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How the book
"Alcoholics Anonymous" came about
Bill W. speaking in
Fort Worth, Texas -1954
I
think I’m on the bill for tonight’s show with a talk on
the 12 Traditions of A.A. But you know drunks, like
women, have the prerogative, or at least seize the
prerogative of changing their minds - I’m not going to
make any such damn talk!
For something very festive I think the Traditions 1-12
would be a little too grim, might bore you a little. As
a matter of fact, speaking of Traditions, when they were
first written back there in 1945 or 1946 as tentative
guides to help us hang together and function, nobody
paid any attention except a few "againsters" who wrote
me and asked what the hell are they about?
Nobody paid the slightest attention. But, little by
little as these Traditions got around we had our
clubhouse squabbles, our little rifts, this difficulty
and that, it was found that the Traditions indeed did
reflect experience and were guiding principles.
So, they took hold a little more and a little more and a
little more so that today the average A.A. coming in the
door learns at once what they’re about, about what kind
of an outfit he really has landed in and by what
principles his group and A.A. as a whole are governed.
But, as I say, the dickens with all that. I would like
to just spin some yarn and they will be a series of
yarns which cluster around the preparation of the good
old A.A. bible and when I hear that it always makes me
shudder because the guys who put it together weren’t a
damn bit biblical. I think sometimes some of the drunks
have an idea that these old timers went around with
almost visible halos and long gowns and they were full
of sweetness and light. Oh boy, how inspired they were,
oh yes. But wait till I tell you.
I
suppose the book yarn really started in the living room
of Doc and Annie S. As you know, I landed there in the
summer of ‘35, a little group caught hold. I helped
Smithy briefly with it and he went on to found the first
A.A. group in the world. And, as with all new groups, it
was nearly all failure, but now and then, somebody saw
the light and there was progress.
Pampered, I got back to New York, a little more
experienced group started there, and by the time we got
around to 1937, this thing had leaped over into
Cleveland, and began to move south from New York. But,
it was still, we thought in those years, flying blind, a
flickering candle indeed, that might at any moment be
snuffed out.
So, on this late fall afternoon in 1937, Smithy and I
were talking together in his living room, Anne sitting
there, when we began to count noses. How many people had
stayed dry; in Akron, in New York, maybe a few in
Cleveland? How many had stayed dry and for how long? And
when we added up the total, it sure was a handful of, I
don’t know, 35 to 40 maybe. But enough time had elapsed
on enough really fatal cases of alcoholism, so that we
grasped the importance of these small statistics.
Bob and I saw for the first time that this thing was
going to succeed. That God in his providence and mercy
had thrown a new light into the dark caves where we and
our kind had been and were still by the millions
dwelling. I can never forget the elation and ecstasy
that seized us both. And when we sat happily talking and
reflecting, we reflected, that well, a couple of score
of drunks were sober but this had taken three long
years.
There had been an immense amount of failure and a long
time had been taken just to sober up the handful. How
could this handful carry its’ message to all those who
still didn’t know? Not all the drunks in the world could
come to Akron or New York.
But how could we transmit our message to them, and by
what means? Maybe we could go to the old timers in each
group, but that meant nearly everybody, to find the sum
of money - somebody else’s money, of course - and say to
them "Well now, take a sabbatical year off your job if
you have one, and you go to Kentucky, Omaha, Chicago,
San Francisco and Los Angeles and wherever it may be and
you give this thing a year and get a group started."
It
had already become evident by then that we were just
about to be moved out of the City Hospital in Akron to
make room for people with broken legs and ailing livers;
that the hospitals were not too happy with us. We tried
to run their business perhaps too much, and besides,
drunks were apt to be noisy in the night and there were
other inconveniences, which were all tremendous. So, it
was obvious that because of drunks being such unlovely
creatures, we would have to have a great chain of
hospitals. And as that dream burst upon me, it sounded
good, because you see, I’d been down in Wall Street in
the promotion business and I remember the great sums of
money that were made as soon as people got this chain
idea. You know, chain drug stores, chain grocery stores,
chain dry good stores.
That evening Bob and I told them that we were within
sight of success and that we thought this thing might go
on and on and on, that a new light indeed was shining in
our dark world. But how could this light be a reflection
and transmitted without being distorted and garbled?
At
this point, they turned the meeting over to me, and
being a salesman, I set right to work on the drunk tanks
and subsidies for the missionaries, I was pretty poor
then.
We
touched on the book. The group conscience consisted of
18 men good and true ... and the good and true men, you
could see right away, were dammed skeptical about it
all. Almost with one voice, they chorused "let’s keep it
simple, this is going to bring money into this thing,
this is going to create a professional class. We’ll all
be ruined."
"Well," I countered, "That’s a pretty good argument.
