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Re: Is this still available

 

I couldnt get that work. ?But I tried again and finally figured out I had to click Go in my keyboard. ?When I clicked ?Proceed to checkout nothing would happen. ?Weird but I got it. ?Thanks Thom you are amazing!?

[Moderator edit: You are welcome! I even ordered one also haha! -Thom]

On Aug 19, 2020, at 12:36 PM, Gene <califxr650l@...> wrote:

I cant find it online!?
?

--
Eugene Lane
Redondo Bch Ca

[Moderator edit: There is an "Add to Cart" option to purchase it right there on the page you linked to, friend. -Thom]

--
Eugene Lane
Redondo Bch Ca


Is this still available

 

I cant find it online!?
?

--
Eugene Lane
Redondo Bch Ca

[Moderator edit: There is an "Add to Cart" option to purchase it right there on the page you linked to, friend. -Thom]


What is the origin of "The 'principles' behind the Steps?

 

Hello.

I am going to try this again. I can't find any historical information as to the genesis of the "principles" commonly studied and used in AA.

My reading of the BB and other literature leads me to think that the Steps and the Traditions ARE THE PRINCIPLES. So who "invented" the various versions of the principles. e.g.?
image.png
?

The Cleveland site says:?The office was recently contacted by a long-timer who pointed out that the following article provides a list of spiritual?virtues?(not principles) that originated from a plaque which was sold years ago and may originally came from a Grapevine article or other AA newsletter. It is known in the rooms of AA that the spiritual principles are the Twelve Steps. To be thorough, the 36 principles are the?,??and?.

There are many different spiritual virtue lists that refer to the Twelve Steps which have been printed by other AA¡¯s over the years. Although used by many AA members, they are not Conference Approved and the origin of these lists are unknown.

Bill W. considered each step to be a spiritual principle in and of itself.?"

TIA

Jim??


The Empty Jug, July 1946

 

I am searching for anyone that has a copy of the July 1946 issue of an AA newspaper that was published out of Chattanooga, Tennessee with the name of The Empty Jug. The editor of the newspaper was Carl Knoedler, who unfortunately passed away a few weeks after this issue of the newspaper was published. Apparently the editor desired to seek controversy and this issue fulfilled that objective with a variety of possible outside issues.

If you do have a copy, I will gladly pay any expenses related to providing me a copy. There were supposed to be around 600 subscribers to the newspaper at the time in 44 States, Canada, and Mexico.

Thank you in advance.

Gary Neidhardt
Lilburn, GA?
770-364-4044


The Names of 75 Failures

 

Bill Wilson addressed the State of New York Neurology and Psychiatry Annual Meeting in May of 1944. In his talk, he mentioned ¡°75 Failures:¡±

¡°The speaker recalls seventy-five failures during the first three years of A.A. ¨C people we utterly gave up. During the past seven years sixty-two of these cases have returned to us, most of them now making good.¡± (p. 36 of Three Talks to Medical Societies).

AAHL Message 27 written in 2002 (from either Nancy Olsen or Jim Blair or both) documents Bill Wilson using updated numbers on the 75 Failures in 1950:

¡°About two thousand recoveries now take place each month. Of those alcoholics who wish to get well and are emotionally capable of trying our method, 50 per cent recover immediately, 25 per cent after a few backslides. The remainder are improved if they continue active in A.A. Of the total who approach us, it is probable that only 25 per cent become A.A. members on the first contact. A list of seventy-five of our early failures today discloses that 70 returned to A.A. after one to ten years. We did not bring them back; they came of their own accord. (N.Y. State J. Med., Vol.50, July 1950)¡±

Margaret ¡°Bobbie¡± Burger wrote the following in May of 1945:

¡°Take Bill¡¯s experience: he and Lois, his wife, two years ago made a list of their first 75 failures, men they had worked with for months and some for over a year. These 75 all left AA and went on drinking. Bill and Lois were forced to consider them lost. Today 65 of those 75 are now AA members in good standing, some having come in as much as 3 or 4, 5 and even 8 years after their first contact with AA. All this seems to prove that once a man is inoculated he is never the same again and when he finally reaches that day of complete despair he will turn to AA as a last resort. On Bill¡¯s trip to the coast two years ago he met 5 of these 75 ¡°failures¡±, 3 of them had founded new groups.¡±

I find Bobbie¡¯s paragraph to be particularly fascinating. One would think that in the first three years of Bill being recovered, almost all his personal failures would have been in New York ¨C and many, if not the majority, of them would have been at Towns Hospital. I find it almost incredible that Bill would have encountered five Californians on his west coast trip that began on October 24, 1943 that ran until roughly January 20, 1944.

