Timeline of Events Related to AA
August 8, 1879Robert Holbrook Smith born in St. Johnsbury VermontNov. 26, 1895 William (Bill) Griffith Wilson was born in a small room behind a bar in East Dorsett, VT., to Gilman and Emily Wilson.1901
Professor William James lectures at University of Edinburgh, Scotland. Lectures published as The Varieties of Religious Experience in 1902.
Bill's father, Gilman, deserts the family. Bill's mother, Emily, moves to Boston and becomes an Osteopathic Physician. Bill and sister Dorothy live with maternal grandparents, Fayette and Ella Griffith. Bill's first "success" making a boomerang - "a fitting irony".1907 About age 12 Bill "leaves the Church" over a required temperance pledge.1908Oxford Group begun as A First Century Christian Fellowship. Frank Buchman, Founder. They espoused the Four Absolutes: Honesty, Purity, Unselfishness, and Love. They practiced the principles of self-survey confession; restitution; and service to others.1909 Bill begins secondary education at Burr & Burton Academy.1911Ebby Thatcher and Bill first meet.1912
Bill's "first love", Bertha Bamford, dies after surgery in New York. Bill began a three year depression.1914-1918World War I1914Bill enters Norwich University - a military college with strict discipline. Bill meets Lois Burnham, daughter of New York physician, Dr. Clark Burnham.April 6, 1917U.S. enters World War I. Summer 1917A Second Lieutenant in the coast artillery at Ft. Rodman, Mass., Bill takes first remembered drink - Bronx Cocktail - feels a miracle - relaxed and free. A profound experience he recalled vividly more than 50 years later.Jan. 24, 1918Bill marries Lois Burnham.Summer 1918On way to France, Bill visits Winchester Cathedral and is stirred by a "tremendous sense of presence." Reads epitaph on headstone of a Hampshire Grenadier.Nov. 11, 1918
Armistice signed, World War I ends.Jan. 16, 191936 states ratified constitutional amendment for prohibitionMay 1919Bill returns home.1920Bill enters Brooklyn Law School.1921An investigator for U.S. F & G and also works around Wall Street.Christmas 1923Bill vows to stay sober one year - Lasted only 2 months.1925-26Bought motorcycle and became (First?) "Market Analyst." Disease progressing.1926On Wall Street full time. Disease progressing.Late 1928 - Early 1929Bill crosses "invisible line" in his drinking.Oct. 1929
Stock Market collapse.Nov. 1929Bill goes to Canada for a job with Dick Johnson.1930 - 31 Back in Brooklyn and Wall Street. Living with Lois's family - unemployed. Disease progressing.1930-34
Bill in "An Alcoholic Hell".1931 Rowland Hazzard sees Dr. Carl Jung in Zurich, Switzerland. Told no medical or psychological hope for an alcoholic of his type; told the only hope was a spiritual or religious experience or conversion. This considered "the first in the chain of events that led to the founding of A. A."Spring 1932 Bill's business deal in New Jersey - drank Apple Jack and drunk three days. Contract cancelled.1933-34Bill in Towns Hospital four times. At Towns Hospital, Bill meets Dr. William Silkworth on second admission. "The Little Doctor Who Loved Drunks." Bill resumes drinking after each admission. Disease progressing.Dec. 5, 1933
Prohibition ended.Summer 1934
Dr. Silkworth pronounces Bill a "Hopeless Drunk." Rowland Hazzard returns to America and becomes involved in Oxford Group.1934
