17 July 2025

July 17 in A.A. History

In 1918, Bill and Lois W. were in Newport, Rhode Island, where Bill was stationed at Fort Adams. It was just a few hours before his deployment to Europe for possible action in World War I. He would later write,
    
I remember going out to dinner with Lois and another officer and his wife. A pall of gloom settled over us all. I remember feeling an aversion to the mood of pessimism and thinking how selfish and self-concerned it was. Lois and I stood alone on one of the beautiful cliffs at Newport, overlooking the sea. It was an utterly desolate part of the shoreline. She and I gazed out over the ocean, wondering. The sun was just setting, and we talked about the future with joy and optimism. There I felt the first glimmerings of what I was later to understand as a spiritual experience, while it evolved in me over the years. I shall never forget it [above right: Cliff Walk in Rhode Island at a sunset in 1918].
In 1946, Margaret “Bobbie” B. [left], National Secretary at the Alcoholic Foundation in New York City, replied to an A.A. member from Atlanta, Georgia. The member had written to complain that the March of Time episode “Problem Drinkers” [below right: screen capture] was not being shown in local theaters:
    THE MARCH OF TIME headquarters here tells me today that they do not think any pressure group is keeping the film from Atlanta. They think it is a matter of local theatre policy. They suggest that you see [the] District Manager or [the], Branch Manager, for the local office of the 20th Century Fox at 127 Walton Street N.W., Atlanta 3 (MARCH OF TIME distributes their films thru 20th Century Fox). Perhaps these men may be able to help you on how to get the MOT film, Problem Drinkers, into an Atlanta theatre. It is worth a try anyway. I certainly hope you see it—it has been well received by the groups so far. Naturally we think it is pretty good but we could be prejudiced having worked on the parts dealing with AA for many long months.
In 1952, Bill W. wrote to Father Ed Dowling [left] about his difficulties writing essays on each Step for the book Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions.
    The problem of the Steps has been to broaden and deepen them, both for newcomers and oldtimers. But the angles are so many, it’s hard to shoot them rightly. We have to deal with atheists, agnostics, believers, depressives, paranoids, clergymen, psychiatrists, and all and undry. How to widen the opening so it seems right and reasonable to enter there and at the same time avoid distractions, distortions, and the certain prejudices of all who may read, seems fairly much of an assignment.


In 1960, Albert R. “Abby” G. [right], 70, died in at St. Alexis Hospital in Cleveland, Ohio, following two years of failing health [left: obituary]. Notably, the first A.A. group in Cleveland met in his home while he was under the care of Dr. Bob Smith at Akron City Hospital.


16 July 2025

July in A.A. History (day unknown)

In 1935, encouraged by T. Henry Williams [left], Ernie G.—the “devil-may-care chap” in “A Vision for You” (pp. 158–159 of Alcoholics Anonymous)—reached out to Dr. Bob S. and got sober. At just 30 years old, some believed he was “too young” to get sober. He becomes the fourth member of A.A. and authors “The Seven Month Slip” in the first edition of the Big Book, Alcoholics Anonymous.
    
In September 1941, he would marry Dr. Bob S’s adopted daughter, Sue, but he struggled with continuing to drink, leading to marriage becoming a disaster. Tragically, on 11 June 1969, their daughter Bonna would take her own life after killing her 6-year-old daughter—Ernie and Sue’s granddaughter—Sandy. Ernie died exactly two years later [right: Ernie and Sue in happier times].

In 1946
, Ricardo “Dick” [left] and Helen P. traveled from Cleveland, Ohio to New York City to “have the pleasure of delivering our work [a translation of Alcoholics Anonymous into Spanish] to Bill W——.”
    
Dick had gotten sober in 1940 while living illegally in Cleveland, Ohio, after reading 
in the Cleveland Plain Dealer about major league baseball player Rollie H. [right] getting sober. In 1943, Helen “got the idea that maybe if the Big Book was in Spanish, it would be easier for other Mexicans who don't understand or speak English to recover.” From 1943 to 1946, they worked in their spare time on the translation. Dick wrote,
    My wife already had an old typewriter. We sent it out to be fixed. We worked on the translation using several dictionaries, an encyclopedia and several other books. We usually did this work at nights and on the weekends. Thank God, little by little this adventure was finished at the beginning of 1946. My wife and I took the translation and the Big Book to the college professor, Mary Coates, so that she could do a detailed revision of our work and correct style and grammatical errors.… [Bill] told us that our translation of the AA Big Book into Spanish was the first translation ever done into a foreign language. [Note: quoted translation from Spanish by Jim W.]

