Early
A.A. History at a Glance
© 2005
by Dick B.
Alcoholics
Anonymous and its many 12 Step offshoot
groups are in a position today, via
the internet, newsletters, chats,
press releases, conferences, and trained
teachers to let the fellowships know,
and the public see just where A.A.
came from and why, at the beginning,
it had astonishing successes.
First,
A.A. had two distinctly different
roots, just as it had two distinctly
different founders. Dr. Robert H.
Smith, one co-founder, was from St.
Johnsbury, Vermont. His whole family
were church-goers. And his church
had a Christian Endeavor Society to
whip up the enthusiasm of young people.
Its outreach became world-wide. And
its format included Confession of
Christ, conversion meetings, prayer
meetings, Bible study meetings, topical
discussions, Quiet Hour, the reading
of varied religious literature, social
fellowship, support of the local church,
and an emphasis on love and service.
These were the factors that impacted
heavily on the life of Dr. Bob. He
refreshed his memory of this material.
And ultimately he brought almost every
idea and practice into the Christian
Fellowship that was the alcoholic
squadron of Akron. The program worked.
It produced a 75% success rate for
cures among those who really tried.
Second,
A.A.’s origins on the East Coast were
of an entirely different nature. An
American businessman, named Rowland
Hazard had a serious alcoholism problem,
went to Switzerland to be treated
by the famous psychiatrist Dr. Carl
Gustav Jung. After doing his best,
Jung faced the fact that Rowland had
(as Jung put it) the mind of a chronic
alcoholic and could not be cured without
conversion. He suggested a religious
association. Rowland joined the Oxford
Group, apparently absorbed its principles
and practices, and achieved victory
over alcoholism. Since one of the
Oxford Group principles was sharing
for witness, Rowland and two companions
sought out a seemingly hopeless alcoholic
named Ebby Thacher from Albany, New
York. The taught Ebby the Oxford Group
principles and practices and placed
him in the Calvary Rescue Mission
in New York. This Mission was run
by Rev. Sam Shoemaker’s Calvary Episcopal
Church. It provided food and shelter
for thousands each day. It also held
services which involved hymns, Bible
reading, and altar calls to make a
decision for Christ. This Ebby did.
He overcame his drinking and invoked
sharing for witness in a visit to
his old and still suffering alcoholic
friend, Bill Wilson. Wilson was a
conservative atheist (as he put it).
He had never studied the Bible, never
belonged to a church, and had done
little if any religious reading. He
was hostile to Christianity and Christians.
Essentially, Ebby ignored Wilson’s
prejudices, told Wilson that he had
got religion, that God had done for
Him what he could not do for himself,
and that he had been to the Rescue
Mission. There Wilson went, seeking
what Ebby had gotten. Wilson made
the altar call, made his decision
for Christ, and wandered around drunk
for several days. Then he checked
into Towns Hospital, said he had found
something, and was hospitalized. Ebby
visited him and took Bill through
the Oxford Group practices which later
became the Twelve Steps. Wilson, alone,
humbly offered himself to God, cried
out if there be a God, let him show
himself. And immediately he experienced
a white flash experience - saying
so this is the God of the preachers.
He never drank again. But he set out
at once to do sharing for witness
to other drunks. Either Ebby or Rowland
brought Wilson a copy of William James’s
Varieties of Religious Experiences;
and Wilson concluded he had had such
an experience - the very thing Jung
had prescribed, that James’s book
validated the experience, and that
this was the solution to alcoholism.
Armed with this information, Wilson
began witnessing to drunks at Towns
Hospital, the Rescue Mission, and
the Oxford Group meetings he and Lois
(his wife) were regularly attending.
But to no avail. Wilson’s psychiatrist
Dr. William Silkworth had explained
the disease concept to Bill and suggested
he preface his witnessing with the
hard medical facts, then witness.
Wilson
came to Akron on an ill-fated financial
deal. He wanted to drink. He sought
out a drunk to help. He phoned Dr
Walter Tunks (rector of St. Paul’s
Episcopal Church in Akron). Tunks
put Wilson in touch with Henrietta
Seiberling who was desperately trying
- with a small group of Oxford Group
people and Dr. Bob’s wife - to help
Dr. Bob achieve sobriety. God revealed
to her that Bob should not touch one
drop of liquor - the start of the
abstinence solution. She called a
meeting where Dr. Bob confessed his
alcoholism. At Henrietta’s suggestion,
Dr. Bob and those present prayed for
his recovery. Though he - as Wilson
had done at the beginning - continued
to drink, a miracle happened. Henrietta
called it manna from heaven. Wilson
phoned, said he was from the Oxford
Group, was a rum hound from New York,
and needed to talk to another drunk
Henrietta arranged a meeting at her
home in the Gate Lodge on the famous
Seiberling Estate. Bill and Bob talked
for six hours. Bill thought he had
carried a great medical and spiritual
message, but Dr. Bob quietly ruminated
that he had heard it all before. What
impressed him, he said, was that Wilson
knew what he was talking about and
was willing to serve. Hearkening to
his days of love and service teaching
in Christian Endeavor, Bob suggested
they work together. Bob had one more
brief binge, but he quit drinking
on June 10, 1935 - the day A.A. was
founded. Bill had moved in to the
Smith home and there remained for
three months. The Bible was a major
topic of study. Bill and Bob sought
out a drunken lawyer (Bill Dotson),
hospitalized him, and told him what
they had done. Dotson gave his life
to God’s care and walked from the
hospital never to drink again. And
A.A. Group Number One was thereby
founded. All three men had stated
clearly that the Lord had cured them
of the curse of alcoholism.
Over the next three years, Bob, Bill,
Anne Smith, Henrietta, and a handful
of Oxford Group people began working
with drunks and using a program resembling
that of Christian Endeavor. After
two years, some forty men were stone
sober - a few for two years. This
caused Bill and Bob to realize that
God had shown them how to help other
alcoholics. And they did - each in
his own way.
END