Lots to what you say ... but even within gunshot of this
very house, alcoholics are dying like flies. And if this
thing doesn’t move any faster than it has in the last
three years, it may be another 10 before it gets to the
outskirts of Akron. How in God’s name are we going to
carry this message to others? We’ve got to take some
kind of chance. We can’t keep it so simple it becomes an
anarchy and gets complicated. We can’t keep it so simple
that it won’t propagate itself, and we’ve got to have a
lot of money to do these things."
So, exerting myself to the utmost, which was
considerable in those days, we finally got a vote in
that little meeting and it was a mighty close vote by
just a majority of maybe 2 or 3. The meeting said with
some reluctance, "Well Bill, if we need a lot of dough,
you better go back to New York where there’s plenty of
it and you raise it."
Well, boy, that was the word that I’d been waiting for.
So I scrammed back to the great city and I began to
approach some people of means describing this tremendous
thing that had happened. And it didn’t seem so
tremendous to the people of means at all.
What? 35 or 40 drunks sober up? They have sobered them
up before now, you know. And besides, Mr. Bill W., don’t
you think it’s kind of sweeping up the shavings? I mean,
wouldn’t this be something for the Red Cross be better?
In
other words, with all of my ardent solicitations, I got
one hell of a freeze from the gentlemen of wealth. Well,
I began to get blue and when I begin to get blue my
stomach kicks up as well as other things.
I
was laying in the bed one night with an imaginary ulcer
attack (this used to happen all the time - I had one the
time the 12 steps were written) and I said, "My God,
we’re starving to death here on Clinton Street." By this
time the house was full of drunks. They were eating us
out of house and home. In those days we never believed
in charging anybody anything - so Lois was earning the
money, I was being the missionary and the drunks were
eating the meals. "This can’t go on. We’ve got to have
those drunk tanks, we’ve got to have those missionaries,
and we’ve got to have a book. That’s for sure."
The next morning I crawled into my clothes and I called
on my brother-in-law. He’s a doctor and he is about the
last person who followed my trip way down. The only one,
save of course, the Lord. "Well," I said, "I’ll go up
and see Leonard."
So
I went up to see my brother-in-law Leonard and he pried
out a little time between patients coming in there. I
started my awful bellyache about these rich guys who
wouldn’t give us any dough for this great and glorious
enterprise. It seemed to me he knew a girl and I think
she had an uncle that somehow tied up with the
Rockefeller offices. I asked him to call and see if
there was such a man and if there was, would he see us.
On what slender threads our destiny sometimes hangs.
So, the call was made. Instantly there came onto the
other end of the wire the voice of dear Willard
Richardson - one of the loveliest Christian gentlemen I
have ever known. And the moment he recognized my
brother-in-law he said, "Why Leonard, where have you
been all these years? "Well, my brother-in-law, unlike
me, is a man of very few words, so he quickly said to
dear old Uncle Willard, he had a brother-in-law who had
apparently some success sobering up drunks and could the
two of us come over there and see him. "Why certainly,"
said dear Willard. "Come right over."
So
we go over to Rockefeller Plaza. We go up that elevator
- 54 flights or 56 I guess it was, and we walk promptly
into Mr. Rockefeller’s personal offices, and ask to see
Mr. Richardson
Here sits this lovely, benign old gentleman, who
nevertheless had a kind of shrewd twinkle in his eye. So
I sat down and told him about our exciting discovery,
this terrific cure for alcoholics that had just hit the
world, how it worked and what we have done for them.
And, boy, this was the first receptive man with money or
access to money—remember we were in Mr. Rockefeller’s
personal offices at this point—and by now, we had
learned that this was Mr. Rockefeller’s closest personal
friend.
So
he said, "I’m very interested. Would you like to have
lunch with me, Mr. Wilson?" Well, now you know, for a
rising promoter, that sounded pretty good - going to
have lunch with the best friends of John D. Things were
looking up. My ulcer attack disappeared. So I had lunch
with the old gentleman and we went over this thing again
and again and, boy, he’s so warm and kindly and
friendly.
Right at the close of the lunch he said, "Well now Mr.
W. or Bill, if I can call you that, wouldn’t you like to
have a luncheon meeting with some of my friends? There’s
Frank Amos, he’s in the advertising business but he was
on a committee that recommended that Mr. Rockefeller
drop the prohibition business. And there’s LeRoy
Chipman, he looks after Mr. Rockefeller's real estate.
And there’s Mr. Scotty, Chairman of the Board of the
Riverside Church and a number of other people like that.
I believe they’d like to hear this story."
So
a meeting was arranged and it fell upon a winter’s night
in 1937. And the meeting was held at 30 Rockefeller
Plaza. We called in, posthaste, a couple of drunks from
Akron - Smithy included, of course - heading the
procession. I came in with the New York contingent of
four or five. And to our astonishment we were ushered
into Mr., Rockefeller’s personal boardroom right next to
his office. I thought to myself "Well, now this is
really getting hot." And indeed I felt very much warmed
when I was told by Mr. Richardson that I was sitting in
a chair just vacated by Mr. Rockefeller. I said "Well,
now, we really are getting close to the bankroll."