15 July 2025

July 15 in A.A. History

In 1938, Bill W. [right] wrote a letter to Willard Richardson, inviting him, A. LeRoy Chipman, and Albert Scott [below left, respectively]—all associates of Rockefeller—to attend any weekly A.A. meeting at the home of Bill and Lois at 182 Clinton Street in Brooklyn. In the letter, Bill said,
    Certainly in the cases of you gentlemen, we shall gladly waive the heavy drinking requirement that has qualified us for Alcoholics Anonymous. We think you are one of us, and there are no honorary members.
This letter contains the earliest documented use of the name “Alcoholics Anonymous,” suggesting that Richardson was likely already familiar with it.

In 1950, the first A.A. meeting in Honduras took place in Comayagüela [right: 1987 Honduran stamp celebrating 37 years of A.A.].

14 July 2025

July 14 in A.A. History

In 1949, in a letter to Rev. Sam Shoemaker [near right], Bill Wilson wrote, “So far as I am concerned, and Dr. Smith too, the Oxford Group seeded AA. It was our spiritual wellspring at the beginning.” Bill later expressed regret for not having also written to Frank Buchman [far right]; in Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, Bill wrote,
    Early A.A. got its ideas of self-examination, acknowledgment of character defects, restitution for harm done, and working with others straight from the Oxford Groups [sic] and directly from Sam Shoemaker, their former leader in America, and from nowhere else.
In 1950
, the front page [left] of The San Quentin (California) News—a unique, non-profit, monthly newspaper written and edited by incarcerated individuals at San Quentin State Prison—overprinted “Greetings [to the] First International Conference [of] Alcoholics Anonymous” in red.

In 2023
, the Star Tribune of Minneapolis, Minnesota, published an editorial by Steven Kind* [right] titled “Counterpoint: AA helps many. For others, alternatives exist.” It was subtitled “Not every recovery program puts God at the center.” The first three paragraphs read:
    A July 10 commentary asked, “Could AA help more people if it were not Christian-centric?” Well, maybe, but there are better options out there for people who want a secular alternative to Alcoholics Anonymous.
    While Alcoholics Anonymous has undeniably helped countless people, it is not for everyone. Just removing references to God from AA’s 12 steps does not address important underlying issues.
    AA’s 12 steps call on members to admit they are powerless over alcohol and must rely on something outside of themselves to recover. The AA program treats addiction as a moral issue—or, as Step 2 suggests, a form of insanity.

*Kind was, at the time, serving as the Minnesota outreach coordinator for SMART Recovery, one of the alternatives he advocates.

13 July 2025

July 13 in A.A. History

In 1972, at the 30th anniversary banquet of the Summer School of Alcohol Studies at Rutgers University Commons, the E. M. Jellinek Memorial Fund Award—a bronze bust [left] of E. M. “Bunky” Jellinek—was presented posthumously to Bill W. for his contributions as co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous.
Bill’s widow, Lois Burnham W. [above right], accepted the award on his behalf. This marked the first time the award was given to a non-scientist. About 500 people attended the banquet [left: article from The Courier-News of Bridgewater, New Jersey].

Today in A.A. History—July 13–14

In 2019
, the General Service Office of A.A., along with the Southern California Area Assembly (SCAA, Area 05), San Diego-Imperial Area Assembly (SDIAA, Area 08), Mid-Southern California Area (MSCA, Area 09), and Central California Area Assembly (Area 93), hosted a bilingual Forum [right: flyer; bottom of post: event logo], calling it a Unity Forum (El foro de Unity), at the Westminster Presbyterian Church [below left] in Pasadena, California. 
    
Like all Local Forums, this was a unique event. The purpose  of which was…
    bringing together A.A. members, volunteers, and staff from all A.A. service organizations in our area to connect, strengthen unity, share valuable ideas and experiences, and explore ways to further support and collaborate with one another in our mission to assist still-suffering alcoholics.
    Over the weekend, more than 400 people attended.
    The motivation for this Forum was described by Ted C., Chair of the 2019 Area 05 A.A. Unity Forum Planning Committee, in the Spring 2019 issue of SCAA’s newsletter, SCAAN:
    In Los Angeles, observing Tradition 9 (organizing minimally) and Tradition 4 (intentionally lacking a centralized authority—favoring autonomy instead) has led to “service communities” that often operate independently, with limited interaction and collaboration between them, low overlap in membership, and at times a surprising lack of awareness of each other’s purposes and activities.
    We would like to counteract this separation with a great celebration of all of AA’s service entities, the valuable services they perform, and the wonderful trusted servants that serve them. This is the idea behind the 2019 AA Unity Forum in which we invite you to participate. We are extending this invitation to participate and collaborate to all AA service organizations in the Greater Los Angeles Area and surrounding communities. This includes Young People’s and Seniors’ organizations, Central Offices, Hospitals and Institutions Committees, local Roundups and Conventions, General Service Areas and Districts, and any other organization that has been formed under Tradition 9. We are also inviting all linguistic organizations to fully participate and collaborate, and will be providing Spanish and ASL interpretation at the event.


