
Many of us have wondered how and why did Bill W create the AA program. Below are the various events that took place in the years from 1908 to 1935, know as the Oxford Group Remember, this happened years before Bill and Dr. Bob got together.
This information has been copied from the Silkworth website which prides it's self in the remembrance and history of Alcoholics Anonymous.
This is an assemblage of facts gleaned from the following publications:
Alcoholics
Anonymous
AA Comes of Age
Pass It On
Dr. Bob and the Good Old Timers
Not God (by Ernest
Kurtz)
For Sinners Only (by
A.J. Russell)
On the Tail of a Comet (by
Garth Lean)
Akron Genesis of Alcoholics Anonymous (by
Dick B.)
The Oxford Group & Alcoholics Anonymous (by
Dick B.)
Who were these people? Frank Buchman--Sam Shoemaker--Rowland H.--Jim N.--Eleanor F.--Ebby T.--Shepard C.--Henrietta Seiberling--Rev. Walter Tunks--Norman S.--Russell Firestone--T. Henry & Clarace Williams?? If it were not for these people, that infamous meeting could never have taken place, and the fellowship to which we all owe our lives today might never have been born.
In
AA Comes of Age, (p.39) Bill W wrote:
"Early AA got it's ideas of self-examination, acknowledgement of character defects, restitution for harm done, and working with others straight from the Oxford Groups and directly from Sam Shoemaker, their former leader in America, and nowhere else."

Who were the Oxford Group
(2)? In 1908, a YMCA secretary named Frank
Buchman had a spiritual transformation that changed his life
(3). Upon graduating in June of that year, he
started a street side church in Philadelphia (Church of the Good Shepherd) with
a donation of seventeen dollars. The church flourished, and he started a hospice
for young men which spread to other cities, and then he started a settlement
house project. Frank had a violent argument with his trustee committee because
they cut the budget and the food allotment. He resigned and went to Europe,
ending up at a large religious convention in Keswick, England. The spiritual
transformation occurred when he heard a woman speaker talk simply about the
cross of Christ. He felt the chasm separating him from Christ, and a feeling of
a will to surrender. He went back to his house and wrote these words to each of
his six trustees in Philadelphia: "My dear friend. I have nursed ill feelings
against you. I am sorry. Will you forgive me? Sincerely, Frank." Feeling an urge
to share this experience, he went to nearby Oxford University and formed an
evangelical group there among the student leaders and athletes.
Later the movement spread, and groups formed over
the next twenty years in England, Scotland, Holland, India, South Africa, China,
Egypt, Switzerland, and North and South America. Many of the basic things they
did have carried over directly into our program. They practiced absolute
surrender, guidance by the Holy Spirit, sharing bringing about true fellowship,
life changing, faith and prayer. They aimed for absolute standards of Love,
Purity, Honesty, and Unselfishness, which were an integral part of the first AA
programs in Akron and Cleveland and New York. Above all the group was a
fellowship: "A First Century Christian Fellowship." They carried the message
aggressively to others. They met in churches, universities, and homes.
The Oxford Group and their principles were carried
to the United States so that in both New York City and Akron, Ohio an Oxford
Group was in place and functioning when Bill W. and Dr. Bob S. hit their
respective bottoms. These two groups would befriend and teach their principles
to our co-founders before they ever met, and then go on to host the fledgling
groups of newly dry and nameless drunks as they came together.
Here is how the Oxford Group came to the United
States. One early member at Oxford, Ken Twitchell, had attended Princeton
University and had a brother in New York City who was a mainstay in the Calvary
Episcopal Church. This becomes one of several amazing coincidences. In 1918
during his travels, Frank Buchman met a young YMCA worker, Sam Shoemaker, in
China and converted him to the Oxford Group principles. Years later, Sam became
the minister of that Calvary Church in New York, and that same church became the
titular headquarters for the Oxford Group in the United States. (The name was
changed in 1928 from "A First Century Christian Fellowship" to the "Oxford
Group.")
The groups' popularity peaked during this period.
There were 10,000 people at one meeting at Stockbridge in the Berkshire
Mountains. Business teams began to have their "house parties" in various cities
(4).
In 1931 in England, a London newspaper editor, A. J. Russell, attended an Oxford
Group meeting with the intention of exposing the group. But he wrote, "I came as
an observer and became a convert!" (Russell later edited "God Calling", which
may have found it's way into material used by the early AAs.) Some 9 years
later, in 1940, Richmond W. of the Quincy, Mass. group wrote the 24-hour book
still used by us today. This was modeled after Russell's "God Calling" but was
slanted away from all spiritual to more of a 24-hour not drinking theme.
Russell's book, "For Sinners Only", described his journey from prodigal son to
the Oxford Group and became a best seller in the early 1930s in England and the
United States, and was printed in eight languages.
