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Lois Burnham W.: Bill W.'s Wife
"I believe that people are good if you give them half a
chance and that good is more powerful than evil. The
world seems to me excruciatingly, almost painfully
beautiful at times, and the goodness and kindness of
people often exceed that which even I expect." -Lois
Burnham W.
Lois Burnham, the co-founder of The Al-Anon Family
Groups, was born on March 4, 1891 at 182 Clinton Street,
Brooklyn Heights, New York. Brooklyn Heights at that
time was in character much the same that it is today,
one of the most lovely areas in the Greater New York
area and a desirable place to live.
Her father, Clark Burnham, was a gynecologist and
surgeon, and Matilda Spellman, her mother, a young woman
of refinement. Dr. Burnham brought his bride to the
fashionable brick-front row house upon their marriage in
1888. Dr. Burnham had been renting part of the house as
offices but leased the entire five-floor house upon his
marriage.
Lois was the first of the Burnham's children. A
daughter, Matilda, would died in infancy leaving three
girls -- Lois, Barbara and Katherine -- and two boys,
Rogers and Lyman. In her memoir, Lois Remembers,
published by Al-Anon, Lois recalls her childhood as
"idyllic", and it seems that this is an accurate
assessment.
Lois' parents were different from parents in the
Victoria era in that they were affectionately
demonstrative with each other in front of the children.
These open displays of affection were rare in those days
and attest to the deep love the two had for each other
and that it was regarded as natural and good. Indeed, in
many photos of the two, even into old age, the couple
seem engaged with each other and truly enjoying each
other's company.
The Burnham household seems to have embodied so
many wonderful elements. The children were respected and
deeply loved by their parents and were brought up to be
loving and thoughtful towards others. They were given
excellent educations and all sent to college. Lois was a
graduate of The Packer Collegiate Institute in Brooklyn.
All the children went to Pratt Institute in Brooklyn
which was one of the first schools to have a new type of
preschool started in Germany called "kindergarten".
Later, they were enrolled in the Quaker's Friends
School.
Lois' primary interests were mostly artistic. She
would later become interested in interior decoration,
but also showed interest in fine art. After graduating
from Packer Institute, she took drawing classes at the
New York School of Fine and Applied Art.
Lois' memories of childhood are a rich pastiche of
the best of the turn-of-the-century family life and
infused with stories of warm gatherings with her
relatives, admiration for her intelligent and artistic
mother and her energetic and confident father. Most of
all, she remembers how loving and warm her parents were
and how much she wanted to one day have a home like the
one from which she came.
The Burnhams taught their children to be
thoughtful and caring of others and to be of use in the
world. The impressions of her home life are ones of
excitement and lots of fun. Lois was particularly
adventuresome and cared little for how she looked and
was often referred to as a "tomboy."
This aspect of her personality was given its
fullest expression during the Burnhams long sojourns in
southern Vermont. Each year, the family spent half a
year in the Manchester, Vermont area where Dr. Burnham's
New York patients also spent long periods. Her parents
were fully part of the upper-class social life there and
were friends with many well-known people of the day,
including Abraham Lincoln's son whose children were
among the younger Burnham's playmates.
One of the children the Burnham's played with,
especially Rogers, was a boy who came each summer with
his prominent family from Albany, New York. His name was
Edwin or "Ebby" T. who would also become a close friend
of Lois' future husband, Bill W., and be instrumental in
Bill's getting sober.
Rogers also found a pal in Bill W., and in 1913
introduced him to his sister. Lois was over four years
older than Bill, and being 22 at the time, did not
regard him as anything other than her brother's friend.
But as the summers went on, she and Bill more and more
found many common interests and gradually fell in love.
They were both intelligent, athletic and fun-loving.
Lois encouraged Bill at his studies and thought him to
be a most remarkable young man. Her family shared this
assessment. And so, in 1915, the couple became secretly
engaged and married on January 24, 1918, just days
before young officer Bill W. shipped off to Europe in
the First World War.
When Lois married Bill, she wed an upstanding
young man of good character filled with exciting ideas
about his future. What Lois did not marry was a drinker.