12 July 2025

July in A.A. History (day unknown)



In 1922, Lois W. experienced her second ectopic pregnancy, where a fertilized egg develops outside the uterus—in her case, in a fallopian tube. The first had occurred just a month before in her other fallopian tube, and her father, Dr. Clark Burnham [left], had treated her at home. 


    This time, he promptly sent her to the Skene Sanitarium [right], where he was on staff. A colleague performed the surgery, and Lois then went to her family's camp on Emerald Lake in Vermont to recover under her father's care. Unfortunately, her condition worsened instead of improving. Despite feeling increasingly unwell, she missed home and pretended to be getting better until Dr. Burnham “let” her go home.
    
Once home, her husband Bill kept her in bed for several weeks. Concerned about her deteriorating health, he consulted Dr. Leonard Strong [left], his brother-in-law, who realized that a cyst had formed on what remained of her ovary. Lois returned to the surgeon who had operated on her, but he only conducted a “cursory examination” and prescribed a laxative for what he assumed was constipation. Knowing better, Bill contacted Dr. Burnham, who quickly took a train back from Vermont and readmitted Lois to the Skene Sanitarium. There, the cyst was removed, and she began to recover rapidly.
    Lois would suffer a third and final ectopic pregnancy the following May.
 
In 1934, Ebby T. was approached in Manchester, Vermont, by his friends Cebra G., a lawyer, and F. Sheppard “Shep” Cornell, a stockbroker from New York City. Both were members of the Oxford Group and had previously been heavy drinkers, and specifically drinking buddies with Ebby. They had stopped drinking and were now sober. They told Ebby about the existence of the Oxford Group in Vermont, but he wasn’t quite ready to give up alcohol.
 


In 1934, Bill W. was admitted to Charles B. Towns Hospital [left] for the second time, again paid for by Dr. Leonard V. Strong, his sister’s husband. During this stay, Bill met Dr. Silkworth [right] for the first time. The doctor explained the concepts of obsession and allergy related to alcoholism.


However, shortly after his release, Bill started drinking again. At this point, he was unemployable, over $50,000 in debt [~$1.2 million in 2025], suicidal, and drinking around the clock.

11 July 2025

July 11 in A.A. History

In 1950, (Lawrence) Morris Markey, the author of the September 1939 Liberty magazine article “Alcoholics and God,” was found dead at his home in Halifax, Virginia, by family members. The local coroner discovered a small-caliber bullet wound behind his right ear and issued an “open verdict,” stating that there was insufficient evidence to determine whether the death was a homicide, suicide, or accident; the case remains open to this day. The next day’s New York Times headlined the article [right] on page 30 with “Morris Markey, 51, Writer, Shot Dead.”

In 1960, Time magazine [left: cover] published an article titled “Passionately Anonymous,” which covered the 25th anniversary celebration of Alcoholics Anonymous in Long Beach, California. The article began:

The 15,000 men and women who thronged California's Long Beach Memorial Stadium last week differed from most conventioneers in one major respect, there was no danger that any of them would get together in a hotel room to kill a bottle. For this was Alcoholics Anonymous, mustering its recovered, sworn-off drinkers, their relatives and well-wishers to celebrate its 25th anniversary.

10 July 2025

July in A.A. History (day unknown)

In 1939 [Early], Marty M. [right, at Blythewood with her sisters Chris (L) and Betty (R), 4 Jul 1938] had been a charity patient at the upscale Bythewood Sanitarium [left] under Dr. Harry Tiebout [below left] for over a year, but she showed no signs of progress.

