1923: In its “University and Educational Notes,” Science magazine
indirectly announced
[left]
that U.S. Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover
[near right, 1922 ±1]
had made “the appointment of Professor Frederick E. B――
[far right, 1923]
as chemical trade commissioner to Germany.”
Today in A.A. History—June 8–9
1991: El X Congreso Zonal de Alcohólicos Anónimos [izquierda] se celebró en la ciudad colombiana de San José de Cúcuta. (The 10th Zonal Congress of Alcoholics Anonymous [left] was held in the Colombian city of San José de Cúcuta.)
June in A.A. History—day unknown
1941: [Very early, the 1st?]
After a six-week freighter cruise to South America, Lois W. returned to
Stepping Stones
[right: 1957]
in Bedford Hills, New York. She and Bill had moved into the house just days
before her departure, and upon her return, Lois discovered Bill had suffered
significantly during her absence. “He had tried to create order out of
chaos,” said Lois. “The fireplace was the only source of heat in the house,
and a bad cold had settled in his chest.” In her memoir, Lois Remembers,
Lois recounted the story:
His cough was getting worse and worse, so he went to the drugstore for medicine [left: Cheracol With Codeine, a typical cough medicine of this era, 3% alcohol (very prominently labeled)]. Like many alcoholics he figured that if the recommended dose was helpful, two or even three times that amount would do more good, so he sipped and sipped from the medicine bottle. When it was about half empty, ideas popped into his head. “Lois is away. I’m alone. Very few people know where I am. Whiskey is what I need to stave off this cold. It would cure me in no time, and no one would know the difference.”
Quickly he recognized the crazy thinking. He hadn’t thought this way for years and then only twice, not long after he stopped drinking. What had caused this distorted notion? He read the label on the medicine bottle and found there was a high percentage of alcohol in the cough mixture. That was it. Even the small amount of alcohol his system had absorbed was enough to change his thinking. This was a great lesson to us all.
1941: The Minneapolis Group of Alcoholics Anonymous—the first in
Minnesota—relocated to larger quarters at 200 E. Franklin Ave.
[right, Oct 2008]
just two months after its establishment.
1942: Irwin “Irv” M. [left,
1940s–50s]
reported there were three sober A.A. members in New Orleans, Louisiana:
Albert B., Bruce L., and Alec J.
1942: The first Alcoholics Anonymous group in Parkersburg, West Virginia [right, Feb 1940], began with two members and one prospect.







































