
As Bill W. and Dr. Bob met and began to build a foundation for recovering
alcoholics, it was Annie S., wife of Dr. Bob, who comforted the grief-stricken
wife when she said: "Come in my dear, you are with friends now -- friends who
understand."
Perhaps Annie was given the first insight into the significance of the Twelve
Steps of AA as a way of life for family members as well.
Family groups started as early as 1935 when close relatives of alcoholics
accompanied them to AA meetings. Families shared with each other. They
discovered the benefits of living by AA's Twelve Steps, and how this improved
family relationships which often remained difficult even after the alcoholic
became sober.
In 1950, when Bill returned home after visiting AA groups throughout the United
States and Canada, he reported many family groups had sprung up and suggested to
Lois that she open an office to provide service for these groups.
At the close of the 1951 AA General Service Conference, Lois invited the AA
Delegates' wives to lunch at her home, Stepping Stones, along with local family
group members. She then decided to open an office there, with a close friend and
neighbor, Anne B.
They received a list from the AA Foundation of 87 nonalcoholic individuals or
groups from the U.S., Canada, Australia, South Africa and Ireland, who requested
registration with AA. Since AA could not comply, Lois and Anne's first service
project was to write these individuals or groups.
In a questionnaire dated May, 1951, they stated their purpose: to unify family
groups, to select a name and to adopt the Twelve Steps of AA. As a result of
this questionnaire, the name Al-Anon Family Groups was chosen. With AA's
permission, they adopted the Twelve Steps and later the Twelve Traditions as
guiding principles.
As the family group movement grew, AA offered Lois and Anne the use of a studio
at the 24th Street Clubhouse in New York City. They called themselves the
Clearinghouse Committee and volunteers were recruited from local groups. Soon
the movement came to public attention. In March, 1952, the groups were asked to
voluntarily support a world service office. In January, 1954, Henrietta S., one
of the volunteers, became the first part-time paid staff member who subsequently
became the first General Secretary-Executive Director. The Clearinghouse was
incorporated later that year in May, as a nonprofit organization under the name
Al-Anon Family Group Headquarters, Inc.
The first pieces of literature included Purposes and Suggestions, One Wife's
Story, and Freedom From Despair. The hardcover book, Al-Anon Family Groups, took
two years to write. Concern for the problems of the children surfaced as early
as 1955 at the AA International Convention in St. Louis, where several Al-Anon
talks were presented on "Children of Alcoholics." But it wasn't until 1957 that
an Alateen group was started in California by a teenage son of AA/Al-Anon
parents. This same year, the pamphlet, Youth and the Alcoholic Parent, was
published.
The Al-Anon World Service Conference was first held on a trial basis in 1961.
(The WSC is representative of the Al-Anon membership in reaching a "wider group
conscience" as expressed in Tradition Two.) The experiment continued for two
more years and in 1963 was voted a permanent part of the Al-Anon structure,
beginning in 1964. Today, the conference meets annually and comprises Area
Delegates from the U.S. and Canada, Board of Trustees, Executive Committee,
Committee Chairpersons and World Services Office staff.
In February, 1978, the International Coordination Committee was established to
maintain contact and worldwide unity with the Al-Anon groups that form in
countries other than the U.S. and Canada, totaling 112 to date, 30 of which have
established national offices.
As Al-Anon continued to grow, the desire to maintain a grass roots contact
prompted the 1979 World Service Conference to establish Regional Service
Seminars (RSSs) to be hosted by the six Al-Anon regions of the U.S. and Canada.
The first was held in the fall of 1980 and semiannually thereafter. In 1989, the
U.S. and Canada divided into nine Al-Anon regions. RSSs are now held three times
a year.
On July 7, 1980 in New Orleans, LA, Al-Anon reached another milestone. Delegates
and observers from 16 General Service Offices met with the WSO International
Coordination Committee for a one-day historic meeting with one purpose in mind
-- to strive for unity in Al-Anon worldwide. The first permanent International
Al-Anon General Services Meeting (IAGSM) took place Sept. 12-16, 1986, and has
been held every two years since then.
Beginning in 1955, Al-Anon participated at AA International Conventions. Al-Anon
and Alateen workshops and speakers meetings were part of those events for the
next 30 years. In 1985, Al-Anon held its first International Convention side by
side with AA in Montreal, Canada. Five years later, a second Al-Anon
International Convention was held simultaneously with AA in Seattle, WA. In
1998, Al-Anon will host its own International Convention in Salt Lake City,
Utah.
Al-Anon has grown through the diversification of its membership. First there was
the transition from the original AA wives' "coffee and cake" groups to those
still living with active alcoholism. Gradually, the Al-Anon membership expanded
to include men, parents, dual members (Al-Anon members also recovering in AA),
adult children, gays/lesbians, brothers/sisters, divorced men and women, widows
and widowers, all became part of the Al-Anon fellowship. Alateen too expanded
through an increased number of pre-teen family members. Some Al-Anon and Alateen
members identify themselves as having several relationships with alcoholics or
acknowledge that alcoholism is multi- generational in their families.
Al-Anon's history has been one of steady and constant growth. The needs and the
variety of relationships members have to problem drinkers continue to make
Al-Anon vital to its members for recovery from the family disease of alcoholism.
In 1996, Al-Anon observed its 45th anniversary. Today, Al-Anon serves more than
33,000 groups in 112 countries, including 4,000 Alateen groups. Al-Anon
membership worldwide is estimated at 600,000.
The Al-Anon World Service Office employs a staff of 52 people. It prints 15
books, over 70 pamphlets, and assorted Al-Anon Conference-Approved Literature,
many of which are printed in 30 languages.
In keeping with its single purpose, Al-Anon remains available as a mutual
support group for the families and friends of alcoholics and constantly seeks to
welcome more newcomers whose lives have been impacted by alcoholism into its
meeting rooms. The legacy of Al-Anon's early members and co-founders lives on.
* Reprinted with permission of Al-Anon Family Group Headquarters, Inc.
Al-Anon: Then and Now is available as a pamphlet. For additional historical
information, see Lois Remembers (B-7). Click on 'Literature'
for information on how to obtain these histories.
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Baby Lois
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Early Lois |
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Bill and Lois |
Bill and Lois |
![]() Lois circa 1970 |
![]() Bill and Lois at Dr. Bob's Funeral |
![]() Lois and Bill |
![]() Lois on a Harley! |
![]() Young Bill |
![]() Young Lois |
![]() Lois' Headstone |
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![]() Stepping Stones |
![]() The Wilson House |