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Congressman
Seiberling's remarks about
Bill Wilson's Visit to the Seiberling Estate
Cong. John Sieberling wrote:
In the spring of 1971, the
newspapers reported the passing of Bill Wilson of New York
City, who as one of the two co-founders of Alcoholics Anonymous.
The other co-founder, Dr. Robert Smith of Akron, Ohio, has
passed on some years earlier.
Shortly after Bill’s
death, the Akron Alcoholics groups asked my mother Henrietta
Seiberling, to speak at the annual “Founders Day”
meeting in Akron, which is attended by members of Alcoholics
Anonymous from all over the world. She lives in New York
and did not feel up to traveling, so they asked me to speak
in her place.
I agreed to speak but felt
that it would mean most to them to hear some of her own
words, so I called her on the telephone and asked her to
tell me about the origins of Alcoholics Anonymous so that
I could make sure my remarks were accurate. I made a tape
recording of the conversation and played part of it at the
1971 Founders Day meeting, which was held in the gymnasium
at the University of Akron with a couple of thousand people
present.
So many people have asked
for a transcript of the recording that I have finally had
one typed. Attached is a copy of the transcript, which follows
the tape recording as closely as possible, with only my
own remarks and some of the conversational asides and redundancies
edited out.
The first meeting of Bob
and Bill, described in the attached transcript, took place
in the summer of 1935 in Henrietta’s house in Akron,
which was the Gatehouse of Stan Hywet Hall, then my family’s
estate, now the property of Stan Hywet Hall Foundation.
Henrietta was not an alcoholic.
She was a Vasser college graduate and a housewife with three
teenage children. She, like Bob and Bill, would be deeply
disturbed by any inference that she or they possessed any
extraordinary virtues or talents. On the contrary, they
would all emphasize the power of ordinary people to change
their lives and the lives of others through the kind of
spiritual discipline so successfully exemplified in Alcoholics
Anonymous.
I am happy to make this
transcript available to persons who are sincerely interested
in learning more about Alcoholics Anonymous and its message.
It is a way of sharing some of the insight’s which
made and still make Alcoholics Anonymous a vital force in
people’s lives. I ask only that the transcript be
held in the spirit in which it is offered and not used for
publicity or in an effort to magnify any individual.
John F. Seiberling
Transcript Of Remarks
Henrietta
B. Seiberling:
I
would like to tell about Bob in the beginning. Bob and Ann
came into the Oxford group, which, as you know, was the
movement which tried to recapture the power of first Century
Christianity in the modern world, and a quality of life
which we must always exercise. Someone spoke to me about
Bob Smith’s drinking. He didn’t think that people
knew it. And I decided that the people who shared in the
Oxford group had never shared very costly things to make
Bob lose his pride and share what he thought would cost
him a great deal. So I decided to gather together some Oxford
Group people for a meeting, and that was in T. Henry Williams’
house. We met afterwards there for five or six years every
Wednesday night.
I
warned Ann that I was going to have this meeting. I didn’t
tell her it was for Bob, but I said, “Come prepared
to mean business. There is going to be no pussyfooting around.
And we all shared very deeply our shortcomings, and what
we had victory over, and then there was silence, and I waited
and thought, “Will Bob say something?” Sure
enough, in that deep, serious tone of his, he said, “Well,
you good people have all shared things that I am sure were
very costly to you, and I am going to tell you something
which may cost me my profession. I am a silent drinker,
and I can't stop.” This was weeks before Bill came
to Akron. So we said, “Do you want to go down on your
knees and pray?” And he said, “Yes.” So
we did.
And
the next morning, I, who knew nothing about alcoholism (I
thought a person should drink like a gentleman, and that's
all), was saying a prayer for Bob. I said, “God, I
don't know anything about drinking, but I told Bob that
I was sure that he lived this way of life, he could quit
drinking. Now you have to help me.” Something said
to me – I call it “guidance” – it
was like a voice in the top of my head – “Bob
must not touch one drop of alcohol.” I knew that wasn't
my thought. So I called Bob, and said I had guidance for
him – and this is very important.