    
Dr. Tiebout decided to give her his manuscript copy of Alcoholics Anonymous to see if the book had any value. Eagerly, she read it and was “thrilled” to discover a name for her affliction: alcoholism, a disease. “I love the word alcoholic!” she exclaimed.  
    However, she soon encountered a significant obstacle. “On every page, there were four or five capital Gs [‘God’]!” The following day, she confronted Tiebout, declaring, “God is nothing but self-hypnosis. I’m not about to accept this! I can’t buy it.”
    Tiebout responded calmly but firmly, “Oh, never mind about that. Go back and read some more, and we’ll talk about it tomorrow.” Marty resisted. Each day, she read just enough to arm herself for their next session. Tiebout would always say, “All right. Now go read some more.” This routine continued for six weeks, and she was only halfway through the manuscript.
    Then a crisis erupted, sending Marty into a rage that involved her sister Chris and her friend Grennie. Feeling responsible, she stormed up to her third-floor attic room. “I was angry with a kind of anger I had never felt before, and thank God, never have since,” she later recounted. “I was raging. I wanted to kill!” She literally saw red as the blood vessels in her eyes began to break.
    As she was contemplating a thought to “get two big bottles of whiskey and get good and drunk” to drown her anger, out of the corner of her eye she noticed “that damn book,” Alcoholics Anonymous, lying open on her bed.
    In the middle of the page was a line that stood out as if carved in raised block letters, black, high, sharp—“We cannot live with anger.” That did it. Somehow those words were the battering ram that knocked down my resistance.
In 1939 [Fall?], Kaye M., a non-alcoholic, divorced her alcoholic husband Ty while he was trying to get sober in Akron, Ohio, and traveled to New York City to meet Bill W.
    Previously, after Ty had managed to stay sober for two years, he and Kaye had moved from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to Los Angeles, California. However, in Los Angeles, he relapsed and drank himself into one jam after another. His attorney in Cleveland, Ohio, sent Ty a copy of the multilith final draft of Alcoholics Anonymous, which Bill Wilson had provided him. Though Ty was deeply impressed with the manuscript, he did not stop drinking. Kaye, who did not read the manuscript herself, was moved by her husband’s reaction and wired the Alcoholic Foundation for help.
    When they told her that the nearest A.A. meeting to Los Angeles was in Akron, Ohio, Kaye took Ty there and asked Dr. Bob S. and Wally G. to help him.
    On meeting Bill in New York City, Kaye was surprised when he spoke not about Ty’s issues, but about her’s, saying that she was spiritually bankrupt. She later recalled:
    Bill told me that I had been an extremely bad wife because I had broken all his falls for him and never let him hit bottom.
    Bill also gave her a newly published copy of Alcoholics Anonymous. While in New York, Kaye attended her first A.A. meeting, which made a significant impression on her. Saying goodbye to Bill, she told him:
    I’m going home to Los Angeles, and if Ty can stay sober on these twelve steps of yours for six months, I’m going to beat the drum for Alcoholics Anonymous up and down the state of California, I swear to God.
Kaye returned home—without Ty—by freighter via the Panama Canal, a journey that likely took 2 to 3 weeks. She used this time to read the Big Book.

09 July 2025

July in A.A. History (day unknown)


In 1908, exhausted and depressed after a budget dispute that led to his resignation, Rev. Frank Buchman [upper right], the future founder of the Oxford Group, arrived in England to attend the Keswick Convention of Evangelicals. He hoped to meet the renowned Quaker-influenced Baptist evangelist F. B. Meyer [center right] (1847–1929), whom he believed could offer him guidance. Although Meyer was not there, Buchman experienced a profound spiritual surrender after hearing a sermon titled “The Cross of Christ” delivered by evangelist Jessie Penn-Lewis [lower right, a descendant of William Penn’s]. As he later recalled:
    She pictured the dying Christ as I had never seen him pictured before. I saw the nails in the palms of His hands, I saw the bigger nail which held His feet. I saw the spear thrust in His side, and I saw the look of sorrow and infinite suffering in His face. I knew that I had wounded Him, that there was a great distance between myself and Him, and I knew that it was my sin of nursing ill-will.…
    I thought of those six men back in Philadelphia who I felt had wronged me. They probably had, but I'd got so mixed up in the wrong that I was the seventh wrong man. Right in my conviction, I was wrong in harbouring ill-will. I wanted my own way and my feelings were hurt.
    I began to see myself as God saw me, which was a very different picture than the one I had of myself. I don't know how you explain it, I can only tell you I sat there and realised how my sin, my pride, my selfishness and my ill-will, had eclipsed me from God in Christ.
    He later helped another participant in undergoing the same experience. These experiences became pivotal to the rest of his life’s work. Upon returning to the U.S., he entered his “laboratory years,” where he developed the principles he would later implement on a global scale.

