knew us better than we knew ourselves, better than we know each other. Many
of us felt that his medical skill, great as that was, was not at all the
full measure of his stature. Dr. Silkworth was something that it is
difficult even to mention in these days. He was a saintly man. He stood in
an unusual relationship to truth. He was able to see the truth of a man,
when that truth was deeply hidden from the man himself and from everyone
else. He was able to save lives that were otherwise beyond help of any kind.
Such a man cannot really die. We wish to honor this man, a gentle doctor
with white hair and china blue eyes.
Dr. Silkworth lived on Chelsea Avenue in Long Branch, attended Long Branch
High School where he has been inducted in that school's Hall of Fame,
graduated from Princeton University, and lived for a while in Little Silver.
He was born on July 27, 1873 and died on March 22, 1951. His relatives that
still carry the Silkworth name live in Oceanport NJ.
PLEASE BE SURE TO BRING A LAWN CHAIR OR SOMETHING TO SIT ON.
If you have any questions please call Barefoot Bill at 201-232-8749 (cell).
Directions:
Take the Garden State Parkway (north or south) to Exit 105 (Route 36),
continue on Route 36 approximately 2.5 to 3 miles through 5 traffic lights
(passing Monmouth Mall, two more shopping plazas, and several automobile
dealerships). Watch for green road signs stating "Route 71 South, West Long
Branch and Asbury Park" (this is before the sixth light). Take this turnoff
to the right, past Carriage Square and bear right onto Route 71 (Monmouth
Road.) Glenwood Cemetery appears very quickly on the left. The entrance is
marked by two stone pillars and the name. Once inside the cemetery, bear
left, go up the hill and make the first right (a hard right). The gravesite
is near the first tree on the right.
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++++Message 1901. . . . . . . . . . . . Reel to Reel tape restoration
From: kopnor . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/6/2004 12:02:00 AM
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Hi I am Richard K. . I am a member of the Maine area archives
committee. We have a reel to reel tape of the 1955 St.Louis
convention. We would like to know if there is a lot of these tapes
in circulation.
this tape is over 50 years old. We are wondering if we will
run into any difficulties restoring this tape. Maybe someone has
some ideas they might have on this subject.
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++++Message 1902. . . . . . . . . . . . 4th Step Guides
From: lawrence . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/7/2004 10:27:00 PM
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Dear AA friends, I'm collecting 4th step guides. I have a xerox copy
of a lenthy one, about 28 full pages, starting with General
Instructions "Buy paper and pen and start writing." etc. Then there's
the main part called "Revised Fourth Step Guide" starting with 'Why
a "Revised edition"? The original Fourth Step Inventory, written over
10 years ago, needed revision for three reasons. 1. Two major areas
were not ncluded in the original inventory and are in this one:
military service (including Vietnam) and Alanon."' Then there are
lengthy sections on Family, Your Childhood, Religion, Kindergarten
and Early School, Your Sexual Life, Adolescence, etc. etc.
Is this lengthy and very detailed 4th Step Guide available online so
I could download it?
I do have a similar one which I found on a couple sites, starting with
the following:
"A Searching, Fearless, Moral, Inventory 4th Step Guide
The history of this 4th Step Guide is vague but it has been
attributed to anonymous members of Alcoholics Anonymous. Various
versions could be found on early recovery computer bulletin boards
(BBS). One version was dubbed "The California 4th Step Guide" as it
was believed that the originators were located in California. Another
version "suggested" that a person should have at least 5 years of
recovery before using this guide. In any event this guide has well
over 300 questions for a person to answer starting with your
childhood years, through adolescence, and into your adult life. The
guide works for all 12 step programs as the guide is not specific to
any particular program. The guide has a very good set of general
directions for doing a 4th step." Etc.
Perhaps the one I have a xerox of is an earlier version of this one,
one, but I'd love to find a copy of the first one I could download.
Thank you for any help on this, or suggestions of other 4th Step
guides I should know about.
Yours in sobriety, Larry G. in Placitas, NM.
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++++Message 1903. . . . . . . . . . . . Beginner''s Meeting Format
From: Linda . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/8/2004 8:20:00 AM
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I thought I had posted before but I don't see it so, I'll try again.
Does anyone have a good meeting format for Beginner's Meetings?