Has anyone ever seen the list of names of the 75 Failures? I have asked Stepping Stones already, but I thought it might be worthy to ask AA History Lovers also. The period of December 18, 1934 until early May of 1935, when Bill seemed to get nobody sober, may not have been so futile after all. If the records of Towns Hospital could ever be located, and then matched with the names of these 75 failures, we might find that Bill¡¯s efforts during his first five months of his sobriety weren¡¯t so futile after all.

Gary Neidhardt
Lilburn, GA


Re: Stock certificate question

 

Oh, one final thing, this certificate was issued in 1940 by Works Publishing.
--
Jacob S.
KIS1935


Re: Stock certificate question

 

Interesting questions. During extensive research when I was the Archivist for District 1, Area 4 in NW Arkansas I found the original Stock Certificate #32.?

First, Robert Furlong was a gentleman who lived in Springfield, MA and ran a stationary store with his wife. He started the first AA meeting, in one of the rooms, in that store. He and Bill W. corresponded frequently and there is a, still unpublished letter that GSO Archives has, where Bill W. wrote to one Mr. Robert A. Furlong. In the letter Bill tells Mr. Furlong that he and Lois cannot visit. He does, however, give an invitation that he and his wife are welcome to visit he and Lois in New York at their Clinton Street address.

Secondly, Mr. Furlong's letter also mentioned his concern about why there were so few alcoholics who were attending the meetings that were held in his stationary store. This letter is dated July 15, 1938 and displayed the address as 132 Clinton Street in Brooklyn, NY.

Because the letter has not been published I can only show a portion of this document that I found most inspiring. Bill writes, "These men, as a class, remind me of a forest through which a great fire has swept. All of the trees are charred on the outside and there appears to be no worthwhile timber left, but a good part of the trees were once strong and the wood was straight-grained. We have discovered, in our work, that if these were not too badly charred, they make great timber; even better because of their seasoning in the fire."

As an aside, I selected only this portion because my wife and I had just visited the "survivor tree' at the World Trade Center in NYC not 3 hours before we went to GSO Archives.?

I hope that you find this information helpful.

--
Jacob S.
KIS1935


Re: Stock certificate question

 

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According hindsfoot Jim was probably not Roland Furlong. His storey in the book and Jim dont match at all.?


On Aug 5, 2020, at 8:22 PM, Bob S <rstonebraker212@...> wrote:

?

?

<image001.jpg>

?

Matt,

?

Question One: ¡°If you enlarge this graphic you will notice it was sold to ¡°Robert E. Furlong.¡± ?Well, there was a ¡°Ralph Furlong¡± who got sober June 6, 1938. I wonder whether ¡°Robert¡± and ¡°Ralph¡± ?were the same person who wrote ¡°Another Prodigal Story,¡± which appears in the first edition of the BB only.? (p. 357)?¡±

?

Question Two: What is the significance of ?the written large hand written word: CANCELED?

?

Question Three: Does the 1940 date at the lower right hand corner indicate that the stock receipt had been redeemed at that time??

?

Commentary:

?

The following is copied from AA Trivia, by Gary N. :

?

¡°According to the web site, barefootsworld.net/aa-bbtrivia.html, they were real people. ¡°Jim the Car Salesman,¡± mentioned on page 35, is attributed to be the story of Ralph Furlong, who got sober through meeting Bill Wilson. Ralph¡¯s story is titled ¡°Another Prodigal Story¡± which appears on page 357 of the First Edition. However, Jim the car salesman puts whiskey into his milk when he stops for a sandwich. Ralph¡¯s story has him practicing ¡°a little controlled drinking¡±: he takes a quick drink at noon ¡°and cover[s] it up with a milk shake. To be doubly sure, [he¡¯d] have ice cream put into the milk shake.¡± (In New England, a milk shake is literally milk shaken in a blender without ice cream). There is no mention in the First Edition story of him being a car salesman or formerly owning the business in which he¡¯s now an employee.¡±

?

I also noticed Ruth Hock¡¯s signature at the Bottom.

?

Thank you!

?

Bob

?

?


