A.A.
History Collection Locations
A Mid-Year Up-date
Dick
B. © 2005 All rights reserved.
Note:
This does not purport to be, nor is
it, a list of all the locations where
A.A. historical items may be found.
Surely various individual AAs and
12 Step people, historians and writers,
recovery groups, treatment facilities,
substance abuse libraries, religious
institutions, non-profits, research
facilities, and universities, have
bits and pieces of our history—some
large and some small. And A.A.’s General
Service Office certainly maintains
archives and some books, but access
is limited. State and area archives
also have collections of one sort
or another. Indeed, there are some
private collections which still exist
and can be unearthed with effort.
The sites here are simply those in
which I have personally been involved
or which I know to be large enough
to warrant inclusion. They are of
particular and unique importance to
the extent that they present, as a
whole, a fairly complete picture of
all the spiritual history and roots
of Alcoholics Anonymous.
The Griffith House Library
at the Wilson House, Village Street,
East Dorset, Vermont
For
a decade, Ozzie and Bonnie Lepper
have been inviting and receiving A.A.
historical materials of all kinds
to become a part of the Wilson House
historical treasures. Then, about
five years ago, I began urging some
of my benefactors to contribute funds
for or make actual donations of most
of the 23,900 historical items in
my Maui research library on Maui.
Today, most of those items are located
at the Wilson House. Check the Wilson
House website for more details. I
believe this is the largest, most
accessible, and most comprehensive
library in existence of temperance,
pre-A.A., Oxford Group, Shoemaker,
Biblical, recovery, and A.A. history
and literature.
The
Traveling Archives of Ray G., Archivist
at Dr. Bob’s Home
Ray
G. and his wife Ginny have a home
in Newton Falls, Ohio, and also spend
their winters in Seminole, Florida.
Ray is the archivist at Dr. Bob’s
Home in Akron. For many years, Ray
has been collecting, organizing, and
displaying all kinds of A.A. historical
materials at such places as Archives
2000 in Minneapolis, Joe and Charlie
Big Book Seminars, state and area
A.A. conferences, and A.A. History
Conferences. When Ray and Ginny appear,
the collection is there for all to
see, read, and have explained—even
during the busy Founders Day period
in Akron. The work is extensive and
important.
The
New Shoemaker Collection at the Shoemaker
Room, Calvary Episcopal Church, Pittsburgh
For
years, Sam Shoemaker’s Calvary Episcopal
Church in Pittsburgh has had an archivist
who knew Sam and his work, but had
few Shoemaker articles. This year,
after being on tour with Ray G., my
entire Shoemaker collection was, by
two benefactors, donated outright
to Calvary Church in Pittsburgh. It
contains almost all Sam’s books, sermons,
articles, and pamphlets, and many
personal journal entries, letters,
memos, and other data obtained from
Hartford Seminary, Princeton University,
Episcopal Church Archives in Texas,
Mrs. W. Irving Harris (who ran the
book stall at Calvary House and whose
husband was Sam’s Assistant Minister),
as well as books purchased or collected
from all over the world.
The
Annex at Dr. Bob’s Home in Akron,
Ohio – adjacent to 855 Ardmore Avenue
Long
after Dr. Bob’s Home was acquired
and opened, its trustees began collecting
books pertaining to the early program.
I persuaded Dr.Bob’s son Smitty to
donate most of his portion of his
dad’s books to Dr. Bob’s Home. His
sister Sue Windows sold most of her
portion to Brown University. The library
in Akron is voluminous, but the books—though
visible on their shelves—are mostly
under lock and key.
The
Akron Intergroup Archives, Elma Street,
Akron
Gail
L. has spent many years during Founders
Days in Akron presenting the historical
books and materials she was able to
collect. Later, she was given the
position of Archivist for the Intergroup,
and an excellent display of pictures
and memorabilia is located at the
Akron Intergroup Office. Still more
materials are in a locked room there.
Gail frequently gives talks on the
history and historical materials.