One chapter of the book was devoted to Calvary
Episcopal Church in New York City and it's rector, Sam Shoemaker. Calvary Church
became the virtual American headquarters for the Oxford Group during the 1930s.
And it was here, (in the church's mission) , that Bill W.'s sponsor, Ebby T.,
was living at the time of Bill's last drunk.
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In 1932 and 1933,
a man named Rowland H., son of wealthy Rhode Island mill owners and a State
Senator, had become a hopeless alcoholic, and in his quest for help had sought
out the world famous psychiatrist, Carl Jung. Jung told him there was no hope
for him there, and to go home and possibly find a conversion through some
religious group. He did this in the Oxford Group in the United States and became
sober. They taught him certain principles that he applied to his life. This
story is documented in our Big Book.
In 1934, Ebby T., childhood friend of Bill W.'s, was
about to be locked up as a chronic drunk in Bennington, Vermont. He was visited
by three men from an Oxford Group; Shep C., Rowland H., and Cebra G. (A
precursor to our Twelve Step work!) They later sent Rowland H. back alone to see
Ebby. He acted as a sort of sponsor and told his story. He taught Ebby the
precepts he had learned from the Oxford Group. Later, as we know, in December of
that year, Ebby had his chance to relay these precepts to Bill W. Here they are,
transcribed from a tape of one of Bill's AA talks:
We admitted we were licked.
We got honest with ourselves.
We talked it over with another person.
We made amends to those we had harmed.
We tried to carry this message to others with no thought of reward.
We prayed to whatever God we thought there was.
Now we begin to see the emerging pattern of events
in Akron and in the New York area in the ten year period before the start of AA.
We see how, through the machinery of the Oxford Group and its key leaders, Frank
Buchman and Sam Shoemaker, events conspired to make possible this meeting
between Dr. Bob and Bill W. in Akron in 1935. Shep, Cebra, and Rowland were all
three Oxford Group members. They were part of the business teams which were
working around the country in various cities. In November of 1934, Ebby
surrendered his life to God at the Calvary Episcopal Church mission run by Sam
Shoemaker. (Sam had met Frank Buchman in China in 1918, and by 1934 was regarded
as a major leader of the Oxford Group movement in the United States and was
hosting their headquarters.) Ebby is staying at his mission. Bill W. shows
up there drunk looking for Ebby, can't find him, and goes to Towns Hospital.
Bill Duval recalls in a letter, "Bill W. told us at
the mission that he had heard that Ebby, on the previous Sunday at the Calvary
Church, had witnessed that with the help of God he had been sober a number of
months." Bill said that if Ebby could get help here, then he (Bill) needed help,
and he could get it at the mission, also. Bill looked prosperous compared to our
usual mission customers, (actually, he was wearing a Brooks Brother's suit
purchased at a rummage sale for $5.00!), so we agreed that he go to Towns
Hospital where Ebby and others of the group could talk to him.
After his
spiritual
experience at Towns, Bill immediately made a decision to become very active
in Oxford Group work, and to try to bring other alcoholics from Towns to the
group. He visited the mission Oxford Group meetings and the hospital daily for
four or five months, right up to the time of the Akron trip. No one stayed
sober.
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Rowland H., who rescued Ebby in August 1934, had a thorough indoctrination in Oxford Group teachings and he passed many of these along to Ebby and Bill W. Soon after his release from Towns Hospital at the end of 1934, Bill and the rest of the alcoholic contingent of the Oxford Group began gathering at Stewart's Cafeteria in New York following their regular meeting. Shep C., then a member of the Oxford Group business team that included Rowland, Sam Shoemaker, and Hanford Twitchell, was also a recovering alkie. Lois W. talked of regular attendance at the Oxford Group meetings with Bill, Shep, and Ebby. James Houck, a nonalcoholic Oxford Group member in Frederick, Maryland, stated that Bill W. went to many Oxford Group meetings at the Francis Scott Key Hotel in Frederick and always centered on alcohol. He was obsessed with the idea of carrying the message. The conclusion is that Bill had a wide acquaintance in Oxford Group circles, not just confined to Sam and Calvary House. Bill told Houck that he worked on 50 drunks in the first 6 months with no success. Calvary House was Sam's residence and contained an Oxford Group bookstore. Calvary Mission was at another location in the "gas house" district. Thousands of people passed through the mission where they offered lodging, free meals, and Oxford Group meetings every night. Tex Francisco was its superintendent in 1934 when Bill showed up there.
