Sam
Shoemaker Goes On Tour For AAs
Priceless
Collection of Shoemaker s Books, Articles,
Sermons, Talks, Papers
©
2005 by Dick B.
For
the past fifteen years, I have traveled
and interviewed all over the United
States and communicated with many
in Great Britain, Canada, and Australia.
In part, the quest was to locate,
collect, and research the books, articles,
sermons, talks, and personal letters
and journals of the Episcopal priest
whom Bill Wilson dubbed a co-founder
of A.A. As I have written elsewhere
in my titles New Light on Alcoholism
(http://www.dickb.com/newlight.shtml)
and The Oxford Group and Alcoholics
Anonymous (http://www.dickb.com/Oxford.shtml),
you can find Rev. Sam Shoemaker's
footprints all over Alcoholics Anonymous
history. And it became important to
assemble, review, analyze, publicize,
and make available to the religious
and recovery communities the wonderful
resources that today show just what
Shoemaker did add to the A.A. mix.
We know that Rev. Sam Shoemaker brought
Russell Firestone to Christ and to
victory over liquor in 1931. We know
that these events precipitated the
famous visits of Dr. Frank Buchman
and the Oxford Group people to Akron
in 1933, where they were heard by
Henrietta Seiberling and Dr. Bob s
wife Anne Smith. We know that Sam
Shoemaker kept in touch with the Akron
people, particularly Rev. Wright,
to keep tabs on the effectiveness
of the meeting of Bill Wilson and
Dr. Bob at the Seiberling home in
1935.
We knew far less about what Sam Shoemaker
taught Bill Wilson on the East Coast.
The dearth of information was probably
as much due to Shoemaker's humility
as to Bill Wilson's reluctance for
many years to let A.A. people in on
the sources of the Twelve Steps and
the Big Book. See my title Twelve
Steps for You (http://www.dickb.com/12stepsforYou.shtml).
But a relentless search for the facts
turned up (1) Shoemaker letters at
Hartford Seminary, (2) Shoemaker articles
and correspondence at the Episcopal
Church Archives in Texas, (3) Shoemaker's
first radio broadcast at the Princeton
Alumni Archives, (4) Shoemaker's personal
journals at the home of his daughter
Nickie Haggart, (5) the content of
early meetings at Calvary House through
interviews with Jim Newton and Mrs.
W. Irving Harris, (6) the work of
Shoemaker in Pittsburgh through Calvary
Church there and through the Pittsburgh
Experiment and Pittsburgh Leadership
Foundation, (7) details about Bill
Wilson, Ebby Thacher, Rowland Hazard,
Shepherd Cornell, Victor Kitchen,
Hanford Twitchell, Cleve Hicks, and
several other Wilson/Oxford Group
associates all at the papers and libraries
at St. George's Parish and Calvary
Episcopal Church in New York. (8)
Fragments of the history from A.A.
publications like Pass It On, Alcoholics
Anonymous Comes of Age, The Language
of the Heart, the Grapevine, (9) Pictures
of Calvary Rescue Mission, Calvary
Church in New York, inscribed pictures
from Wilson to Shoemaker, and pictures
of the Oxford Group businessmen s
team to which Bill Wilson belonged.
(10) Most of all, the facts came from
widely diverse interviews with James
Newton, Eleanor Forde Newton, Mrs.
Samuel Shoemaker, Norman Vincent Peale,
Rev. Paul Everett, Nell Wing, Mrs,.
W. Irving Harris, L. Parks Shipley,
Sr., T. Willard Hunter, George Vondermuhll,
Sr., Garth Lean, Michael Hutchinson,
Nickie Shoemaker Haggart, Sally Shoemaker
Robinson, Dr. Thomas Pike, Vicar Steve
Garmey, the Pittsburgh golf club crowd,
and several other Oxford Group activists
in Great Britain, Canada, and the
United States. (11) Finally, there
were the large number of Shoemaker's
books, articles, sermons, letters,
papers, pamphlets, and manuscripts
that finally made up most of the Shoemaker
Collection.
The actual items in the Shoemaker
collection are specifically described
in a recent article about them now
posted on archivesinternational.org
and on dickb-blog.com.
Thanks to the great interest and generous
anonymous donation of an active member
of the fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous,
this entire collection is in the process
of being donated free to Ray G., archivist
at Dr. Bob's Home in Akron, Ohio.
Other donors are being asked to help.
Ray travels all over the United States
and Canada with his extensive collections
of Alcoholics Anonymous historical
items. He displays them. He lets people
read and study them. He explains them,
and he carefully stewards them. They
are seen at many A.A. Conferences
throughout the United States. They
were displayed at Archives 2000 at
the A.A. International Convention
in Minneapolis. And they will soon
be displayed at Archives 2005 at the
A.A. International Convention soon
to be held in Toronto. Ultimately,
when Ray has concluded his tireless
trips and displays, the Shoemaker
collection will go into good, long-term
stewardship in the hands of an Episcopal
location either at St. Georges and
Calvary Church in New York, or at
Calvary Church in Pittsburgh, or at
St. Paul s in Akron, or possibly an
Episcopal seminary library in the
New York area. They will be preserved
and available for generations to come.
In short, Sam Shoemaker has gone on
the road. You will be able to see
the Shoemaker materials at many A.A.
Conferences, at Dr. Bob's Home in
the summer when Ray G. serves there
as archivist, and at archival conferences
such as A.A. International Conventions.
This will be an invaluable opportunity
for those who have wanted for so long
to see his books, read his articles,
absorb his sermons, and review his
personal correspondence with Bill
Wilson and a host of others, and actually
see his own personal journal entries
pertaining to Bill Wilson. Hopefully
too, many of the Shoemaker materials
will find their way into the internet
and world-wide visibility.
End
Copyright
© Dick B.