Old Doc Silkworth was there that
night too, and he testified what he had seen happen to
these new friends of ours, and each drunk, thinking of
nothing better to say, told their stories of drinking
and recovering and these folk listened.
They seemed very definitely impressed. I could see that
the moment for the big touch was coming. So, I gingerly
brought up the subject of the drunk tanks, the
subsidized missionaries, and the big question of a book
or literature.
Well, God moves in mysterious ways, his wonders to
perform. It didn’t look like a wonder to me when Mr.
Scott, head of a large engineering firm and Chairman of
the Riverside Church, looked at us and said "Gentlemen,
up to this point, this has been the work of goodwill
only. No plan, no property, no paid people, just one
carrying the good news to the next. Isn’t that true? And
may it not be that that is where the great power of this
society lies? Now, if we subsidize it, might it not
alter its’ whole character? We want to do all we can,
we’re gathered for that, but would it be wise?" Well
then, the salesmen all gave Mr. Scott the rush and we
said, "Why, Mr. Scott, there’re only 40 of us. It’s
taken 3 years. Why millions, Mr. Scott, will rot before
this thing ever gets to ‘em unless we have money and
lots of it."
And we made our case at last with these gentlemen for
the missionaries, the drunk tanks and the book. So one
of them volunteered to investigate us very carefully,
and since poor old Dr. Bob was harder up than I was, and
since the first group and the reciprocal community was
in Akron, we directed their attention out there. Frank
Amos, still a trustee in the Foundation, at his own
expense, got on a train, went out to Akron and made all
sorts of preliminary inquiries around town about Dr.
Bob. All the reports were good except that he was a
drunk that recently got sober. He visited the little
meeting out there. He went to Dr. Bob's house and he
came back with what he thought was a very modest
proposal.
He recommended to these friends of
ours that we should have at least a token amount of
money at first, say $50,000, something like that. That
would clear up the mortgage on Dr. Bob’s place. It would
get us a little rehabilitation place. We could put Dr.
Bob in charge. We could subsidize a few of these people
briefly, until we got some more money. We could start
the chain of hospitals. We’d have a few missionaries. We
could get busy on the book, all for a mere $50,000
bucks.
Well, considering the kind of
money we were backed up against, that did sound a little
small, but, you know, one thing leads to another and it
sounded real good.
We
were real glad. Mr. Willard Richardson, our original
contact, then took that report into John D. Jr. as
everybody recalls. And I’ve since heard what went on in
there. Mr. Rockefeller read the report, called Willard
Richardson and thanked him and said: "Somehow I am
strangely stirred by all this. This interests me
immensely." And then looking at his friend Willard, he
said, "But isn’t money going to spoil this thing? I’m
terribly afraid that it would. And yet I am so strangely
stirred by it."
Then came another turning point in our destiny. When
that man whose business is giving away money said to
Willard Richardson, "No," he said, I won’t be the one to
spoil this thing with money. You say these two men who
are heading it are a little ‘stressed’, I’ll put $5,000
dollars in the Riverside Church treasury. Those folks
can form themselves into a committee and draw on it as
they like. I want to hear what goes on. But, please
don’t ask me for any more money."
Well, with 50 thousand that then was shrunk to five, we
paid the mortgage on Smithy’s house for about three
grand. That left two and Dr. Bob and I commenced chewing
on that too. Well, that was a long way from a string of
drunk tanks and books. What in thunder would we do?
Well, we had more meetings with our newfound friends,
Amos, Richardson, Scott, Chipman and those fellows who
stuck with us to this day, some of them now gone.
And, in spite of Mr. Rockefeller’s advice, we again
convinced these folks that this thing needed a lot of
money. What could we do without it? So, one of them
proposed, "Well, why don’t we form a foundation,
something like the Rockefeller Foundation?"
I
said, "I hope it will be like that with respect to
money."
And then one of them got a free lawyer from a firm who
was interested in the thing. And we all asked him to
draw up an agreement of trust, a charter for something
to be called the Alcoholic Foundation. Why we picked
that one, I don’t know. I don’t know whether the
Foundation was alcoholic, it was the Alcoholic
Foundation, not the Alcoholics Foundation.
And the lawyer was very much confused because in the
meeting which formed the Foundation, we made it very
plain that we did not wish to be in the majority. We
felt that there should be non-alcoholics on the board
and they ought to be in a majority of one.
"Well, indeed," said the lawyer, "What is the difference
between an alcoholic and a non-alcoholic?"
And one of our smart drunks said, "That’s a cinch, a
non-alcoholic is a guy who can drink and an alcoholic is
a guy who can’t drink."
"Well," said the lawyer, "how do we state that legally?"
We didn’t know. So at length, we have a foundation and a
board which I think then was about seven, consisting of
four of these new friends, including my brother-in-law,
Mr. Richardson, Chipman, Amos and some of us drunks. I
think Smithy went on the board but I kind of coyly
stayed off it thinking it would be more convenient later
on.