On the contrary, Bill has a disdain for liquor partly
because he believed it had played a part in his parents
separation and divorce. It was a great shock to Lois
some months later when, visiting her husband at his New
Bedford, Massachusetts station, his soldier friends told
her about Bill getting so drunk one night they had to
carry him back to barracks. Lois could not believe they
were speaking of her husband.
Bill shipped off to England, and Lois found work
as an occupational therapist. As an educated woman, Lois
believed in being independent and making her own living.
She worked at the YWCA and was promoted several times
within the organization leaving in 1917 to assist in a
school her aunt had established in Short Hills, New
Jersey. She left that position to marry Bill.
When Bill returned from the war, Lois hoped to
start the family she always wanted. However, a series of
miscarriages made childbearing impossible. This was a
devastation for her. All Lois wanted out of life was a
family and a home. Now she would not have the family.
She and Bill tried to adopt, but they were unsuccessful.
She later found out why - agencies performing routine
background checks would eventually be told about Bill.
Stories about his drinking would surface and be enough
to make adoption impossible as well.
Bill's drinking alarmed Lois very much. At first,
she tried not to be concerned, but his drinking
progressed during the early years of marriage to the
point where he would see all his ambitions dashed and
his wonderful opportunities for employment and
advancement shattered. He became a broken man who
eventually had to seek refuge with his wife in the house
of his in-laws.
Lois employed many tactics over the years to help
Bill get sober. She really thought she would be able to
help him stop drinking. She would realize later how
futile this was. Bill did stop in 1934, but it was not
due to the efforts of his wife.
In 1939, Bill and Lois were forced to leave the
Burnham's house. Her father and mother had died, and
Bill and Lois could not afford to go anywhere except to
the homes of various friends which they did for the
following two years. Over the years, Lois had been the
breadwinner bringing in a modest income from her work in
department stores as a decorator and also from her
consultations with private clients. While working at
Macy's she wrote an article on veneered furniture that
was published by the popular House and Garden magazine.
Living as Lois once wrote "from pillar to post"
was difficult for Lois. Not having children was a deep
loss, and now, not to have a home was quite painful. She
did her best and maintained her dignity throughout the
ordeal but sometimes despaired that they might be
homeless for a very long time.
But in 1941 an extraordinary thing happened. A
generous offer was made by an acquaintance for Bill and
Lois W. to purchase a home in Westchester County. Due to
this magnanimous gesture, Bill and Lois moved into their
first and only real home -- Stepping Stones in Bedford
Hills, New York. It took them 23 years, but they finally
had a home of their own.
In 1951, Lois followed the suggestion made by her
husband who had crafted the 12 steps of recovery in
Alcoholics Anonymous to create a similar 12-step program
for the family and friends of alcoholics. In truth,
there had been several family groups around the country
that Bill had become aware of and Anne S., wife of AA
co-founder Dr. Bob, had been involved in working with
wives and families from the very first.
Bill thought the groups could be consolidated and
that Lois be the one to take it on. (Anne S. had died in
1949.) Lois was reluctant, not because she did not
recognize the need, but because she was 60 and wanted to
enjoy life at Stepping Stones tending her garden and
involving herself in artistic projects. Lois' strong
sense of service prevailed, and at the end of the 1951
AA General Service Conference, she gathered the
delegates' wives and local family groups members at
Stepping Stones to discuss going forward with a formal
organization.
Working from Lois' upstairs desk at Stepping
Stones, Lois and Anne B., a nearby friend whose husband
was in AA, wrote to 87 non-alcoholics who had written to
AA asking for information about alcoholism. The letters
had come from the U.S., Canada, Ireland, Australia and
South Africa. Forty-eight people wrote back and
eventually the organization known as the Al-Anon Family
Groups was formed. It now has over 29,000 groups
worldwide and a membership of over 387,000.
Lois W. died on October 6, 1988 at 97 years old.
She was present and energetic throughout her latter
years and enjoyed good health for most of them. She
wanted to live to be 100 and almost did.
Lois was one of the 20th century's most important
women. Her life has been somewhat overshadowed by that
of her husband, but, in recent years, she has emerged
more visible than before for her unique contribution to
humanity. It is through her tireless efforts and vision
that Al-Anon is the strong organization it is today and
why it continues to attract members through its message
of hope and renewal.
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