Thanks,
Linda D "Florida Keys"
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++++Message 1904. . . . . . . . . . . . two questions
From: john . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/10/2004 5:33:00 PM
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I have a 4x6 card which lists the first three books and has the price
of each
AA 4.50, 12&12 2.75 and AA Comes of Age 4.00
at the top it atates (You may wish to use this as a book mark)
Does anyone know when this card was pbulished by AA
I have a pamphlet This is AA in the burgandy cover. The only
reference to age is a note that states 11th printing. When was this
published?
John Wikelius
301 North Rawls Street
Enterprise, Alabama 36330
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++++Message 1905. . . . . . . . . . . . Loners International
From: kopnor . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/12/2004 3:04:00 AM
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I have heard that the loners international group is the largest
group in AA. Is this true. I would also like to know if Captain
Jack was the official founder of the loners international. I also
would appreciate it if someone could tell me if there is a biography
or story available on Captain Jack.
Richard K.
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++++Message 1906. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: Loners International
From: Jim S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/12/2004 1:10:00 PM
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From page 7, Box 459, Vol. 50, June-July 2004:
"Staff Report: Loners are A.A.s who are unable to attend meetings
because there are no groups nearby. There are about 210 Loners in 57
countries. Seagoing A.A.s, known as Internationalists, number about
73 as well as 55 Port Contacts. We now have 185 Homers, A. a
.s who are housebound due to illness or physical disability. Homers,
Loners, and Internationalists stay sober by sharing with each other
through letters, tapes, and e-mails. Each new Loner, Homer, and
Internationalist receives a directory of members, a subscription to
Box 459, and the Loners/Internationalists Meeting-By-Mail (LIM), a
confidential bi-monthly bulletin which shares excerpts of letters
received at G. S. O. from LIM members. There are also over 475 Loner
Sponsors, who share
A. A. activities and personal experience."
From LIM, Volume 13, No. 1, January/February 1988:
"...Note: for those who might not know, Capt. Jack is the founder of
A. A. Internationalists. ........"
From LIM, Volume 29, No. 2, March/April 2003:
"OVERVIEW OF LIM HISTORY"
"The first LIM bulletin, printed in 1949 as The Internationalists
Round Robin, was a few pages of excerpts from letters received at G.
S. O. and mailed to a small band of Internationalists determined to
stay sober no matter how isolated they were.
By 1963, the bulletin consisted of 5 or 6 one-sided pages,
mimeographed on blue paper. In 1976, an A. A. Loners meeting merged
with the original Internationalists meeting. Since the March-April
1980 issue, LIM has been printed on the familiar yellow pages.
Lim began through the efforts of Captain Jack S., a sailor who found
sobriety in A. A. and understood that to maintain sobriety he needed
to reach out to other members through correspondence.
Initially, Captain Jack was looking for A. A. contacts in port cities
when he wrote a letter to G. S. O. dated March 28, 1946. Captain Jack
requested information on A. A. contacts because he was "...still at
sea on oil tankers, on which I have served for ten years. I have few
contacts ashore with A. A., and have to rely on the Book and the guy
upstairs." A G. S.O. staff member provided Captain Jack with the names
of A. A. contacts in port cities, and encouraged him to write to other
seagoing members, which he did.
After the publication of a three-part article, "A `Loner' at Sea," by
Captain Jack in the October, November, and December 1948 issues of the
A. A. Grapevine, plans began to take shape to start an
Internationalists meeting-by-mail. Letters responding to that
Grapevine article prompted another G.S.O. staff member to suggest to
Captain Jack that he consider starting a "Round Robin Meeting" via
letters. Captain Jack responded positively and suggested the name be "The
Far East International Group." he said the name `...would leave it
open to members stationed ashore in the Far East and also to men who
sail these waters under flags of different nations."
Captain Jack died in December 1988 at age 91, a few months after
celebrating his 42nd A. A. anniversary. He had remained active in the
Fellowship, seeking newcomers in Portland, Maine, where he had
retired, while continuing to answer the many letters he received.
Some of A. A.'s phenomenal worldwide growth is attributed in part to
Captain Jack and hundreds of Internationalists like him who, sailing
the seven seas, carried the message wherever they dropped anchor."
It's my understanding that the Pacific Group in California has well
over 1000 members, which would make it larger than LIM.
Jim S.
