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Alcoholics
Anonymous history in your area
San Antonio Texas
http://www.aaofsa.org/archives/archivesindex.html
HISTORY OF AA IN SAN ANTONIO
Alcoholics
Anonymous came to Texas in 1941 when a group started in
Houston. Later that same year, a member of the Houston group,
Mrs. Ester E., began a group in Dallas when she moved there.
The
San Antonio history is blurry. It's known that about April,
1941, The Rt Rev Everett H Jones, the then rector of St
Marks Episcopal Church, inserted an ad in the local newspapers
announcing that he had information for anyone who had a
drinking problem and wished to do something about it. Five
problem drinkers began meeting in '42 or '43 at one of the
Methodist churches. However after a few meetings everybody
got drunk except a guy named Hollis N. That was the end
of the fledgling group.
In
1944 the Rev. Everett H Jones, later to become a bishop,
convened some of the more spectacular drinkers of St. Mark's
Episcopal Church. He arranged for a member of the Houston
AA group to san Antonio to show them how to reach sobriety
and stay there. On the night the meeting was to take place,
everyone showed but the man from Houston, who telephoned
from a stop somewhere between Houston and San Antonio and
said, in effect, "Better get someone else, I'm having
a little booze trouble."
Finally,
Jones managed to get some meetings going in his St. Mark's
office, with help from an Episcopa1 bishop from Houston
and an AA member who arrived from that town, erect and sober
through 1944.
In
April 1945, Alcoholics Anonymous moved out of St, Mark's
into a vacant, one-room grocery at 4th and Taylor Sts. The
grocery was used as a meeting place in 1945-46. In June
1947 AA began to grow up when members rented a huge room
on West Commerce Street, directly across from the Frost
National Bank, in There was a taxi dancehall on the second
floor and underneath, was a liquor store and juke joint.
Members had to pass both of these in order to mount the
stairs. That old W. Commerce citadel of "one-day-at-a-time"
sobriety is gone now. Its members started the Sahara Club,
Club 12, The Olmos Group at The Witte Museum, and the Collins
Gardens Group. From there, AA spread like wildfire across
town. Today it has an estimated 2.5 million active members
world wide, and an estimated 3,000 members across the San
Antonio metropolitan area
In
1949 the AA central Office was opened in the Travis Building,
it operated on a daily basis with a full time Secretary.
Today CSO operates today with a manager an admin assistant
and the help of many volunteers.
The
above information compiled directly from the Central Service
Office Archives
http://www.aaofsa.org/

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