So
we had this wonderful new foundation. These friends,
unlike Mr. Rockefeller, were sold on the idea that we
needed a lot of dough, and so our salesmen around New
York started to solicit some money, again, from the very
rich. We had a list of them and we had credentials from
friends of Mr. John D. Rockefeller. "How could you miss,
I ask you, salesmen?" The Foundation had been formed in
the spring of 1938 and all summer we solicited the rich.
Well, they were either in Florida or they preferred the
Red Cross, or some of them thought that drunks were
disgusting and we didn’t get one damn cent in the whole
summer of 1938, praise God!
Well, meantime, we began to hold trustee meetings and
they were commiseration sessions on getting no dough.
What with the mortgage and with me and Smithy eating
away at it, the five grand had gone up the flu, and we
were all stone broke again.
Smithy couldn’t get his practice back either because he
was a surgeon and nobody likes to be carved up by an
alcoholic surgeon - even if he was three years sober.
So
things were tough all around, no fooling.
Well, what would we do?
One day, probably in August 1938, I produced at a
Foundation meeting, a couple of chapters of a proposed
book along with some recommendations of a couple of
doctors down at John Hopkins to try to put the bite on
the rich. And we still had these two book chapters
kicking around. Frank Amos said, "Well now, I know the
religious editor down there at Harpers, an old friend of
mine, Gene Exman." He said, "Why don’t you take these
two book chapters, your story and the introduction to
the book, down there and show them to Gene and see what
he thinks about them."
So
I took the chapters down. To my great surprise, Gene who
was to become a great friend of ours, looked at the
chapters and said, "Why Mr. W. (Bill), could you write a
whole book like this?"
"Well, I said, "Sure, sure." There was more talk about
it. I guess he went in and showed it to Mr. Canfield,
the big boss, and another meeting was had. The upshot
was that Harpers intimated that they would pay me as the
budding author, 15 hundred in advance royalties,
bringing enough money in to enable me to finish the
book. I felt awful good about that. It made me feel like
I was an author or something. I felt real good about it
but after awhile, not so good.
Because I began to reason, and so did the other boys, if
this guy Bill W. eats up the 15 hundred bucks while he’s
doing this book, after the book gets out, it will take a
long time to catch up. And if this thing gets him
publicity, what are we going to do with the inquiries?
And, after all, what’s a lousy 10% royalty anyway?
The $15 hundred still looked pretty big to me. Then we
thought too, now here’s a fine publisher like Harpers,
but if this book when done, should prove to be the main
textbook for A.A., why would we want our main means of
propagation in the hands of somebody else? Shouldn’t we
control this thing?
At
this point, the book project really began. I had a guy
helping me on this thing who had red hair and ten times
my energy and he was some promoter [Hank P.].
He
said, "Bill, this is something, come on with me."
We
walk into a stationary store, we buy a pad of blank
stock certificates and we write across the top of them
‘Works Publishing Company’- Par Value 25 Dollars.
So
we take the pad of these stock certificates, (of course
we didn’t bother to incorporate it, that didn’t happen
for several more years) we took this pad of stock
certificates to the first A.A. meeting where you
shouldn’t mix money with spirituality.
We
said to the drunks "look, this thing is gonna be a
cinch. Hank P. will take a third of this thing for
services rendered. I, the author will take a third for
services rendered, and you can have a third of these
stock certificates par 25 if you’ll just start paying up
on your stock. If you only want one share, it’s only
five dollars a month, 5 months, see?"
And the drunks all gave us this stony look that said,
"What the hell, you mean to say you’re only asking us to
buy stock in a book that you ain’t written yet?"
"Why sure," we said "If Harpers
will put money in this thing why shouldn’t you? Harpers
said it’s gonna be a good book."
But the drunks still gave us this stony stare. We had to
think up some more arguments. "We’ve been looking at
pricing costs of the books, boys. We get a book here, ya
know, 400 or 450 pages, it ought to sell for about
$3.50."
Now back in those days we found on inquiry from the
printers that that $3.50 book could be printed for 35
cents making a 1,000% profit. Of course, we didn’t
mention the other expenses, just the printing costs. "So
boys, just think on it, when these books move out by the
carload we will be printing them for 35 cents and we’ll
be selling them direct mail for $3.50. How can you
lose?"
The drunks still gave us this stony stare. No salt.
Well, we figured we had to have a better argument than
that. Harpers said it was a good book, you can print
them for 35 cents and sell them for $3.50, but how are
we going to convince the drunks that we could move
carload lots of them? Millions of dollars.
So
we get the idea we’ll go up to the Readers Digest, and
we got an appointment with Mr. Kenneth Paine, the
managing editor there. Gee, I'll never forget the day we
got off the train up at Pleasantville and were ushered
into his office. We excitedly told him the story of this
wonderful budding society. We dwelled upon the
friendship of Mr. Rockefeller and Harry Emerson Fosdick.