(Jim Newton enters the scene)
Now enters the man most certainly responsible for the fateful Akron meetings between Bill and Dr. Bob. Jim Newton was surely the sole catalyst that ordained the Oxford Group would be in place in Akron, Ohio when Bill showed up there in 1935. This amazing string of circumstances plays out as follows:
Jim, at age 20,
was a luggage salesman in New York who had come upon an Oxford Group meeting by
accident (actually, he was looking for fun and games that night!) in
Massachusetts in 1923 when he was 18 years old. He was converted at the party,
got on his knees and gave the direction of his life to God at that time. He met
a lady named Eleanor Forde who greatly influenced his thinking about the
movement. (He and Eleanor were to meet and marry 20 years later in 1943.)
(5)
Several twists and turns of fate placed
Jim Newton in Akron, Ohio and installed our next cast of characters. These were
both Oxford Group members and regular attendees at Oxford Group meetings. We
will be talking about the intertwined relations of Henrietta Seiberling, Dr.
Walter Tunks, Harvey and Russell Firestone, Sam Shoemaker, Frank Buchman, T.
Henry and Clarace Williams, and Anne and Dr. Bob S.
Jim Newton went to Ft. Myers, Florida
in 1926, at age 21, to visit his father, and they bought a 35 acre tract of land
across the road from the Thomas Edison estate(6).
Jim Newton became as an adopted son to Mr. and Mrs. Edison, and often acted as
host and toastmaster at Edison's famous birthday parties which were attended by
Henry Ford, Harvey Firestone, and many world renowned business leaders and
public figures.
Here begins another key circumstance to
set the stage in Akron, Ohio. Harvey Firestone, Sr., offered Jim a job as
secretary to the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company in 1926, and moved him to
Akron, Ohio putting him in residence at the Portage Country Club adjacent to the
Firestone Estate(7) Jim worked for Firestone
eleven years and was being groomed as president of the company when he resigned
and went full time with the Oxford Groups. Firestone's clergyman was Rev. Walter
Tunks. Jim joined Tunks' church and became active in raising funds for their
birthday committee.
Jim had been in New York for the Jack
Dempsey vs. Gene Tunney fight. While there he confessed to Frank Buchman that
his life was in turmoil and he was about to take a "geographical cure". Buchman
sent him to meet Sam Shoemaker at the Calvary Church an d he made an Oxford
Group confession to Sam and was led to join one of the Oxford Group business
teams.
These were groups of important men who
made attempts to convert others to the Oxford Group method of spirituality. Jim
frequently met with the aforementioned Shep C. and Rowland H. He met T. Henry
and Clarace Williams, husband and wife Oxford Group members from Akron and
members of Walter Tunks' church. The business team put on house parties in
various cities at the finest hotels and clubs. In January of 1933, Frank
Buchman, leading a team of thirty men and women, descended on Akron for the
first time to give testimonials at the Mayflower Hotel and in Akron churches,
and initiate the townspeople in the experiences of the Oxford Group. Here we can
clearly see input from Jim Newton's parties with Firestone and Tunks' Episcopal
Church group to influence the choice of Akron as the site of this endeavor,
rather than some other city. Had Jim not already been a business team member and
in place in Akron, it is very unlikely that Buchman would ever have chosen this
small, rather unknown city as a place to pursue his evangelistic efforts. Jim
was the spokesman who introduced Buchman at all the affairs that week in Akron.
Now our cast of characters is nearly
complete and in place. Still to appear on the scene, however, are Henrietta
Seiberling, Anne and Bob S., and T. Henry and Clarace Williams.
When Jim first arrived in Akron he had
been welcomed into the Firestone family, and had become fast friends with a son,
Russell (Bud) Firestone. Bud had a very bad drinking problem and had already
been sent to several hospitals to no avail. Jim went with Bud to still another
drying-out place, on the Hudson River in New York, and stayed through the entire
30 day program. Then he took Bud to an Episcopal Conference in Denver to which
the Oxford Group people had been invited. On the train East again after the
party, he was able to introduce Bud to his old Oxford Group minister, Sam
Shoemaker. Alone with Sam, Bud surrendered his life to God in a private car on
the train. His life changed, and his family situation and marriage were saved.
"Now Akron was the place where AA
was to be founded. Jim Newton had helped bring to the city the Oxford Group
message of his alcoholic friend, Bud Firestone. The message led to Bud's
"miraculous" recovery which lasted for a time. The message and the recovery were
broadcast to an interested community by a grateful father, Harvey Firestone,
Sr., and by widespread press accounts."(7)
Clarace Williams was there, and
joined the Oxford Group along with T. Henry Williams, and began regularly
attending the meetings. About the same time, a lady named Henrietta Seiberling,
the wife of John Seiberling of the Seiberling Tire and Rubber Company, found
herself with personal and marital problems, and separated from her husband. She
turned to the Oxford Group and attended the first meetings at the Mayflower
Hotel. She went with a woman named Anne S., the wife of a well-known Akron
surgeon who was in deep trouble with his drinking.
The progenitors now assume their roles.
