And the lives of those to come.
We, at Providence Point, are a Group of recovering alcoholics, registered with OIAA (Online Intergroup AA). We hold meetings much like face-to-face AA meetings, guided by an online Protocol. Strongly unified, we are held together by recognition of our primary purpose ~ to carry the AA message to the alcoholic who still suffers. We have no agenda but the sincerest desire to be helpful, and hope you will join us as an additional source for your recovery.

Providence Point Fellowship Room
Meeting Times
Every day at 9 30 pm et.

"Any online AA group or meeting may be listed in the directories provided that it subscribes to the Traditions of Alcoholics Anonymous."
From page 22 of the pamphlet ~ "The AA Group"(copyright AAWS, Inc.; reprinted with permission):
all group members are alcoholics (or have a desire to stop drinking) and the group is willing to "open the door to all alcoholics who seek help, regardless of profession, gender, or other distinction" ("The AA Group," p. 15)
the group is fully self-supporting, declining outside contributions the group has no other affiliation
the group does not endorse outside enterprises
the group has no opinion on outside issues
the group maintains the anonymity of its members (no full names or photos of members in public view)"Even the appearance of being linked to any organization, club, political or religious institution needs to be avoided."Therefore, an AA group that meets in a correctional or treatment facility or a church [or on a non-AA web site, chat server, etc.] can take care not to use the institution's name, but to call itself something quite different. This makes it clear that the AA group is not affiliated with the hospital, church, prison, treatment facility, or whatever, but simply rents space there for meetings.
Our AA group conscience, as voiced by the General Service Conference, has recommended that 'family' meetings, 'double trouble' and 'alcohol and pill' meetings not be listed in our AA directories. The use of the word 'family' might also invite confusion with Al-Anon Family Groups, a fellowship entirely separate from AA.
The primary purpose of any AA group is to carry the AA message to alcoholics. Experience with alcohol is one thing all AA members have in common. It is misleading to hint or give the impression that AA solves other problems or knows what to do about addiction to drugs.
This site does not imply affiliation with, the endorsement from, or approval of Alcoholics Anonymous..Alcoholics Anonymous, AA, and The Big Book are registered trademarks of Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Inc. The Grapevine and AA Grapevine are registered trademarks of The AA Grapevine, Inc.
You can reach us by email at : Help@aaprovidencepoint.com .