In 1918
, Bill W. [left, in uniform (1918)] sailed from Boston to New York Harbor aboard the H.M.T.* Lancashire [below right].
    During the subsequent voyage to England, an officer shared brandy with him, which he immediately took to, of course.
    
On the eve of their arrival, while Bill was on watch, a sudden crashing thud sent the soldiers into a panic. With his pistol drawn, Bill took control of the situation by barking orders, thus proving to himself, at least, that he was the coward he feared.
    After reaching shore, his unit was delayed by a minor epidemic near Winchester. During this time, Bill visited Winchester Cathedral, where he felt a “tremendous sense of presence,” partly inspired by an epitaph on the headstone of a Hampshire Grenadier, Thomas Thetcher. He later quoted this epitaph from memory in “Bill’s Story” in the book Alcoholics Anonymous.

*Hired Military Transport, i.e., non-commissioned




In 1921, without a job and no idea what he wanted to do, Bill W was “restless and his drinking increased,” according to his wife, Lois. She worked as an occupational therapy aide for the Red Cross at Brooklyn Naval Hospital [upper left: exterior, 1940s; lower left: a group of nurses at the hospital, 1920]. Using her vacation time, she and Bill embarked on a camping trip along the 300-mile Long Trail* [below right: map], along the peaks of Vermont’s Green Mountains—a trail that her father and brother had helped to clear. For Lois, these camping trips served as an opportunity to “think things over” and to encourage Bill to curb his drinking.   
    During this trip, Bill resolved to attend law school. His grandfather, who had raised him from the age of 11, had always wanted him to be a lawyer. Although bill was “not sure he wanted to be an attorney,” he believed that “knowledge of the law would always be useful.” Upon their return, Bill enrolled in night classes at Brooklyn Law School [left: Brooklyn Eagle Building, home of Brooklyn Law School, 1923], a division of St. Lawrence University, and kept at his studies for four years. Lois later wrote, “After paying the fifteen-dollar fee [~$270 in 2025] for his diploma, he was too drunk to leave the apartment the next day to pick it up. He never bothered to get it. It could still be there.”
    Lois was not quite correct. David G. Trager, who served as Dean of Brooklyn Law School from 1983 to 1993 and reviewed Bill’s records from the early 1920s, noted that Bill failed a course on Executors and Administrators (pertaining to wills, estates, and trusts) in his final term in 1924. He returned in the fall to retake the course but ultimately left the law school without completing the required examination, and so was ineligible for a diploma (although New York state allows anyone with at least one year law school to take the bar exam, after completing three years of law office study under the supervision of a practicing attorney or judge).
[All quotes are from Lois Remembers.]
*The Long Trail, constructed from 1910 to 1930, follows the main ridge of the Green Mountains from Massachusetts to Canada. It is the oldest long-distance trail in the United States, and later inspired the creation of the Appalachian Trail.

In 1922, Lois W. experienced her second ectopic pregnancy, where a fertilized egg develops outside the uterus—in her case, in a fallopian tube. The first had occurred just a month before in her other fallopian tube, and her father, Dr. Clark Burnham [left], had treated her at home.
    
This time, he promptly sent her to the Skene Sanitarium [right], where he was on staff. A colleague performed the surgery, and Lois then went to her family's camp on Emerald Lake in Vermont to recover under her father's care. 
    
Unfortunately, her condition worsened instead of improving. Despite feeling increasingly unwell, she missed home and pretended to be getting better until Dr. Burnham “let” her go home. Once home, her husband Bill kept her in bed for several weeks. Concerned about her deteriorating health, he consulted Dr. Leonard Strong [left], his brother-in-law, who realized that a cyst had formed on what remained of her ovary. Lois returned to the surgeon who had operated on her, but he only conducted a “cursory examination” and prescribed a laxative for what he assumed was constipation. Knowing better, Bill contacted Dr. Burnham, who quickly took a train back from Vermont and readmitted Lois to the Skene Sanitarium. There, the cyst was removed, and she began to recover rapidly.
    Lois would suffer a third and final ectopic pregnancy the following May.

08 July 2025

July 8 in A.A. History

In 1980 [Some sources cite July 10] Helen Evans [right: at age 16, in 1931], Bill W.’s half-sister and the first paid employee of the A.A. Grapevine, died of cancer at the age of 64 in Tucson, Arizona.