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++++Message 1907. . . . . . . . . . . . AA on the Internet
From: Gary Becktell . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/12/2004 10:41:00 PM
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Does anyone have any info on the early days of AA on the Internet, and
the Bulletin Boards that preceded the Internet? Thank you.
G
gk@kitcarson.net
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++++Message 1908. . . . . . . . . . . . Older Grapevine Question
From: rrecovery1984 . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/12/2004 8:08:00 AM
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I am area archivist and we are often donated older Grapevines. The
duplicate ones, I give to the Institution and jail reps to bring to
hospitals and jails but I just can't bring myself to donate thirty or
forty year old ones. Any other people have this problem? I would
rather trade for ones we are missing. Any suggestions?
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++++Message 1909. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: Older Grapevine Question
From: Mel Barger . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/13/2004 8:45:00 AM
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Instead of donating the old Grapevines, a better way would be to find the
articles on the new Digital Archive and print them out for institutions.
This will serve the same purpose and will allow you to save your old GVs as
treasures. I understand that there's no problem in making these printouts
as long as it's not for commercial purposes. And it can be done very
cheaply on your printer.
Mel Barger
~~~~~~~~ Mel Barger melb@accesst ~~~~~~~~ Mel Barger melb@accesstoledo.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "rrecovery1984"
To:
Sent: Monday, July 12, 2004 9:08 AM
Subject: [AAHistoryLovers] Older Grapevine Question
> I am area archivist and we are often donated older Grapevines. The
> duplicate ones, I give to the Institution and jail reps to bring to
> hospitals and jails but I just can't bring myself to donate thirty or
> forty year old ones. Any other people have this problem? I would
> rather trade for ones we are missing. Any suggestions?
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> __________________________________________________________
> This message was scanned by GatewayDefender
> 9:17:42 AM ET - 7/13/2004
>
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++++Message 1910. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: AA on the Internet
From: Martha Brummett . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/13/2004 9:20:00 AM
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Subject: AA on the Internet
> Does anyone have any info on the early days of AA on the Internet, and
the Bulletin Boards that preceded the Internet? Thank you.
G
There was a FidoNet forum called A.A. SiP (for Singleness in Purpose, s/h/b S
of
P) in the mid to late eighties. I vividly recall the exchange of messages as a
woman in Nashville got sober and got directed to her first meeting. I can't
recall any names really. I participated from around 1986 to 1992 or so.
Supposedly all the FidoNet stuff was archived, but that was a long time ago,
and
there was an effort in this forum to maintain anonymity.
Martha Brummett
Denver CO
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++++Message 1911. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: Older Grapevine Question
From: ricktompkins . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/13/2004 7:10:00 PM
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You neglected to say what Delegate Area Archives you serve...
I would suggest that after your Grapevines are duplicated into two sets,
place the older extras with your Area's District archives.
Does your Area's largest Intergroup hold an archives collection? There's
another destination!
Make sure you get a stamp that will print "courtesy of Area xx Archives."
From my own past experience, our general service archives grows by giving,
not swapping..
Rick T., Illinois
past Area 20 Archivist
----- Original Message -----
From: "rrecovery1984" <>
To:
Sent: Monday, July 12, 2004 8:08 AM
Subject: [AAHistoryLovers] Older Grapevine Question
> I am area archivist and we are often donated older Grapevines. The
> duplicate ones, I give to the Institution and jail reps to bring to
> hospitals and jails but I just can't bring myself to donate thirty or
> forty year old ones. Any other people have this problem? I would
> rather trade for ones we are missing. Any suggestions?
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++++Message 1912. . . . . . . . . . . . THE A.A. MESSAGE IN PRINT-SUMMARY OF
DISTRIBUTION
From: JOHN REID . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/14/2004 3:48:00 AM
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Below are the literature piece that are updated annually.