Emmett Fox publishes The Sermon On The Mount.Aug. 1934Rowland Hazzard and Cebra persuade court to parole Ebby Thatcher in their custody. Ebby sobers up at Oxford Group at Calvary Episcopal Mission, Sam Shoemaker.Nov. 1934Ebby T. carries message to Bill at home. Tells his story. "One Alcoholic Talking To Another." Bill starts attending Oxford Group at Calvary Church, Bowery Mission. Bill drinks again - Back to Towns Hospital.Dec. 1934 Bill has "Hot Flash" spiritual experience at Towns Hospital.Dr. Silkworth assured Bill he was not crazy; rather a "psychic experience upheaval" or "conversion." BILL NEVER DRANK AGAIN. The next day Ebby brought Bill a copy of William James' Varieties of Religious Experience. Bill reads Varieties of Religious Experience, an explanation of need for Pain, Suffering, Calamity and "Deflation in Depth" and the "Simultaneous Transmission of Hope." The two "Halves" are joined into a "Whole."Bill returns to Oxford Group and works with other alcoholics, also at Sam Shoemaker's Calvary Mission and at Towns Hospital, emphasizing his "Hot Flash" spiritual experience. He noted they "seemed to do better" talking of their common problems, but no success in sobering up others. Bill develops belief that alcoholics are resistant to the "Four Absolutes" of the Oxford Group. 1935
Bill, still sober, but no success yet in helping others. Still frequents Wall Street. Went to Akron Ohio for proxy fight. Lost proxy fight. Bill at Mayflower Hotel.Very discouraged and afraid he might drink.May 11, 1935Bill reached realization of: I need another alcoholic. "He starts making telephone calls. This is the final founding moment of A.A.Rev. Walter Tanks Referred to Norman Sheppard. Then referred to Henrietta Seiberling, an Oxford Group adherent. She arranged a meeting the next afternoon at the Seiberling Estate with Dr. Bob Smith.Robert Holbrook (Bob) Smith: Born in St. Johnsbury, VT., Aug. 8, 1879. Dartmouth College, Pre-Med at University of Michigan. M.D. at Rush Medical College, Chicago, IL. Internat City Hospital, Akron, OH. Proctologist. His wife, Anne was a friend of Henrietta Seiberling. They brought Dr. Bob to Oxford Group meetings for 2-1/2 yrs. He continued to get drunk regularly.May 12, 19355:00 P.M. Bill meets Dr. Bob. Bob still drinking. Bill tells Bob of his experiences with alcohol; of the hopes, promises, and failures; the obsession, compulsion, and physical allergy; of Ebby's visit and simple message, "show me your faith and by my works I will show you mine."Dr. Bob understood with sudden clarity - the difference with the Oxford Group. "The spiritual approach was as useless as any other if you soaked it up like a sponge and kept it to yourself." The purpose of life was not to "get" , it was to "give."
Bill had presented Dr. Bob four aspects of one core idea:(1) Utter Hopelessness (2) Totally Deflated(3) Requiring Conversion (4) Needing OthersJune 10, 1935 Dr. Bob has last drink. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS FOUNDEDJune 11, 1935Dr. Bob suggests they both start working with other alcoholics.June 28, 1935Bill and Dr. Bob confront Bill Dotson, first "Man on the Bed." Bill D. was a prominent attorney in Akron. The 3rd A. A. Note: Bill D. had a spiritual experience without familiarity with Oxford Group principals.Summer 1935 Bill stayed in in Akron. He and Dr. Bob worked with alcoholics and attended weekly Oxford Group meetings and received spiritual nourishment. Henrietta Seiberling supplied them with "Infusion of Spirituality" mainly through Paul to Corinthians on "Love" and James on "Works" if faith is to have meaning.Winter 1935
Back in New York on Clinton St., Hank P. and Fitz M. got sober.Mid 1936A small but solid group developing at Clinton St. in New York. Bill's efforts with alcoholics receiving criticism from Oxford Group. Charles Towns offers Bill a job at Towns Hospital. Bill wanted it. The question was presented to the Group and rejected because what they had, the "thing" that bound them together and those feelings could not be bought and paid for. The only authority was the Group Conscience and all decisions were to be made by the Group.1937 Beginning of the split from the Oxford Group. Residents at Clinton St.: Ebby T., Oscar V., Russell R., Bill C., Florence R.Nov. 1937 Bill and Dr. Bob meet in Akron and compare notes. Forty cases sober and staying sober. More than twenty sober for more than one year. All had been diagnosed as HOPELESS. A meeting of the Akron Group to consider Bill's ideas for a book, pamphlets and how to expand the movement. Presented but only narrowly passed by a majority of 2.Feb. 1938