You know we were traveling in good company with Pain.
The society, by the way, was about to publish a
textbook, then in the process of being written and we
were wondering, Mr. Paine, if this wouldn’t be a matter
of tremendous interest to the Reader’s Digest? Having in
mind of course that the Reader’s Digest has a
circulation of 12 million readers and if we could only
get a free ad of this coming book in the Digest we
really would move something, ya see?
"Well," Mr. Paine said, "this sounds extremely
interesting, I like this idea, why I think it’ll be an
absolutely ideal piece for the Digest. How soon do you
think this new book will be out Mr. (Bill) W.?" I said,
"We’ve got a couple of chapters written, ahem, if we can
get right at it, Mr. Paine, uh, you know, uh, probably
uh, this being October, we ought to get this thing out
by April or next May.
"Why," Mr. Paine said, "I’m sure the Digest would like a
thing like this. Mr. (Bill) W., I’ll take it up with the
editorial board, and when the time is right and you get
already to shoot, come up and we’ll put a special
feature writer on this thing and we’ll tell all about
your society."
And then my promoter friend said, "But Mr. Paine, will
you mention the new book in the piece?"
"Yes," said Mr. Paine, "we will mention the book."
Well, that was all we needed, we went back to the drunks
and said, "now look, boys, there are positively millions
in this – how can you miss? Harpers says its going to be
a good book. We buy them for 35 cents from the printer,
we sell them for $3.50 and the Reader’s Digest is going
to give us a free ad in its’ piece and boys, those books
will move out by the carload. How can you miss? And
after all, we only need 4 or 5 thousand bucks."
So
we began to sell the shares of Works Publishing, not yet
incorporated, par value $25 and at $5 per month to the
poor people. Some people bought as little as one and one
guy bought 10 shares. We sold a few shares to
non-alcoholics and my promoter friend who was to get
one-third interest was a very important man in this
transaction because he went out and kept collecting the
money from the drunks so that little Ruthie Hock and I
could keep working on the book and Lois could have some
groceries (even though she was still working in that
department store).
So, the preparation started and some more chapters were
done and we went to A.A. meetings in New York with these
chapters in the rough. It wasn’t like
chicken-in-the-rough; the boys didn’t eat those chapters
up at all. I suddenly discovered that I was in this
terrific whirlpool of arguments. I was just the umpire -
I finally had to stipulate:
"Well boys, over here you got the Holly Rollers who say
we need all the good old-fashioned stuff in the book,
and over here you tell me we’ve got to have a
psychological book, and that never cured anybody, and
they didn’t do very much with us in the missions, so I
guess you will have to leave me just to be the umpire.
I’ll scribble out some roughs here and show them to you
and let’s get the comments in."
So
we fought, bled and died our way through one chapter
after another. We sent them out to Akron and they were
peddled around and there were terrific hassles about
what should go in this book and what should not.
Meanwhile, we set drunks up to write their stories or we
had newspaper people to write the stories for them to go
in the back of the book. We had an idea that we’d have a
text and all and then we’d have stories all about the
drunks who were staying sober.
Then came that night when we were up around Chapter 5.
As you know I’d gone on about myself, which was natural
after all. And then the little introductory chapter and
we dealt with the agnostic and we described alcoholism,
but, boy, we finally got to the point where we really
had to say what the book was all about and how this deal
works.
I told you this was a six-step program then. On this
particular evening, I was lying in bed on Clinton Street
wondering what the deuce this next chapter would be
about. The idea came to me, well, we need a definite
statement of concrete principles that these drunks can’t
wiggle out of. Can’t be any wiggling out of this deal at
all. And this six-step program had two big gaps
in-between they’ll wiggle out of. Moreover if this book
goes out to distant readers, they have to have got to
have an absolutely explicit program by which to go.
This was while I was thinking these thoughts, while my
imaginary ulcer was paining me and while I was mad as
hell at these drunks because the money was coming in too
slow. Some had the stock and weren’t paying up. A couple
of guys came in and they gave me a big argument and we
yelled and shouted and I finally went down and laid on
the bed with my ulcer and I said, "poor me."
There was a pad of paper by the bed and I reached for
that and said "you’ve got to break this program up into
small pieces so they can’t wiggle out. So I started
writing, trying to bust it up into little pieces. And
when I got the pieces set down on that piece of yellow
paper, I put numbers on them and was rather agreeably
surprised when it came out to twelve.
I
said, "That’s a good significant figure in Christianity
and mystic lore. "Then I noticed that instead of leaving
the God idea to the last, I’d got it up front but I
didn’t pay much attention to that, it looked pretty
good.
Well, the next meeting comes along; I’d gone on beyond
the steps trying to amplify them in the rest of that
chapter to the meeting and boy, pandemonium broke loose.
"What do you mean by changing the program.. .what about
this, what about that, this thing is overloaded with
God. We don’t like this, you’ve got these guys on their
knees….stand them up!"