The
A.A. Library at Dr. Bob’s church,
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Akron
The
current rector at St. Paul’s Church
in Akron has enabled and facilitated
many of the donations of A.A. history
books to prisons, intergroups, history
locations, and to some of the sites
above. In addition, the library has
a small, but important collection
of books on A.A.’s spiritual history.
Dr. Bob became a communicant at St.
Paul’s shortly before his death.
The
Gate Lodge (the former home of Henrietta
Seiberling) at Stan Hywet Museum and
Gardens in Akron
Very
recently, this historic spot where
Henrietta Seiberling introduced Bill
Wilson to Dr. Bob Smith was opened
to the public. At the same time, explanatory
displays were placed on the walls;
a few important historical books were
placed on display; and tapes of pioneers
were made available for listening.
Brown
University Collections, Providence,
Rhode Island
Several
years ago, A.A. antiquarian bookseller
Charles Bishop sold a large collection
of early temperance, anti-saloon,
and alcoholism books to Brown University
thanks to a benefactor named Chester
Kirk. The acquisition cost was $250,000.00.
The materials are in the custody of
the Brown University Library system
under the watchful eye of Dr. David
Lewis, director of the addiction studies
program there. Shortly before her
death, Dr. Bob’s daughter Sue Smith
Windows sold a portion of her collection
of Dr. Bob’s books and memorabilia
to Brown, where they now repose. I
believe other historical materials,
including some of my own, are part
of the Brown collection.
Hazelden
Pttman Archives, Center City, Minnesota
Over
a long period of years, Bill Pittman,
an author and publisher of recovery
books, began collecting and making
available a very large number of books
and pamphlets ( particularly those
pertaining to A.A.’s spiritual roots),
to Hazelden Foundation. At a major
conference of A.A. historians at Hazelden,
the collection was dedicated; and
Pittman later became Director of Historical
Information at Hazelden—a position
he no longer occupies.
Stepping
Stones—The Home of Bill and Lois Wilson,
Bedford Hills, New York
When
I visited and researched at Stepping
Stones in the early 1990’s, there
was a large library of books belonging
to Bill Wilson, practically none of
which pertained to A.A. There was
also a library of spiritualist and
psychic books representing Bill’s
personal involvement in those activities.
There was a large quantity of historical
manuscripts and papers of Bill’s that
were directly related to A.A. history,
but they had not been organized or
catalogued. I was allowed to study
and make copies of most of that material
and included it in The Founders Collection
mentioned below. Later, an A.A. historian
named Earl H. informed me that he
had a huge collection of A.A. history
books and that he had donated them
to Stepping Stones. But I have never
seen either the collection or an inventory
of it; however, I believe whatever
is there can readily be identified
by contacting the affable executive
director for information.
The
Founders Collection—now on loan to
Dr. Karen Plavan in Pittsburgh as
Curator and Custodian
As
related above, I saw Dr. Bob’s Library—which
tells so much about what early AAs
did and studied—split between the
inaccessible stacks at Brown University
and the locked shelves at Dr. Bob’s
Home. I also realized that most of
the original manuscripts either written
or described by Bill Wilson had never
been made available until Hazelden
finally published an autobiography
which I have and which Bill Pittman
also obtained from Stepping Stones.
I also knew that the original contents
of Anne Smith’s spiritual journal
which I obtained from GSO archives
had never been seen, published, or
even reported until I wrote my Anne
Smith’s Journal, 1933-1939. I therefore
held on to these items so they could
be placed as a unit, travel widely,
and be posted on the internet if that
were funded. The funding, though not
yet complete, is substantially complete.
Therefore I shipped this collection
to Karen Plavan, Ph.D., former professor
of counseling and chemical dependency
at Penn State; former addiction consultant
to the Pittsburgh Leadership Foundation;
and presently Vice President of a
global outreach ministry headquartered
in Pittsburgh and named GOAL. Dr.
Plavan is curator and custodian; and
when the acquisition funding has been
completed, she and I will work out
a plan for making this vital historical
material available in a permanent
location, available for tour, and
usable for posting on the internet.
END
Copyright
© Dick B.