ummer 1917






admission. "The Little Doctor Who Loved Drunks."Bill resumes drinking after each admission. Disease progressing.
Dr. Silkworth pronounces Bill a "Hopeless Drunk."Rowland Hazzard returns to America and becomes involved in Oxford Group.
1934
Emmett Fox publishes The Sermon On The Mount.
Aug. 1934
Rowland Hazzard and Cebra persuade court to parole Ebby Thatcher in their custody. Ebby sobers up at Oxford Group at Calvary Episcopal Mission, Sam Shoemaker.
Nov. 1934
Ebby T. carries message to Bill at home. Tells his story. "One Alcoholic Talking To Another."Bill starts attending Oxford Group at Calvary Church, Bowery Mission.Bill drinks again - Back to Towns Hospital.
Dec. 1934 
Bill has "Hot Flash" spiritual experience at Towns Hospital.Dr. Silkworth assured Bill he was not crazy; rather a "psychic experience upheaval" or "conversion."BILL NEVER DRANK AGAIN.The next day Ebby brought Bill a copy of William James' Varieties of Religious Experience.Bill reads Varieties of ReligiousExperience, an explanation of need for Pain, Suffering, Calamityand "Deflation in Depth" and the "Simultaneous Transmission of Hope." The two "Halves" are joined into a "Whole."
Bill returns to Oxford Group and works with other alcoholics, also at Sam Shoemaker's Calvary Mission and at Towns Hospital, emphasizing his "Hot Flash" spiritual experience. He noted they "seemed to do better" talking of their common problems, but no success in sobering up others.Bill develops belief that alcoholics are resistant to the "Four Absolutes" of the Oxford Group. 
1935
Bill, still sober, but no success yet in helping others. Still frequents Wall Street. Went to Akron Ohio for proxy fight. Lost proxy fight. Bill at Mayflower Hotel.
Very discouraged and afraid he might drink.
May 11, 193
5
Bill reached realization of: I need another alcoholic. "He starts making telephone calls. This is the final founding moment of A.A.Rev. Walter Tunks Referred to Norman Sheppard. Then referred to Henrietta Seiberling, an Oxford Group adherent. She arranged a meeting the next afternoon at the Seiberling Estate with Dr. Bob Smith.
Robert Holbrook (Bob) Smith: Born in St. Johnsbury, VT., Aug. 8, 1879. Dartmouth College, Pre-Med at University of Michigan. M.D. at Rush Medical College, Chicago, IL. Internat City Hospital, Akron, OH. Proctologist. His wife, Anne was a friend of Henrietta Seiberling. They brought Dr. Bob to Oxford Group meetings for 2-1/2 yrs. He continued to get drunk regularly.
May 12, 19355:00 P.M.
Bill meets Dr. Bob. Bob still drinking. Bill tells Bob of his experiences with alcohol; of the hopes, promises, and failures; the obsession, compulsion, and physical allergy; of Ebby's visit and simple message, "show me your faith and by my works I will show you mine."Dr. Bob understood with sudden clarity - the difference withthe Oxford Group. "The spiritual approach was as useless as any other if you soaked it up like a sponge and kept it to yourself." The purpose of life was not to "get" , it was to "give."
Bill had presented Dr. Bob four aspects of one core idea:
(1) Utter Hopelessness (2) Totally Deflated
(3) Requiring Conversion (4) Needing Others
June 10, 1935 
Dr. Bob has last drink.ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS FOUNDED
June 11, 1935
Dr. Bob suggests they both start working with other alcoholics.
June 28, 1935
Bill and Dr. Bob confront Bill Dotson, first "Man on the Bed." Bill D. was a prominent attorney in Akron. The 3rd A.A. Note: Bill D. had a spiritual experience without familiarity with Oxford Group principals.
Summer 1935 
Bill stayed in in Akron. He and Dr. Bob worked with alcoholics and attended weekly Oxford Group meetings and received spiritual nourishment.Henrietta Seiberling supplied them with "Infusion of Spirituality" mainly through Paul to Corinthians on "Love" and James on "Works" if faith is to have meaning.
Winter 1935
Back in New York on Clinton St., Hank P. and Fitz M. got sober.
Mid 1936
A small but solid group developing at Clinton St. in New York.Bill's efforts with alcoholics receiving criticism from Oxford Group.Charles Towns offers Bill a job at Towns Hospital. Bill wanted it. The question was presented to the Group and rejected because what they had, the "thing" that bound them together and those feelings could not be bought and paid for. The only authority was the Group Conscience and all decisions were to be made by the Group.
1937 
Beginning of the split from the Oxford Group.Residents at Clinton St.Ebby T.Oscar V.Russell R.Bill C.Florence R.
Nov. 1937 
Bill and Dr. Bob meet in Akron and compare notes. Forty cases sober and staying sober. More than twenty sober for more than one year. All had been diagnosed as HOPELESS.A meeting of the Akron Group to consider Bill's ideas for a book, pamphlets and how to expand the movement. Presented but only narrowly passed by a majority of 2.
Feb. 1938
Rockefeller gives $5,000 and saves A.A. from professionalism.
May 1938