Service Material from the General Service Office
THE A.A. MESSAGE IN PRINT-SUMMARY OF DISTRIBUTION
First Printing through December 31, 2003
Alcoholics Anonymous (Big Book)
English (First printing - 1939)
Hardcover (B-1) 15,845,956
Softcover (B-30) 6,713,109
Large Print (B-16) 241,712
Pocket/abridged (B-35) 1,163,732
Total: 23,964,509
Spanish (First Printing - 1962)
Hardcover (SB-1) 53,561
Softcover (SB-30) 495,032
Pocket/abridged (SB-35) 68,024
Total: 616,617
Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions
English (First Printing - 1952)
Hardcover (B-2) 7,842,858
Pocket Size (B-17) 412,778
Softcover (B-15) 2,254,309
Large Print (B-14) 120,208
Gift Edition (B-4) 1,386,176
Total: 12,016,329
Spanish (First Printing - 1985)
Softcover (SB-15) 357,325
Pocket Size (SB-17) 37,440
Total: 394,765
Other Formats
Audio Cassettes: Big Book (MB-1) 79,659
Big Book (MB-1A) 490
Twelve & Twelve (MB-2) 38,937
Big Book CD ROM (M-70) 517
Big Book Audio CD (M-81) 1,235
Spanish Big Book (SMB-1) 6,839
Spanish Twelve & Twelve (SMB-2) 11,320
Braille: Big Book (M-34) 2,766
Twelve & Twelve (M-35) 1,717
ASL Video: Big Book (VS-1) 1,910
Computer Disk: Big Book (M-53) 7,234
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++++Message 1913. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: AA on the Internet
From: Susan Krieger . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/14/2004 1:12:00 PM
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The West Baltimore site went up 6/26/94, about the time the WWW went up.
According to Archives at GSO we are the first and we have sent them a copy
of the first site as it went up and also a copy of the Baltimore Intergroup
as originally published.
Contact Al W. welsch@a-1associates.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "Gary Becktell"
To:
Sent: Monday, July 12, 2004 8:41 PM
Subject: [AAHistoryLovers] AA on the Internet
> Does anyone have any info on the early days of AA on the Internet, and
> the Bulletin Boards that preceded the Internet? Thank you.
> G
>
gk@kitcarson.net
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>
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++++Message 1914. . . . . . . . . . . . Beginners'' Meeting Format
From: Glenn Chesnut . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/14/2004 4:35:00 PM
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For Linda D (Florida Keys),
You wrote in on July 8th asking, "Does anyone have a good meeting format for
Beginners' Meetings?"
Several early pamphlets for newcomers including material designed for
beginners' lessons can be found on the Hindsfoot Foundation website:
http://hindsfoot.org/archives.html
One pamphlet on that website comes from Detroit (1943) and four came from
Akron (the earliest published in late 1939 or early 1940, and the others only
a few years later at most). The four from Akron give us a very good and
detailed picture of what early Akron A.A. people believed and practiced.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Detroit Pamphlet is one which I do know will work very effectively for
beginners. On Monday night, June 14, 1943, the North-West Group at 10216
Plymouth Road in Detroit began holding a set of four beginners' meetings
(which were repeated over and over again for years). There were so many people
coming into A.A. by that point, that the old-timers could no longer give each
newcomer the same kind of individual, one-on-one instruction that they had
used in the beginning. So the most knowledgeable old-timers sat as a panel at
the front of the room, with the beginners gathered in front of them. The
introductory material for that particular class was read, and then the
newcomers were allowed to ask questions of the old-timers.
Like everything else in early A.A., anything that seemed to be working well
was rapidly circulated all over the country, and the first printed version was
actually produced in Washington D.C., so that some A.A. people still associate
these Beginners' Lessons with that city instead of Detroit. But Jack H. in
Scottsdale, Arizona, who has done the most careful study on the whole topic of
Beginners' Lessons and other early A.A. readers, says that Detroit published
its own printed version not long afterwards, probably only a few months later.
Just a few years ago I know, copies of The Detroit Pamphlet were still
obtainable from the Greater Detroit A.A. office Alcoholics Anonymous of
Greater Detroit in Ferndale, Michigan, for a modest cost.
In the early 1990's, The Detroit Pamphlet was used very successfully in
northern Indiana, so it still works just as well today. In Elkhart, they had a
Saturday morning Beginners' Meeting which was structured a little like the
original Detroit meetings. An old-timer would preside over the meeting and
give a short talk at the beginning on one of the steps. Submarine Bill in
particular found that a talk based on The Detroit Pamphlet worked better than
anything he had ever used over the years. Then (in Elkhart) the newcomers were
allowed to speak, going around the table in turn, much like an ordinary A.A.
discussion meeting. It did require a powerful personality like Submarine
Bill's (he was used to giving orders to a whole submarine full of sailors, and
having those orders obeyed!) for a single person to keep control of a group of
newcomers that large (usually thirty or forty people).