A
lot of these drunks are scared to death of being
Godly….let’s take God out of it entirely."
Such were the arguments that we had. Out of that
terrific hassle came the Twelve Steps. That argument
caused the introduction of the phrase which has been a
lifesaver to thousands....it was certainly none of my
doing. I was on the pious side then, you see, still
suffering from this big hot flash of mine.
The idea of "God as you understand Him" came out of that
perfectly ferocious argument and we put that in.
Well, little by little things
ground on, little by little the drunks put in money and
we kept an office open in Newark, which was the office
of a defunct business where I tried to establish my
friend.
The money ran low at times and Ruthie Hock worked for no
pay. We gave her plenty of stock in the Works Publishing
of course. All you had to do is tear it off the pay, par
25 have a week’s salary, dear.
So, we got around to about January 1939. Somebody said
"hadn’t we better test this thing out; hadn’t we better
make a pre-publication copy, a multilith or mimeographed
copy of this text and a few of the personal stories that
had come in - try it out on the preacher, on the doctor,
the Catholic Committee on Publications, psychiatrists,
policemen, fishwives, housewives, drunks, everybody.
Just to see if we’ve got anything that goes against the
grain anyplace and also to find out if we can’t get some
better ideas here?"
So at considerable expense, we got
this pre-publication copy made; we peddled it around and
comments came back, some of them very helpful. It went,
among other places, to the Catholic Committee on
Publications in New York and at that time we had only
one Catholic member to take it there and he had just
gotten out of the asylum and hadn’t had anything to do
with preparing the book.
The book passed inspection and the stories came in.
Somehow we got them edited, somehow we got the galleys
together. We got up to the printing time.
Meanwhile, the drunks had been kind of slow on those
subscription payments and a little further on I was able
to go up to Charlie Towns where old Doc Silkworth held
forth. Charlie believed in us so we put the slug on to
Charlie for $2,500 bucks.
Charlie didn’t want any stocks, he wanted a promissory
note on the book not yet written. So, we got the $2,500
from Charlie routed around through the Alcoholic
Foundation so that it could be tax exempt. Also, we had
blown $6,000 in these 9 months in supporting the 3 of us
in an office and the till was getting low.
We
still had to get this book printed. So, we go up to
Cornwall Press, which is the largest printer in the
world, where we’d made previous inquiries and we asked
about printing and they said they’d be glad to do it and
how many books would we like? We said that was hard to
estimate. Of course our membership is very small at the
present time and we wouldn’t sell many to the membership
but after all, the Readers Digest is going to print a
plug about it to its’ 2 million readers. This book
should go out in carloads when it’s printed.
The printer was none other than dear old Mr. Blackwell,
one of our Christian friends and Mr. Blackwell said "How
much of a down payment are you going to make? How many
books would you like printed?"
"Well," we said "we’ll be conservative, let’s print
5,000 just to start with."
Mr. Blackwell asked us what we were going to use for
money. We said that we wouldn’t need much; just a few
hundred dollars on account would be all right. I told
you, after all, we’re traveling in very good company,
friends of Mr. Rockefeller and all that.
So, Blackwell started printing the 5,000 books; the
plates were made and the galleys were read. Gee, all of
a sudden we thought of the Reader’s Digest, so we go up
to there, walk in on Mr. Kenneth Paine and say "We’re
all ready to shoot."
And Mr. Paine replies "Shoot what - Oh yes, I remember
you two, Mr. (Hank) P. and Mr. (Bill) W. You gentlemen
were here last fall, I told you the Reader’s Digest
would be interested in this new work and in your book.
Well, right after you were here, I consulted our
editorial board and to my great surprise they didn’t
like the idea at all and I forgot to tell you!"
Oh
boy, we had the drunks with $5,000 bucks in it, Charlie
Towns hooked for $2,500 bucks and $2,500 on the cuff
with the printer. There was $500 left in the bank...what
in the duce would we do?
Morgan R., the good-looking Irishman who had taken the
book over to the Catholic Committee on Publication, had
been in an earlier time a good ad man.
He
said that he knew Gabriel Heatter. "Gabriel is putting
on these 3 minute heart to heart programs on the radio.
I’ll get an interview with him and maybe he’ll interview
me on the radio about all this," said Morgan R.
So, our spirits rose once again. Then all of a sudden we
had a big chill, suppose this Irishman got drunk before
Heatter interviewed him? So, we went to see Heatter and
lo and behold, Heatter said he would interview him and
then we got still more scared. So, we rented a room in
the downtown Athletic Club and we put Morgan R. in there
with a day and night guard for ten days.
Meanwhile, our spirits rose again. We could see those
books just going out in carloads. Then my promoter
friend said "Look, there should be a follow-up on a big
thing like this here interview. It’ll be heard all over
the country…national network. I think folks that are the
market for this book are the doctors...the physicians. I
suggest that we pitch the last $500 that we have in the
treasury on a postal card shower, which will go to every
physician east of the Rocky Mountains. On this postal
card we’ll say "Hear all about Alcoholics Anonymous on
Gabriel Heatter’s Program - spend $3.50 for the book
Alcoholics Anonymous, sure-cure for alcoholism."