He
came over at 10 in the morning, and I told him that my guidance
was that he mustn't touch one drop of alcohol. He was very
disappointed, because he thought guidance would mean seeing
somebody or going someplace. And then – this is something
very relevant – he said, “Henrietta, I don't
understand it. Nobody understands it.” Now that was
the state of the world when we were beginning. He said,
some doctor had written a book about it, but he doesn't
understand it. I don't like the stuff. I don’t want
to drink. I said, “Well, Bob, that is what I have
been guided about.” And that was the beginning of
our meetings, long before Bill ever came.
Now
let me recall some of Bills very words about his experience.
Bill, when he was in a hotel in Akron and down to a few
dollars and owed his bill after his business venture fell
through, looked at 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 got the guidance to look in a ministers
directory, and a strange thing happened.
He
just looked in there, and he put his finger on one name:
Tunks. And that was no coincidence, because Dr. Tunks was
Mr. Harvey Firestone’s minister, and Mr. Firestone
had brought 60 of the Oxford Group people down there for
10 days out of gratitude for helping his son, who drank
too much. His son had quit for a year and a half or so.
Out of the act of gratitude of this one father, this whole
chain started.
So
Bill called Dr. Tunks, and Dr. Tunks gave him a list of
names. One of them was Norman Sheppard, who was a close
friend of mine and knew what I was trying to do for Bob.
Norman said, “I have to go to New York tonight but
you can call Henrietta Seiberling, “When he told the
story, Bill shortened it by
just saying
that he called Dr. Tunks, but I did not know Dr. Tunks.
Bill said that he had his last nickel, and he thought, “Well,
I’ll call her.”
So
I, who was desperate to help bob in something I didn’t
know much about, was ready. Bill called, and I will never
forget what he said: “I’m from the Oxford Group
and I’m a Rum Hound.” Those were his words.
I thought, “This is really manna from Heaven.”
And I said, “You come right out here.” And my
thought was to put those two men together. Bill, looking
back, thought he was out to help someone else. Actually,
he was out to get help for himself, no thought of helping
anyone else, because he was desperate. But that is the way
that God helps us if we let God direct our lives. And so
he came out to my house, and he stayed for dinner. And I
told him to come to church with me next morning and I would
get Bob, which I did.
Bill
stayed in Akron. He didn’t have nay money. There was
a neighbor of mine, John Gammeter, who had seen the change
in my life brought by the Oxford Group, and I called him
and asked him to put Bill up at the country club for two
weeks or so, just to keep him in town. After that, Bill
went to stay with Bob and Ann for three months, and we started
working on Bill Dotson and Ernie Galbraith.
The
need was there, and all of the necessary elements were furnished
by God. Bill the promoter, and I, not being an alcoholic,
for perspective. Every Wednesday night I would speak on
some new experience or spiritual idea I had read. That’s
the way we all grew. Eventually the meetings moved to King
School. Some man from Hollywood came, an actor, and he said
that he had been all over the country and that there was
something in the King School group that wasn’t in
any other group. I think it was our great stress and reliance
on guidance and quiet times.
Bill
did a grand job. We can all see in his life what the Oxford
Group people had told us in their message: that if we turn
our lives to God and let him run it, he will take our shortcomings
and make them valuable in His way and give us our hearts
desire. And when I got the word that Bill had gone on, I
sat there, and it was just as if someone had spoken to me
again on top of my head. Something said to me, “Verily,
verily, he as received his reward.” So I went to the
Bible, and there it was, in Matthew VI. Then I looked at
Bill’s story in Alcoholics Anonymous where Bill had
said that all his failures were because he always wanted
people to think he was somebody.
In
the first edition of the book, he said he always wanted
to make his mark among people. And by letting God run his
life, God took his ego and gave him his hearts desire in
God's way. And when he was gone, he was on the front page
of the New York Times, famous all over the world. So it
does verify what the Oxford Group people had told him.
Father
Dowling, a Jesuit Priest, had first met our group in the
early days in Chicago, and he came to Akron to see us. And
then he went on to New York to see the others. And he said
to one of our men, “This is one of the most beautiful
things that has come into the world. But I want to warn
you that the devil will try to destroy it.” Of course,
it’s true, and one of the first things that the devil
could have used was having money, and having sanitariums'
as the men were planning. Much to Bob’s and Bill’s
and Ann’s surprise, I said, “ No, we’ll
never take any money.”