In South Bend, Indiana, what was called the Golden Key Group was set up in
1990, where each person was given a copy of the pamphlet, and then they went
around the huge table, with each person reading two or three paragraphs of
that Discussion (The Detroit Pamphlet divides the steps into Four Discussion
sessions). Then each person in turn was allowed to speak on something that had
been read that evening.
(The original Detroit printed version was filled with an awful lot of
typographical errors which made it hard to read, so the South Bend people
completely re-set the type, but without changing a single word, so it's the
same text as the original. The South Bend version is the one which is on the
Hindsfoot Foundation website.)
In its heyday, of the newcomers who went to the Golden Key Group every
Thursday evening without fail for an entire year, 90% remained sober for that
entire year. And even today, 90% of those who made it through that first year
without a slip are still sober. That's around an 80% success rate.
(The idea that only EARLY A.A. could ever have that kind of success rate is a
total myth. There are different kinds of strategies that work -- there is no
one single formula which must be used -- but there are still meetings in
northern Indiana today which achieve that kind of 75% to 80% success rate.
Nobody gets sober who doesn't keep on coming to A.A. meetings, but that is
hardly the program's fault! Modern medicine can control diabetes with insulin
shots and proper diet, but nobody blames the medical doctors when people who
refuse to follow these directions get sick and die horribly.)
But back to the Golden Key Group. It eventually ended up dying because of a
combination of (1) its enormous success and (2) lack of responsibility among
the South Bend people with some time in the program.
(1) Treatment centers and halfway houses began bringing in bus loads of
newcomers, literally, as word spread of how extraordinarily well this
Beginners' Meeting worked, and then (2) in response to these floods of
newcomers, the people with time in the program gradually began to quit coming
in the years that followed. It turned out that, because of its discussion
meeting format, it required at least four or five people with a little bit of
significant time in the program be present to keep the discussion on track. By
the end of the line, it was just me and maybe one other person trying to
manage thirty or forty people from halfway houses and treatment centers, many
of whom only wanted to wallow in self-pity and complain about "how badly" the
place they were in was treating them. And it just doesn't work effectively
that way -- you don't put the inmates in charge of the insane asylum! We were
all crazy people when we first came in, or I was, anyway --
ask anybody who knew me during my first year, and they will start laughing so
hysterically that's it really embarrassing for me even now! -- and when we
were newcomers, we needed the people who had a little bit of time in the
program to help us slowly find our way towards a little greater sanity.
So my advice here is that if you want to set up a Detroit Pamphlet Beginners'
Meeting of that sort, most of your work is going to be getting some of the
people with significant time in the program to show up and participate and
make some real long term commitment. The Twelfth Step says that this should be
a primary responsibility for everyone in the program who has worked through
the first eleven steps. When people shirk this responsibility, A.A. in their
community can no longer flourish and grow. I should say that, in my
experience, every one of the twelve steps is a marvelous learning experience.
And strangely enough, I have found myself that Twelfth Step work (in the sense
of working with newcomers and participating in Beginners' Meetings and things
of that sort) gives more insight and personal growth than any of the other
steps.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Some people also think very highly of The Little Red Book: An Interpretation
of the Twelve Steps of the Alcoholics Anonymous Program for Beginners'
Meetings. In the 1940's, the Nicollet Group in Minneapolis, Minnesota,
required newcomers AND their spouses to attend Twelve Step Study Classes which
were conducted by Ed Webster and Barry Collins along with other members of the
group who had some time in the program. Mimeographed copies of the lecture
notes Ed Webster wrote up for these classes began circulating all around the
United States. Their lesson plans were used in Canada too: in 1946, for
example, the Nicollet Group received a letter from an A.A. group in Edmonton
(in Alberta) telling them how successful the mimeographed version had been
there.
The first printed version was published in Minneapolis in August 1946 as The
Little Red Book by the "Coll-Webb Company," which meant that Barry Collins and
Ed Webster had it printed themselves. Hazelden took over publishing and
distributing the book later on, and keeps a version of The Little Red Book in
print today.
