1940: In Pennsylvania, the Philadelphia Group of A.A., with the cooperation
of Dr. William Turnbull, superintendent of Philadelphia General Hospital
(PGH)
[right, 1940s], began making regular visits to the PGH psychopathic ward. There, they
recruited Art McM. and Bud M. as members. The group then persuaded Dr. John
F. Stouffer, the chief psychiatrist, of A.A.’s effectiveness. Dr. Stouffer,
along with Drs. C. Dudley Saul
[far left] and A. Wiese Hammer [near
left], maintained statistics on the Philadelphia Group, which met every
Saturday*
until the hospital closed in the late 1970s.
[far left] and A. Wiese Hammer [near
left], maintained statistics on the Philadelphia Group, which met every
Saturday*
until the hospital closed in the late 1970s.
*My source states that the
first meeting was on 10 April 1940, but that seems incorrect since it was a
Wednesday. I assume the decision was made at the regular Thursday night
meeting of the Philadelphia Group on April 11, with the hospital meetings
beginning the following Saturday, April 13.
1944: The Manhattan Group was formally organized and named, claiming to have been the first Alcoholics Anonymous group in New York City (and second anywhere only to the King School Group 1 in Akron, Ohio, founded in July 1935). This assertion stems from its evolution out of the meetings of “nameless drunks” held at Bill and Lois W.’s Brooklyn home on 182 Clinton Street from 1934 to April 1939. After they lost that home, the meeting relocated several times over the next five years. The Manhattan Group claims to possess a 1966 letter from Bill W. supporting their claim of being the first A.A. group in New York City.
Following the Manhattan Group's formation, the ”Corporation” that managed the 24th Street Clubhouse dissolved. A new, separate corporation was established to oversee the new clubhouse on 41st Street, where the Manhattan Group was presumably, for a time, their sole paying tenant.
Later, a dispute would arise over the administration of A.A. affairs in New York City. This conflict, marked by considerable turmoil,would ultimately lead to the creation of the New York Intergroup Association, which still exists today. The Manhattan Group would eventually accept its role as just another group within the larger A.A. structure, relinquishing any claim to special status.
Today in A.A. History—April 13–19
1997: The 47th General Service Conference was held at the Crowne Plaza
Hotel in New York City.
Of the 39 Advisory Actions submitted to the General Service Board, two from the Conference Report and Charter Committee are particularly noteworthy:
Of the 39 Advisory Actions submitted to the General Service Board, two from the Conference Report and Charter Committee are particularly noteworthy:
31. On-line A.A. meetings that request to be listed in A.A. directories be added to the “International Correspondence Meetings” in A.A. directories, that each listing include the Internet address of the on-line meeting, and that each on-line meeting requesting to be listed in our directories furnish G.S.O. with the name and physical address of a member willing to serve as “mail” contact.[Note: From 1955–mid-2000s, A.A.W.S. printed three meeting directories: one each for Eastern U.S., Western U.S., and Canada. These are the directories referred to in these two Advisory Actions.]
32. An intergroup serving on-line A.A. meetings should be listed adjacent to on-line A.A. meetings in the section on “International Correspondence Meetings.”