07 July 2025

July 7 in A.A. History



In 2023, Mongolian A.A. celebrated their 25th anniversary in a hybrid [in-person and online] meeting at Steppe Arena [right] in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia [left: inside the arena during the celebration]. During the event, one speaker highlighted their achievements:


    Today, Mongolian AA is a non-governmental organization registered in Mongolia that serves its members and has about 3,000 members and 172 registered groups. We are a society registered with the World AA General Service Office, and we have a General Service Board consisting of two Class A or Non-Alcoholic Trustees and seven Class B or A.A. Trustees as outlined in the New Service Manual, Annual Service Conferences, 2-yearly National Conferences, and 5-yearly International Conferences.

06 July 2025

July 6 in A.A. History

In 1985
, during A.A.’s 8h International Convention and 50th anniversary celebration in Montreal, Quebec, Ruth Crecelius (née Hock), the non-alcoholic typist of the first edition of the Big Book and A.A.’s first national secretary, was presented with the 5,000,000th copy that book, Alcoholics Anonymous [right: Ruth holding that copy of the Big Book].

05 July 2025

July 5 in A.A. History

In 1946, in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, an unusually large crowd of 50 to 60 people attended the weekly 7 p.m. Alcoholics Anonymous meeting, which was exclusively for alcoholics and which was ironically held in a pub that had lost its license. Among the attendees, six or seven were visibly drunk, but they went largely unnoticed. Recently, a group of men had been regularly attending the meetings—sometimes sober, sometimes intoxicated—moving from person to person in search of cigarettes and spare change. They made no effort to follow the 12 Steps and often disrupted the gathering. For the first time, those genuinely seeking sobriety followed the advice of the non-alcoholic founders of A.A. in Australia, opting not to give these men money or help them in any way. Consequently, none of the moochers returned for the following two weeks.

In 1970
, at the 5th International Convention [right] in Miami, Florida, Bill W., despite struggling with soon-to-be fatal emphysema, wanted desperately to deliver two major talks and participate in several other meetings throughout the four-day event. However, he fell ill on the first night and was unable to attend until a surprise appearance at the closing session on Sunday morning, July 5, where he gave his very brief “Last Talk.”

In 1990
, at A.A.’s 9th International Convention and 55th anniversary celebration in Seattle, Washington, the 10,000,000th copy of the Big Book, Alcoholics Anonymous, was presented to Nellie “Nell” Wing [left, later in life], who was Bill W.’s longtime non-alcoholic secretary and A.A.’s first archivist. 
    
Nell [right, c. 1945] later described the event as a sort of homecoming for herself, stating,
I had spent 1944-46 in Seattle (the 13th Naval District) as a member of SPARS, the Women’s Coast Guard Reserve, in the basement of the Olympic Hotel. There was a large bar and dining room which we called the “snake pit” and where many of us, along with the Coast Guard and Navy guys, did a bit of off-duty drinking. One night I got involved in an all-night drinking spree and next morning, up before my Executive Officer, was “awarded” a captain’s mast* and sentenced to a brief confinement in my quarters (the “brig” was full). I was allowed out once a day, accompanied by a shore patrol Now, 44 years later, here I was in Seattle again and the recipient of the 10 millionth copy of the Big Book. No words can adequately express my deep gratitude to this beloved Fellowship and my cherished friends therein.

*A captain's mast is a form of nonjudicial punishment used in the U.S. Navy and Coast Guard to address minor offenses committed by service members. It is conducted by the commanding officer, who investigates the alleged misconduct, holds a hearing, and determines whether to impose disciplinary measures. It is less formal than a court-martial and does not result in a criminal conviction

Today in A.A. History—July 5–7

In 1985
, approximately 50,000 people attended the 8th International Convention in Montreal, Quebec, celebrating A.A.’s 50th anniversary [left]. Planning had been for only 28,000 attendees. As a result, downtown hotel rooms quickly filled up, and previously unused motels at the airports and in surrounding communities were pressed into service. Attendees were also accommodated in university dormitories and Laurentian resorts, with some even placed as far away as Sherbrooke (90 miles [~145 km]) and Burlington, Vermont (75 miles [~121 km]). A Seagram distillery stood across from the Palais des Congrès, the large new convention center where many events took place, with its flag flying at half-staff throughout the Convention!

Today in A.A. History—July 5–8

In 1990
, a
n estimated 48,000 people attended A.A.’s 9th International Convention in Seattle, Washington, celebrating the organization’s 55th anniversary [right]. The theme of the event was “55 Years—One Day At A Time.” Participants came from seventy-five countries, including, for the first time, nations from the former Soviet Union.