Jack H. in Scottsdale, Arizona, has a copy of the original 1946 printed
edition, which he puts on display at A.A. conferences. The 50th Anniversary
Edition which Hazelden published in 1996 claims to be a reprint of that
original edition, but Jack says that it was actually a reprint of a slightly
later edition. The reason this is an issue, is because Jack (who has tracked
all the different versions down) says that Ed Webster himself kept on making
revisions in the little book all the way to the end of his life. So the
regular version which you can buy from Hazelden today is different in various
ways from the original printed edition which came out in 1946, and even that
50th Anniversary Edition isn't quite the same as the original 1946 version.
Here in my part of Indiana, I am told that there are groups in Fort Wayne for
example which still use The Little Red Book for meetings on a regular basis
(or this was certainly true only a few years ago), and I understand that it is
also still very much in use in various other places all over the United States
and Canada.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
But then A.A. hit a crisis in the late 1980's and early 1990's, where some of
the younger leaders began insisting that no one was allowed to read ANYTHING
except "conference approved" literature. A.A. began being cut off from its
historical roots, and falling into greater and greater triviality, and
achieving lower and lower success rates.
The only opposing force has been the Archival Movement that arose during that
same period: Nancy O. and the AAHistoryLovers Group, and Gail LaC.'s role in
helping set up the first National Archives Workshop in Akron, and other
grassroots archival efforts which arose at that time all over the United
States, fortunately began to play a role as significant counter-forces.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
But the understanding back in the early days, as far as I can tell, was that
any piece of printed material WHICH WAS SPONSORED BY AN A.A. GROUP (the
Nicollet Group in Minneapolis for The Little Red Book and the A.A. group in
Daytona Beach, Florida, for Twenty-Four Hours a Day) was automatically assumed
to be perfectly acceptable for reading in meetings by any other A.A. groups in
the world. That seemed to have been the key: if that pamphlet or little book
been sponsored by an A.A. group somewhere then it was perfectly O.K. for other
A.A. groups to use.
In early A.A. the New York office took this position too: something that is
written and printed by the members of one A.A. group is totally legitimate to
read in A.A. meetings anywhere else. Dr. Bob and Bill W. both put themselves
on record as supporting that principle. Jack H. in Scottsdale, Arizona, has a
copy of The Little Red Book which Dr. Bob had personally made notes on, making
suggestions to Ed Webster for changes or additions to be made in the next
edition. It is obvious that Dr. Bob gave his O.K. to the four Akron pamphlets
also. Bill W. wrote to Ed Webster in November 1950 and said "we are not
policemen" here at the New York headquarters, "AAs are free to read any book
they choose."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Usually in early A.A. (though not necessarily, since each A.A. group is
completely autonomous and can read anything it wants to) books and pamphlets
which were not sponsored by a particular A.A. group were only read outside of
formal A.A. meetings. In early A.A. in South Bend, Indiana, for example,
little groups would gather in people's homes to read and talk about the latest
Golden Book, but they would not call these "A.A. meetings" in the formal
sense. They were just little private groups of A.A. members gathering on their
own. The Golden Books were printed and distributed by Ralph Pfau (Father John
Doe) on his own. They had marked on the title page that they were published by
the "SMT Guild," which meant the "Society of Matt Talbott," which in turn
meant Father Ralph himself and the three nuns who served as his secretaries
and helpers in the convent in Indianapolis where he lived as confessor to the
sisters. Ralph got along O.K. with the A.A.
groups in Indianapolis where he was based, but none of the Indianapolis groups
officially sponsored these Golden Books, and he basically had to do that on
his own.
Likewise, the books on the early Akron A.A. recommended reading list (Emmet
Fox's Sermon on the Mount, James Allen's As a Man Thinketh, Henry Drummond's
The Greatest Thing in the World, Ernest Ligon's Psychology of Christian
Personality, and so on) were not usually, to the best of my knowledge, read
from or used for providing meeting topics in formal A.A. meetings.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
On the other hand, A.A. groups all around the country had books which were on
this Akron list for sale for A.A. members to purchase. Mel B. (sober 1950)
bought two books from this list in Detroit A.A. when he was first getting
sober. When I asked Brooklyn Bob here in South Bend whether there was any rule
in early A.A. about "only reading conference-approved literature," he snorted
and laughed and said, "We read anything we could get our hands on that might
get us sober!" Real early A.A. was like that, intensely pragmatic -- these
were not rule-bound uptight people who thought that you could get people sober
by repeating mechanical formula phrases and preventing the members from ever
reading or hearing anything that was not approved by the tiny circle of people
who led the organization -- all the really good old-timers whom I have
interviewed have had that same kind of marvelously free and flexible spirit as
Brooklyn Bob had, they're just wonderful
people.