--
Bob S
<Big Book stock receipt.jpg>

--
Eugene Lane
Redondo Bch Ca


Stock certificate question

 

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?

A picture containing rug

Description automatically generated

?

Matt,

?

Question One: ¡°If you enlarge this graphic you will notice it was sold to ¡°Robert E. Furlong.¡± ?Well, there was a ¡°Ralph Furlong¡± who got sober June 6, 1938. I wonder whether ¡°Robert¡± and ¡°Ralph¡± ?were the same person who wrote ¡°Another Prodigal Story,¡± which appears in the first edition of the BB only.? (p. 357)?¡±

?

Question Two: What is the significance of ?the written large hand written word: CANCELED?

?

Question Three: Does the 1940 date at the lower right hand corner indicate that the stock receipt had been redeemed at that time??

?

Commentary:

?

The following is copied from AA Trivia, by Gary N. :

?

¡°According to the web site, barefootsworld.net/aa-bbtrivia.html, they were real people. ¡°Jim the Car Salesman,¡± mentioned on page 35, is attributed to be the story of Ralph Furlong, who got sober through meeting Bill Wilson. Ralph¡¯s story is titled ¡°Another Prodigal Story¡± which appears on page 357 of the First Edition. However, Jim the car salesman puts whiskey into his milk when he stops for a sandwich. Ralph¡¯s story has him practicing ¡°a little controlled drinking¡±: he takes a quick drink at noon ¡°and cover[s] it up with a milk shake. To be doubly sure, [he¡¯d] have ice cream put into the milk shake.¡± (In New England, a milk shake is literally milk shaken in a blender without ice cream). There is no mention in the First Edition story of him being a car salesman or formerly owning the business in which he¡¯s now an employee.¡±

?

I also noticed Ruth Hock¡¯s signature at the Bottom.

?

Thank you!

?

Bob

?

?


--
Bob S


Re: Non capitalized pronouns in 7th Step prayer

 

Hahaha. Seem like we have closed the circle. I asked the question here on AAHL?
Let's see if there is an answer somewhere?

Jim

On Wed, Aug 5, 2020, 11:23 <jimpolizzi@...> wrote:
Greetings from area 44, Northern New Jersey.

A member emailed our Archives Committee with a question regarding the 7th Step prayer. He noted that in? other places in our basic text, references to God are capitalized, and asked why they are not capitalized in the seventh Step prayer. Does anybody have any understanding as to why this is?

Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Thank you all for helping God keep me sober!



Jim Polizzi
Area 44 Archives Chair
862-266-0112


Non capitalized pronouns in 7th Step prayer

 

Greetings from area 44, Northern New Jersey.

A member emailed our Archives Committee with a question regarding the 7th Step prayer. He noted that in? other places in our basic text, references to God are capitalized, and asked why they are not capitalized in the seventh Step prayer. Does anybody have any understanding as to why this is?

Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Thank you all for helping God keep me sober!



Jim Polizzi
Area 44 Archives Chair
862-266-0112


Re: 68 years sober

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Here in Calgary Old Jim has been sober since 1957?

Sent from Mike¡¯s pocket computer?

On Aug 4, 2020, at 12:15 PM, tgifcreations@... wrote:

?Who has the longest sobriety in AA? Liz must be close to the top. Our oldest in VA is a man who has? 61 years.and will have 62 in December.


Re: 68 years sober

 

Who has the longest sobriety in AA? Liz must be close to the top. Our oldest in VA is a man who has? 61 years.and will have 62 in December.


Re: 68 years sober

 
Edited

Liz is incredible. Just saw her speak again on Saturday. :)

She has a heart of gold. I can't say enough about her.


68 years sober

 

Good morning.

Do we know of other living AAs with this much or more sobriety time??

Date of sobriety:?July 11, 1952?, in NYC, at age 31--One of the first black women in AA (the first was Jimmy Miller, from South Bend, Indiana)

¡°If I have reached just one person, then I have not lived in vain.?My life has been so rewarding. ¡±?~ Liz.?B

image.png


Re: Hey all! We are speaking! (Speaker flyer thread for AAHL members) #zoom

 

Thanks!




On Friday, July 31, 2020, 12:06 AM, Thom R. <thomr021092@...> wrote:

I'm speaking tomorrow, meaning Friday, at 8 p.m. Pacific in Vancouver Canada vis ZOOM.