So, we spent the last $500 on the postal card shower and
mailed them out.
They managed to keep Morgan R. sober although he since
hasn’t made it. All the drunks had their ears glued to
the radio. The group market in Alcoholics Anonymous was
already saturated because you see, we had 49
stockholders and they’d all gotten a book free, then we
had 28 guys with stories and they all got a free book.
So we had run out of the A.A. books. But we could see
the book moving out in carloads to these doctors and
their patients.
Sure enough, Morgan R. is interviewed. Heatter pulled
out the old tremolo stop and we could see the book
orders coming back in carloads.
Well, we just couldn’t wait to go down to old Post
Office Box 658, Church Street Annex, the address printed
in the back of the old books. We hung at it for about
three days and then my friends Hank and Ruthie Hock and
I went over and we looked in Box 658. It wasn’t a locked
box; you just looked through the glass. We could see
that there were a few of these postal cards. I had a
terrible sinking sensation. But my friend the promoter
said "Bill, they can’t put all those cards in the box,
they’ve got bags full of it out there."
We
go to the clerk and he brings out 12 lousy postal cards,
10 of them were completely illegible, written by
doctors, druggists, and monkeys? We had exactly two
orders for the book Alcoholics Anonymous and we were
absolutely and utterly stone-broke.
The Sheriff then moved in on the office, poor Mr.
Blackwell wondered what to do for money and felt like
taking the book over at that very opportune moment, the
house which Lois and I lived in was foreclosed and we
and our furniture were set out on the street. Such was
the state of the book Alcoholics Anonymous and the state
of grace Bill & Lois W. were in the summer of 1939.
Moreover, a great cry went up from the drunks, "What
about our $4,500?" Even Charlie (Towns) who was pretty
well off was a little uneasy about the note for $2,500.
What would we do? What could we do? We put our goods in
storage on the cuff; we couldn’t even pay the drayman.
An A. A. lent us his summer camp, another A.A. lent us
his car, the folks around New York began to pass the hat
for groceries for Bill & Lois W. and supplied us with
$50 per month. So, we had a lot of discontented
stockholders, $50 bucks a month, a summer camp and an
automobile with which to revive the failing fortunes of
the book Alcoholics Anonymous.
We
began to shop around from one magazine to another asking
if they would give us some publicity, nobody bit and it
looked like the whole dump was going to be foreclosed;
book, office, Wilson’s, everything.
One of the boys in New York happened to be a little bit
prosperous at the time and he had a fashionable clothing
business on Fifth Avenue which we learned was mostly on
mortgage, having drunk nearly all of it up. His name was
Bert T. I went up to Bert one day and I said "Bert,
there is a promise of an article in Liberty Magazine, I
just got it today but it won’t come out until next
September. It’s going to be called ‘Alcoholics and God’
and will be printed by Fulton Oursler the editor of
Liberty Magazine. Bert, when that piece is printed,
these books will go out in carload lots. We need $1,000
bucks to get us through the summer."
Bert asked, "Well, are you sure that the article is
going to be printed?"
"Oh yes," I said, "that’s final."
He
said, "O.K., I haven’t got the dough but there’s this
man down in Baltimore, Mr. Cochran, he’s a customer of
mine...he buys his pants in here. Let me call him up."
Bert gets on long-distance with
Mr. Cochran in Baltimore, a very wealthy man, and says
to him "Mr. Cochran, from time to time I mentioned this
alcoholic fellowship to which I belong. Our fellowship
has just come out with a magnificent new textbook.. .a
sure cure for alcoholism... .Mr. Cochran, this is
something we think every public library in America
should have, and Mr. Cochran, the retail price of the
book is $2.50. Mr. Cochran, if you’ll just buy a couple
of thousand of those books and put them in the large
libraries, of course we would sell them for that purpose
at a considerable discount."
Mr. Cochran, some publicity will come out next fall
about this new book Alcoholics Anonymous, but in the
meantime, these books are moving slowly and we need,
say, $1,000 to tide us over. Would you loan the Works
Publishing Company this?"
Mr. Cochran asked what the balance sheet of the Works
Publishing Company looked like and after he learned what
it looked like he said "no thanks."
So
Bert then said, "Now Mr. Cochran, you know me. Would you
loan the money to me on the credit of my business?"
"Why certainly," Mr. Cochran said, "send me down your
note." So Bert hocked the business that a year or two
later was to go broke anyway and saved the book
Alcoholics Anonymous. The thousand dollars lasted until
the Liberty article came out.
Eight hundred inquiries came in as a result of that, we
moved a few books and we barely squeaked through the
year 1939. In all this period we heard nothing from John
D. Rockefeller when all of a sudden, in about February,
1940, Mr. Richardson came to a trustees meeting of the
Foundation and announced that he had great news.