So if A.A. people who had some sobriety under their belts in various parts of
the country said, "Yeah, that book by Emmet Fox, The Sermon on the Mount, sure
helped me and some of our other members when we first came in -- it doesn't
work for everybody, you know, but for some of us it really opened our eyes as
to what we were supposed to be doing when we were working the steps" -- then
A.A. people in other parts of the country would read it and see if it helped
them. And if it helped enough people there, then it would be made available
for sale at their A.A. group or their intergroup office, and newcomers would
be encouraged to read it if it seemed appropriate to that particular person's
central problems.
And contrariwise, I remember when one of John Bradshaw's later books was
literally driving some susceptible people over the edge into full-fledged
psychosis, where their attempts to use his methods to come into contact with
their "Inner Child" did so much psychological damage that they had to be
institutionalized for several years afterwards. I'm not kidding, they were
genuinely and literally driven insane by the traumatic stuff that started
coming out of their subconscious minds. It was only a few people who were
driven literally insane in this way, but the word nevertheless spread through
responsible A.A. circles in my part of northern Indiana: Do NOT give that book
to newcomers, or anybody else, it's too dangerous. Do NOT sell that book at
the intergroup offices. WARN people who start talking about reading that book
about how dangerous it is. We can't play games like that with people's lives.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
But the idea which sprang up in the late 1980's and early 1990's, that somehow
or other it wasn't "proper" for an A.A. group or intergroup to sell helpful
books that weren't published by Alcoholics Anonymous World Services in New
York is another thing that is threatening to cut A.A. off from its historical
roots. The New York office never ever had the money to publish all the useful
books that could help a recovering alcoholic, and still doesn't today. The
traditions forbid A.A. itself from having the kind of wealthy publishing
houses that some of the larger religious denominations have (Abingdon Press,
Fortress Press, Augsburg Press, Westminster Press, Loyola University Press,
Ave Maria Press, and so on, for the Methodists, Lutherans, Roman Catholics,
and the other large church organizations).
Therefore we MUST to a certain extent rely on individuals to publish some of
the literature which A.A. needs in order to be successful. The important thing
is to make it clear at all times that several people who get together to
publish some books on A.A. cannot claim any official A.A. connection in
anything that shows up in public, even if all of them are A.A. members.
Likewise, an A.A. group itself cannot get involved in the enormous monetary
expense of publishing a full sized book -- this can sometimes require
thousands of dollars for the initial investment.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Also, just for myself, I would prefer that A.A. books of this sort be
published on a totally nonprofit basis if at all possible, just as Richmond
Walker did when he was printing and distributing his Twenty-Four Hour book. I
have a rule for myself that I will not be involved in publication ventures
involving any kind of program-related material, unless the group publishing it
is a genuine nonprofit organization which exists only to help alcoholics.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
At any rate, Linda, I hope that some of these materials may give you some
useful ideas. Having a set of Beginners' Meetings for newcomers is an old A.A.
tradition that goes back to the early 1940's in many parts of the United
States and Canada.
Glenn C. (South Bend, Indiana)
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++++Message 1915. . . . . . . . . . . . RE: THE A.A. MESSAGE IN PRINT-SUMMARY
OF DISTRIBUTION
From: Rob Childs . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/14/2004 8:21:00 PM
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10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy;">Do you know how to get an ascii version
of the big book? Is that the computer disk or CD version? If so, how does one
order a copy?
10.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:navy;">
-----Original Message-----
*From:* JOHN REID
[mailto:johnyr1@iprimus.com.au]
*Sent:* Wednesday, July 14, 2004
3:49 AM
*To:*
aaHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com
*Subject:* [AAHistoryLovers] THE
A.A. MESSAGE IN PRINT-SUMMARY OF DISTRIBUTION
12.0pt;">
Below are the
literature piece that are updated annually.