I'm also dedicating this thread for any member of this group to do the same, meaning share flyers or information about speaking engagements that you may have that maybe some of us can come in at end. Also if you know of any really cool events coming up that are a history related then also please post them in this thread. Thank you! I'm going to Sticky it as well.

- Thom R.
Your AAHL Moderator


Hey all! We are speaking! (Speaker flyer thread for AAHL members) #zoom

 
Edited

I'm dedicating this thread for any member of this group who is speaking at an AA meeting, especially on Zoom (or similar) to be able to share their flyer or information so that hopefully other AAHL members (or myself), can come and support you. It can be a history talk or any other kind of talk in this case. The idea is for us to be able to hear each other's stories and shares and to get to know each other better. ?Also, if you know of any really cool events coming up (online or not) that are AA history related then also please post them in this thread

Thank you!

This thread will remain sticky, as well.

- Thom R.
Your AAHL Moderator


File /Site Mirrors/hindsfoot.org.zip uploaded #file-notice

[email protected] Notification
 

The following files have been uploaded to the Files area of the [email protected] group.

By: Thom R.

Description:
hindsfoot.org - the web site of Glenn F. Chesnut, as it was mirrored by Thom R. on 07-29-20. We're storing it here for safekeeping just in case the original domain is taken offline.


Re: AA San Diego 1995 - 25 years ago TODAY

 

Thanks Barry Out on the west coast members were not aware of this I have a bunch will have to start giving them out John

-----Original Message-----
From: Barry Murtaugh
Sent: Jul 28, 2020 8:24 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AAHistoryLovers] AA San Diego 1995 - 25 years ago TODAY



Best Regards,
Barry Murtaugh
773.851.2100
Sure?
Reminder of the nickel Bill found in his pocket?to make the phone call to Tunks.?
I have been given a few over the years ?at AA retreats. Usually a Buffalo nickel in a sleeve from a dealer. I gift them to other AA guys I meet at meetings when I¡¯m out of town and I put my phone number on it if they ever want to call and chat.
bear

On Tue, Jul 28, 2020 at 9:08 PM John Schram <lasenby327@...> wrote:
Evening Has anyone heard of tradition of giving a 1935 Nickel to a Newcomer at their first meeting Thanks John

-----Original Message-----
From: "Thom R."
Sent: Jun 29, 2020 3:07 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Special] [AAHistoryLovers] AA San Diego 1995 - 25 years ago TODAY

Today is the 25th anniversary of the beginning of the International Alcoholics Anonymous convention in San Diego, California. It ran from June 29th to July 2nd, 1995.

Watch this space I'm going to be making an announcement later today and I have something very special to share with all of you. ?

If anyone reading this already knows what it is please don't spoil it, I'd like it to be a bit of a surprise.

Meanwhile if anyone has any experiences or anything at all pertaining to this convention that they'd like to share, please use this thread to do just that.

Best,?

Thom





--
Best Regards,
J.Barry Murtaugh

Court Maroon, Ltd.
773-851-2100




Re: AA San Diego 1995 - 25 years ago TODAY

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý



Best Regards,
Barry Murtaugh
773.851.2100
Sure?
Reminder of the nickel Bill found in his pocket?to make the phone call to Tunks.?
I have been given a few over the years ?at AA retreats. Usually a Buffalo nickel in a sleeve from a dealer. I gift them to other AA guys I meet at meetings when I¡¯m out of town and I put my phone number on it if they ever want to call and chat.
bear

On Tue, Jul 28, 2020 at 9:08 PM John Schram <lasenby327@...> wrote:
Evening Has anyone heard of tradition of giving a 1935 Nickel to a Newcomer at their first meeting Thanks John

-----Original Message-----
From: "Thom R."
Sent: Jun 29, 2020 3:07 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Special] [AAHistoryLovers] AA San Diego 1995 - 25 years ago TODAY

Today is the 25th anniversary of the beginning of the International Alcoholics Anonymous convention in San Diego, California. It ran from June 29th to July 2nd, 1995.

Watch this space I'm going to be making an announcement later today and I have something very special to share with all of you. ?

If anyone reading this already knows what it is please don't spoil it, I'd like it to be a bit of a surprise.

Meanwhile if anyone has any experiences or anything at all pertaining to this convention that they'd like to share, please use this thread to do just that.

Best,?

Thom





--
Best Regards,
J.Barry Murtaugh

Court Maroon, Ltd.
773-851-2100