Another
way where I saw that the devil could try to destroy us was
having prominent names. The other night I heard on TV special
about alcoholics, a man explaining why they are anonymous.
And he showed that he didn’t really know why. He just
said that it wouldn’t do to let people know that you
were an alcoholic. That’s not the reason. In fact,
the surest way to stay sober is to let people know that
you are an alcoholic because then you have lost something
of yourself.
I
would say that the second way that I saw that the devil
would be trying to destroy us was to have any names. Those
who think that they are prominent or that they have become
leaders, all fail people because no one is on top spiritually
all the time. So I said, “We’ll never have any
names.”
I
feel that the whole wonderful experience of Alcoholics Anonymous
came in answer to a growing great need in the world, and
this was met by the combination of Bill, who was a catalyst
and promoter, and Bob, with his great humility (if you spoke
to him about his contribution, he’d say, “Oh,
I just work here.) and Ann, who supplied a homeyness for
our men in the beginning.
And
I tried to give to the people something of my experience
and faith. What I was most concerned with is that we always
go back to faith. This brings me to the third thing that
would be destructive to the early days, Bob and Bill said
to me. “Henrietta, I don’t think we should talk
too much about religion or God.” I said to them, “Well,
we’re not out to please the alcoholics. They have
been pleasing themselves all these years. We are out to
please God. And if you don’t talk about what God does,
and your faith, and your guidance, then you might as well
be the Rotary Club or something like that. Because God is
your only source of power.” And finally they agreed.
And they weren’t afraid any more. It is my great hope
that they will never be afraid to acknowledge God and what
he has done for them.
The
last A.A. dinner that I went to, over 3,000 people were
there. And it was the first meeting that I went to which
I was disappointed in. There were two witnesses there, a
man and a woman, and you would have thought they were giving
you a description of a psychiatrist’s work on them.
Their progress was always on the level of psychology. And
I spoke to Bill afterwards and I said that there was no
spirituality there or talk of what God had done in their
lives. There were giving views, not news of that God had
done. And Bill said, “I know, but they think there
were so many people that need this and they don’t
want to send them away.” So there again has come up
this same old bugaboo – without the realization that
they have lost their source of power.
This
makes me think of the story of the little Scotch minister
who was about to preach his first sermon, and his mother
hugged him and said, “Now, Bobbie, don’t forgot
to say a word for Jesus. Your mother always wants a word
for God."
And
then there is one other thought I‘d always like to
stress, and that is the real fact of God’s guidance.
People can always count on guidance, although it seems elusive
at times.

Congressman
John Sieberling placed this in the Congressional Record
on September 11, 1973
I
would like to share a small story about Congressman Sieberling.
In 1975, when Robert Thomsen's biography of "Bill W."
was published, the National Council on Alcoholism arranged
for a Congressional reception to be held in one of the House
of Representatives' office buildings. They invited all the
Members of Congress from Ohio and New York, because AA had
started in those two states, and they invited all the members
of the committees which had jurisdiction over the alcoholism
legislation. I suggested a few other names of Members of
Congress, primarily those on the Appropriations Committees
who would be deciding how much money to earmark for alcoholism.
John
Sieberling was the only member of the House of Representatives
who showed up. (One Senator, Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts,
also attended.)
I
saw Congressman Sieberling at the reception, just milling
around. No one else seemed to recognize him. So I introduced
myself and saw that he met the NCA people who were there,
and that they knew his connection to A.A.
The
next day I wrote him a brief note thanking him for coming
to the reception and mentioning that I owed my life to what
his mother had helped start. When he received my note he
showed up unexpectedly in my office to ask my permission
to send the note to his mother. Of course, I gave the permission.
Then Sieberling said: "I called Mother this morning
and told her that I had attended the reception. Mother replied:
'you were touched.' I asked her what she meant and she said
'John, you were touched by God, that's why you were there.'"
Sieberling
humorous reply was "Mother, I don't know if I was touched,
but I do know that I was invited."
John
Seiberling continued to support our efforts to bring more
federal attention to alcoholism during his entire time in
Congress.
Nancy
O.
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