A kindly and missionary-oriented couple, the Williams, had been impressed with
the Oxford Group message, and had a home to offer for a meeting place. A gifted
and compassionate lady named Henrietta Seiberling, who had mastered some of the
Oxford group principles, had her eye on using the biblical principles to help
her good friend, Dr. Bob S., with his drinking problem. Add to this mix the
efforts of his wife Anne, who assembled books and spiritual readings and
principles from the Bible, the Oxford Group, and various other Christian
writings, all the while praying for a solution to her husband's seemingly
hopeless drinking problem. The talented and very alcoholic surgeon became the
focus of all these efforts. He did a lot of spiritual reading, attended a lot of
meetings, but remained drunk.
Now all the earlier seeming coincidences
converge, and this story merges into the facts we all know from our AA
literature.
Onto this scene landed the "rum hound"
from New York, moved by what both Bill W. and Henrietta Seiberling felt was the
guidance of God. Bill had recovered from his disease, and was determined to stay
sober by seeking out and helping another drunk. The "rum hound from New York",
(Bill's self-description when he made the fateful phone call to Henrietta),
"just happened" to bring to Akron some solutions heretofore never assembled in
one place and delivered by just one person.
Some important knowledge about the disease of alcoholism accumulated through
the work of Dr.Silkworth at Towns Hospital
in New York.
An important spiritual solution to the problem that had been passed from
Dr. Carl Jung to Rowland H. and then
on to Bill by Ebby T.
A validation of this spiritual solution by the scholarly studies of Professor
William James.
A linkage between the problem of alcoholism, and this solution that God could
and would solve the problem if a relationship were sought with Him by using the
Oxford Group's practical program of action, which was already proven by the
results experienced by Rowland and Ebby when they followed the Oxford Group
program.
In Akron, T. Henry and Clarace Williams and Henrietta
Seiberling were attending Oxford Group meetings at the Mayflower Hotel and
elsewhere. Dr. Bob S. also attended with his wife, Anne. He shied away from
talking about his problem publicly, and continued drinking. In her concern for
Bob, Henrietta suggested to T. Henry that if they could set up a smaller, more
private meeting perhaps Dr. Bob might feel more at ease and be able to make a
confession in the Oxford Group fashion, and a commitment to sobriety. T. Henry's
home was chosen for this special meeting and these meetings started on a
Wednesday in April of 1935--just one month before Bill W. came to Akron. These
meetings were usually led by T. Henry, Henrietta, or Florence Main, and at one
of these Dr. Bob was able to confess that he was a secret drinker and needed
help as he could not stop. This was the very place that was to become the home
to the "about to begin" Alcoholic Contingent of the Oxford Group.
We can now see how all these characters contributed to putting Dr. Bob and Bill
at a meeting in Henrietta Seiberling's
home in the Gate House of the Firestone Estate, and make possible the founding
of Alcoholics Anonymous.

We can find no references anywhere to indicate that Bill W. considered or
made any conscious effort to locate an Oxford Group member when he made his
desperation phone call in the Mayflower Hotel in Akron. Henrietta Seiberling
wrote as follows:
"Bill looked into the cocktail room and was tempted and thought, 'Well, I'll
just go in there and get drunk and forget it all and that will be the end of
it!' "
Instead, having been sober five months in the Oxford Group, he said a prayer. He
received guidance to look at a ministers' directory board and a strange thing
happened. He put his finger on one name--Tunks. The Rev. Walter Tunks was Harvey
Firestone's minister, and Firestone had brought Buchman and thirty Oxford Group
members to Akron for ten days in gratitude for their help for his son, Russell,
a drunkard.
Out of the act of gratitude of this one father, this whole chain started.
.
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This article was written in an attempt to preserve and to "pass on" the accurate history of the beginnings of AA, before the sands of time obscure them completely as they have a habit of doing so well.
(1) See also "Language of the Heart", p.298
(2) See "Pass It On", p.130
(3) See also "Life Changers" by Harold Begbie (Mills and Boon)
(4) For further details of the Oxford Group in the U.S., see "Pass It On",
p.127-32; p.168-74 "AA Comes of Age", p.39
(5) The land was subdivided and exists yet today as a prosperous residential
development called the Edison Estates.
(6) Bill W. was also furnished quarters here seven years later after he started
working with Dr. Bob!
(7) This paragraph was taken from "The Akron Genesis and AA".
(8) This writer, along with the Akron Archivist Ray G., had the good fortune to
be able to visit Jim and Eleanor Newton at their home in Ft. Myers, Florida, in
May of 1993. They are active and well, she at age 94, and he at 88. Eleanor was
employed by Sam Shoemaker, who introduced her to Frank Buchman. She went abroad
as an Oxford Group worker with Frank in 1926, and has remained active in the
movement ever since.
Permission to reprint for the benefit of AA or it's individual members has been
granted at large, so long as the text of the doc is not altered in any way.![]()
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