We
were told that Mr. Rockefeller, whom we had not heard
from since 1937, had been watching us all this time with
immense interest. Moreover, Mr. Rockefeller wanted to
give this fellowship a dinner to which he would invite
his friends to see the beginnings of this new and
promising start.
Mr. Richardson produced the invitation list. Listed were
the President of Chase Bank, Wendell Wilkie, and all
kinds of very prominent people, many of them extremely
rich. I mean, after a quick look at the list I figured
it would add up to a couple of billion dollars. So, we
felt maybe at least, you know, there would be some money
in sight. So, the dinner came, and we got Harry Emerson
Fosdick who had reviewed the A.A. book and he gave us a
wonderful plug. Dr. Kennedy came and spoke on the
medical attitudes. He’d seen a patient of his, a very
hopeless gal, Marty M., recover. I got up, talked about
life among the "anonymie," and the bankers assembled 75
strong and in great wealth, sat at the tables with the
alcoholics.
The bankers had come probably for some sort of command
performance and they were a little suspicious that
perhaps this was another prohibition deal, but they
warmed up under the influence of the alcoholics.
Mr. (Morgan) R., the hero of the Heatter episode and
still sober, was asked at his table by a distinguished
banker, "Why, Mr. (Morgan) R., we presumed you were in
the banking business."
Morgan R. says, "not at all sir, I just got out of Great
Stone Asylum."
Well, that intrigued the bankers and they were all
warming up. Unfortunately, Mr. Rockefeller couldn’t get
to the dinner. He was quite sick that night so he sent
his son, a wonderful gent, Nelson Rockefeller, in his
place instead.
After the show was over and everyone was in fine form,
we were all ready again for the big touch. Nelson
Rockefeller got up and speaking for his father said, "My
father sends word that he is so sorry that he cannot be
here tonight, but is so glad that so many of his friends
can see the beginnings of this great and wonderful
thing. Something that affected his life more than almost
anything that had crossed his path."
A
stupendous plug that was! Then Nelson said, "Gentlemen,
this is a work that proceeds on good will. It requires
no money." Whereupon, the 2 billion dollars got up and
walked out. That was a terrific letdown, but we weren’t
let down for too long.
Again, the hand of Providence had intervened. Right
after dinner, Mr. Rockefeller asked that the talks and
pamphlets be published.
He
approached the rather defunct Works Publishing Company
and said he would like to buy 400 books to send to all
of the bankers who had come to the dinner and to those
who had not.
Seeing that this was for a good purpose, we let him have
the books cheap. He bought them cheaper than anybody has
since. We sold 400 books to John D. Rockefeller Jr. for
one buck apiece to send to his banker friends. He sent
out the books and pamphlets and with it, he wrote a
personal letter and signed every dog gone one of them.
In
this letter he stated how glad he was that his friends
had been able to see the great beginning of what he
thought would be a wonderful thing, how deeply it had
affected him and then he added (unfortunately)
"gentlemen, this is a work of goodwill. It needs little,
if any, money. I am giving these good people $1,000."
So, the bankers all received Mr. Rockefeller’s letter
and counted it up on the cuff. Well, if John D. is
giving $1,000, me with only a few million should send
these boys about $10! One who had an alcoholic relative
in tow sent us $300. So, with Mr. Rockefeller’s $1,000
plus the solicitation of all the rest of these bankers,
we got together the princely sum of $3,000 which was the
first outside contribution of the Alcoholic Foundation.
The
$3,000 was divided equally between Smithy and me so that
we could keep going somehow. We solicited that dinner
list for 5 years and got about $3,000 a year for 5
years.
At
the end of that time, we were able to say to Mr.
Rockefeller, "We don’t need any more money. The book
income is helping to support our office, the groups are
contributing to fill in and the royalties are taking
care of Dr. Bob and Bill W."
Now you see Mr. Rockefeller’s decision not to give us
money was a blessing. He gave of himself. He gave of
himself when he was under public ridicule for his views
about alcohol. He said to the whole world "this is
good." The story went out on the wires all over the
world. People ran into the bookstores to get the new
book and boy, we really began to get some book orders.
An awful lot of inquiries came into the little office at
Vessy Street. The book money began to pay Ruth.
We
hired one more to help. There was Ruthie, another gal
and me. And then came Jack Alexander with his terrific
article in the Saturday Evening Post. Then an immense
lot of inquiries.... 6,000 or 7,000 of them. Alcoholics
Anonymous had become a national institution.
Such is the story of the preparation of the book
Alcoholics Anonymous and of its subsequent effect, you
all have some notion. The proceeds of that book have
repeatedly saved the office in New York. But, it isn’t
the money that has come out of it that matters, it is
the message that it carried. That transcended the
mountains and the sea and is even at this moment, is
lighting candles in dark caverns and on distant beaches.
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