Rockefeller gives $5,000 and saves A. A. from professionalism.May 1938
The Alcoholic Foundation established as a trusteeship for A. A.May 1938Beginning of the writing of the book Alcoholics Anonymous.Dec. 1938
Twelve Steps written.1939Membership reaches 100. April 1939 The book Alcoholics Anonymous published.Summer 1939Withdrawal from association with Oxford Group complete. Oxford Group renamed"Moral Re-Armament."1940Bill meets Father Ed Dowling who becomes his "spiritual advisor."Feb. 1940 First World Service Office for A. A.March 1941Jack Alexander's Saturday Evening Post article published and membership jumped to 2000. Jan. 1944Dr. Harry Tiebout's first paper on the subject of "alcoholics anonymous."June 1944The A. A. Grapevine established.1946The Twelve Traditions of A. A. formulated and published.June 1, 1949Anne Ripley Smith died.July 1950First international convention of A. A. at Cleveland, Ohio. Twelve Traditions adopted.Nov. 16, 1950Dr. Robert Holbrook Smith, co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous died.June 1953The book Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions published.Oct. 1954The "Alcoholic Foundation" becomes the "General Service Board of A. A."July 1955
20th Anniversary Convention at St. Louis, MO. Second edition of Alcoholics Anonymous published. The three legacies of Recovery, Unity and Service turned over to the movement by its old-timers.1957 Creation of first overseas General Service Board of A. A. in Great Britain and Ireland. A. A. Comes of Age published in October. Membership reaches over 200,000 in 7,000 groups in 70 countries and U.S. possessions.1959A. A. Publishing, Inc. became A. A. World Services, Inc.July 196025th Anniversary Convention at Long Beach, CA1962 Publication of Twelve Concepts for World Service written by Bill W.July 1965 30th Anniversary Convention at Toronto, Canada. Keynote adopted, "I Am Responsible."1966Change in ratio of trustees of the General Service Board; now two-thirds majority of alcoholic members; the A. A. fellowship accepts top responsibility for all it's future affairs.1967
Publication of the book The A. A. Way of Life now titled As Bill Sees It.Oct. 9-11, 1969
First World Service meeting held in New York with delegates from 14 countries.197035th Anniversary International Convention at Miami Beach, Florida. Keynote: "This we owe to AA's of the future. To place our common welfare first; To keep our fellowship united. For on A. A. Unity depend our lives, and the lives of those to come." Bill's last public appearance.Jan. 24, 1970William Griffith Wilson, co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous, dies at Miami Beach, FL.Jan 21, 1971Second World Service meeting held in New York.1973Publication of Came to Believe.April 1973Distribution of the book Alcoholics Anonymous reached one million mark.1975Publication of Living Sober.1976Publication of 3rd Edition of Alcoholics Anonymous.1976Lois Burnham Wilson died.1988Publication of Alcoholics Anonymous 4th EditionFeb. 9, 2002Sources:Cybriety.orgBill W. by Robert ThompsenNot God. A History of Alcoholics Anonymous by Ernest KurtzAlcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, A. A. World Services, Inc.Pass It On - Bill Wilson and the A. A. Message, A. A. World ServicesThe Language of the Heart, The A. A. GrapevineDr. Bob and the Good Old-Timers, A. A. World Services, Inc.On The Tail of a Comet, The Life of Frank Buchman by Garth Lean The Washingtonian Movement, by Milton A. Maxwell, Ph.D.A.A. The Way It Began, by Bill Pittman
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