1940:
The fifth meeting of the Philadelphia Group of A.A. in Pennsylvania was held
at Saint Luke’s Hospital. Organized by Drs. A. Weise Hammer
[near right] and Dudley Saul [far
right], both non-alcoholic, the meeting was open to the public and attended by
thirty people.
1941: The first Alcoholics Anonymous (A.A.) group in Florida was formally organized in Miami.
However, the earliest known A.A. contact in Florida was Horace S., a Daytona Beach resident, who contacted the Alcoholic Foundation in November 1939. By July 1942, he had moved to Connecticut, leaving no A.A. members in Daytona Beach.
In 1940, Frank P., an A.A. member from New York living in Miami, became the local point of contact. That April, Roger C. reached out to the Alcoholic Foundation for assistance. Later, in November, Joe T.’s wife contacted the Foundation, which connected Roger and Joe with Frank P. Together, with the support of traveling salesman and A.A. member Irwin M.
[left], they began responding to A.A. inquiries in the Miami area. That same
month, Charlie C. wrote to the Foundation inquiring about starting a meeting
in Fort Lauderdale, where he moved in December. Carl C. was recruited in
December 1940, and informal meetings commenced in Miami.
1958:
In a letter to Marjorie W., Bill W.
[right]
offered his most succinct, mature understanding of the “white light”
experience he had in Towns Hospital in December 1934.
1960:
Father Edward Patrick “Ed” Dowling, S.J.
[left], 61, died peacefully in his sleep early this Sunday morning in Memphis,
Tennessee, from a heart attack. Fr. Ed had struggled with compulsive
overeating, consuming excessive amounts of starch, butter, salt, and sugar.
Although he once weighed 240 lbs
[~110 kg], using strategies based on the Twelve Steps, he had managed to lose 60
lbs
[~27 kg]. But unfortunately, he had already caused permanent damage to his heart
and arteries. The first sign of these medical problems occurred in June
1952, when he was hospitalized for a retinal stroke caused by a blood clot
blocking an artery to his retina.
1941: The first Alcoholics Anonymous (A.A.) group in Florida was formally organized in Miami.
However, the earliest known A.A. contact in Florida was Horace S., a Daytona Beach resident, who contacted the Alcoholic Foundation in November 1939. By July 1942, he had moved to Connecticut, leaving no A.A. members in Daytona Beach.
In 1940, Frank P., an A.A. member from New York living in Miami, became the local point of contact. That April, Roger C. reached out to the Alcoholic Foundation for assistance. Later, in November, Joe T.’s wife contacted the Foundation, which connected Roger and Joe with Frank P. Together, with the support of traveling salesman and A.A. member Irwin M.
[left], they began responding to A.A. inquiries in the Miami area. That same
month, Charlie C. wrote to the Foundation inquiring about starting a meeting
in Fort Lauderdale, where he moved in December. Carl C. was recruited in
December 1940, and informal meetings commenced in Miami.1958:
In a letter to Marjorie W., Bill W.
[right]
offered his most succinct, mature understanding of the “white light”
experience he had in Towns Hospital in December 1934.What I really meant was this: I was catapulted into a spiritual experience, which gave me the capability of feeling the presence of God, His love, and His omnipotence. And, most of all, His personal availability to me. Of course this is the ABC of the conversion experience—something as old as man himself. So maybe an awareness of God and some sense of relation to him constitutes a fourth dimension. At least this was true for me, one who had no belief or such sensibility whatever.
1960:
Father Edward Patrick “Ed” Dowling, S.J.
[left], 61, died peacefully in his sleep early this Sunday morning in Memphis,
Tennessee, from a heart attack. Fr. Ed had struggled with compulsive
overeating, consuming excessive amounts of starch, butter, salt, and sugar.
Although he once weighed 240 lbs
[~110 kg], using strategies based on the Twelve Steps, he had managed to lose 60
lbs
[~27 kg]. But unfortunately, he had already caused permanent damage to his heart
and arteries. The first sign of these medical problems occurred in June
1952, when he was hospitalized for a retinal stroke caused by a blood clot
blocking an artery to his retina.





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