Service Material from the General Service
Office
THE A.A. MESSAGE IN PRINT-SUMMARY OF
DISTRIBUTION
First Printing through December 31, 2003
*Alcoholics
Anonymous (Big Book)*
English (First printing - 1939)
Hardcover (B-1) 15,845,956
Softcover (B-30) 6,713,109
Large Print (B-16) 241,712
Pocket/abridged (B-35) 1,163,732
Total: 23,964,509
Spanish (First Printing - 1962)
Hardcover (SB-1) 53,561
Softcover (SB-30) 495,032
Pocket/abridged (SB-35) 68,024
Total: 616,617
*Twelve
Steps and Twelve Traditions**
*
English (First Printing - 1952)
Hardcover (B-2) 7,842,858
Pocket Size (B-17) 412,778
Softcover (B-15) 2,254,309
Large Print (B-14) 120,208
Gift Edition (B-4) 1,386,176
Total: 12,016,329
Spanish (First Printing - 1985)
Softcover (SB-15) 357,325
Pocket Size (SB-17) 37,440
Total: 394,765
Other Formats
Audio Cassettes: Big Book (MB-1) 79,659
Big Book (MB-1A) 490
Twelve & Twelve (MB-2) 38,937
Big Book CD ROM (M-70) 517
Big Book Audio CD (M-81) 1,235
Spanish Big Book (SMB-1) 6,839
Spanish Twelve & Twelve (SMB-2) 11,320
Braille: Big Book (M-34) 2,766
Twelve & Twelve (M-35) 1,717
ASL Video: Big Book (VS-1) 1,910
Computer Disk: Big Book (M-53) 7,234
12.0pt;">
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++++Message 1916. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: AA on the Internet
From: soul . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/15/2004 6:43:00 AM
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The Online Service Conference has a nice page on AA History on the
Internet Here is the link http://www.aa-
onlineserviceconference.org/history_online_aa.htm#AA%20on%20the%
20Internet .
soul
--- In AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com, "Gary Becktell"
wrote:
> Does anyone have any info on the early days of AA on the
Internet, and
> the Bulletin Boards that preceded the Internet? Thank you.
> G
> gk@k...
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++++Message 1917. . . . . . . . . . . . 4th Edition Big Book
From: chillydog012001 . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/13/2004 5:34:00 PM
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I am interested in the years and General Service Conference votes
that took place in order to publish the 4th Edition of the Big Book.
How many votes took place and what was the general consensus at the
group level.
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++++Message 1918. . . . . . . . . . . . principles before personalities...
From: Stanley . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/15/2004 2:04:00 PM
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I'm new to this mailing list; but certainly not new to A.A. (16 years
sobriety) and I have a question that I hope someone familiar to A.A. history
could help me with. I've read most of the books sanctioned by A.A.; but
can't remember how the last part of the 12th Tradition came into being. The
"...principles before personalities" part.
I am really excited about this mailing list!
Stan
**********************************************************************
Stanley Koehler In the heart of the Ozarks
stanley4756@mchsi.com Springfield, MO
**********************************************************************
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++++Message 1919. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: Re: AA on the Internet
From: Mark Warner . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/15/2004 12:29:00 PM
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soul wrote:
> The Online Service Conference has a nice page on AA History on the
> Internet Here is the link http://www.aa-
> onlineserviceconference.org/history_online_aa.htm#AA%20on%20the%
> 20Internet .
http://www.aa-onlineserviceconference.org/history_online_aa.htm#AA%20on%20the%
20\
Internet [85]
http://tinyurl.com/3qk69
--
Mark Warner
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++++Message 1920. . . . . . . . . . . . Report from the Moderator
From: NMOlson@aol.com . . . . . . . . . . . . 7/16/2004 2:37:00 AM
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Friends,
A few items:
1. As of tomorrow, July 17, I will be out of town for a few days and the AA
history lovers will be inactive. I will be at Shreveport, LA for a talk to the
Louisiana Association of Substance Abuse Counselors and Trainers, Inc. If any
members of the list will be present I would be delighted to meet you.
2. I have been doing a post every month of significant dates in AA history. I
have been unwell for the last several week and have not had the energy to
finish the July list. Is anyone willing to take this over for me? As my
sources I use the 2004 Sobriety Calendar PLUS this website:
Sobriety Anniversaries [86]
BTW, July 21, 1980, Marry Mann suffered her fatal stroke. She died the next
day. I sorely miss her.
3. I may also have to turn the AA history list over to someone else in the
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