The Alcoholic Foundation established as a trusteeship for A.A.
May 1938
Beginning of the writing of the book Alcoholics Anonymous.
Dec. 1938
Twelve Steps written.
1939
Membership reaches 100. 
April 1939
The book Alcoholics Anonymous published.
Summer 1939
Withdrawal from association with Oxford Group complete. Oxford Group renamed
"Moral Re-Armament."
1940
Bill meets Father Ed Dowling who becomes his "spiritual advisor."
Feb. 1940 
First World Service Office for A.A.
March 1941
Jack Alexander's Saturday Evening Post article published and membe
rship jumped to 2000. Jan. 1944
Dr. Harry Tiebout's first paper on the subject of "alcoholics anonymous."
June 1944
The A.A. Grapevine established.
1946
The Twelve Traditions of A.A. formulated and published.
June 1, 1949
Anne Ripley Smith died.
July 1950
First international convention of A.A. at Cleveland, Ohio. Twelve Traditions adopted.
Nov. 16, 1950
Dr. Robert Holbrook Smith, co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous died.
June 1953
The book Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions published.
Oct. 1954
The "Alcoholic Foundation" becomes the "General Service Board of A.A."
July 1955
20th Anniversary Convention at St. Louis, MO. Second edition of Alcoholics Anonymous published. The three legacies of Recovery, Unity and Service turned over to the movement by its oldtimers.
1957 
Creation of first overseas General Service Board of A.A. in Great Britain and Ireland. A.A. Comes of Age published in October. Membership reaches over 200,000 in 7,000 groups in 70 countries and U.S. possessions.
1959
A.A. Publishing, Inc. became A.A. World Services, Inc.
July 1960
25th Anniversary Convention at Long Beach, CA
1962 
Publication of Twelve Concepts for World Service written by Bill W.
July 1965
30th Anniversary Convention at Toronto, Canada. Keynote adopted, "I Am Responsible."
1966
Change in ratio of trustees of the General Service Board; now two-thirds majority of alcoholic members; the A.A. fellowship accepts top responsibility for all it's future affairs.
1967
Publication of the book The A.A. Way of Life now titled As Bill Sees It.
Oct. 9-11, 1969
First World Service meeting held in New York with delegates from 14 countries.
1970
35th Anniversary International Convention at Miami Beach, Florida. Keynote: "This we owe to AA's of the future. To place our common welfare first; To keep our fellowship united. For on A.A. Unity depend our lives, and the lives of those to come." Bill's last public appearance.
Jan. 24, 1971
William Griffith Wilson, co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous, dies at Miami Beach, FL.
Oct. 5-7, 1972
Second World Service meeting held in New York.
1973
Publication of Came to Believe.
April 1973
Distribution of the book Alcoholics Anonymous reached one million mark.
1975
Publication of Living Sober.
1976
Publication of 3rd Edition of Alcoholics Anonymous.
Oct. 5, 1988
Lois Burnam Wilson died.
November 2001
Publication of Alcoholics Anonymous 4th Edition
Feb. 9, 2002
Death of Sue Smith Windows, Dr.Bob's daughter
Sources:
Cybriety.org
Bill W. by Robert Thompsen
Not God. A History of Alcoholics Anonymous by Ernest Kurtz
Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, A.A. World Services, Inc.
Pass It On - Bill Wilson and the A.A. Message, A.A. World Services
The Language of the Heart, The A.A. Grapevine
Dr. Bob and the Good Old-Timers, A.A. World Services, Inc.
On The Tail of a Comet, The Life of Frank Buchman by Garth Lean The Washingtonian Movement, by Milton A. Maxwell, Ph.D.A.A. The Way It Began, by Bill Pittman

r. In these surroundings, Rowland H. did find a conversion experience that released him for the time being from his compulsion to drink. Returning to New York, he became very active with the "O.G." here, then led by an Episcopal clergyman, Dr. Samuel Shoemaker. Dr. Shoemaker had been one of the founders of that movement, and his was a powerful personality that carried immense sincerity and conviction.
ding. You might be led to that goal by an act of grace or through a personal and honest contact with friends, or thought a higher education of the mind beyond the confines of mere rationalism. I see from your letter that Roland H. has chosen the second way, which was, under the circumstances, obviously the best one. I am strongly convinced that the evil principle prevailing in this world, lends the unrecognized spiritual need into perdition, if it is not counteracted either by a real religious insight or by the protective wall of human community.

in their imagination. But when they have found their restoration, their imagination is responsive to new incantations, and their talk abounds with color and light, and that makes them charming companions too. The AA people are what they are, and they were what they were, because they are sensitive, imaginative, possessed of a sense of humor and awareness of universal truth. They are sensitive, which means they are hurt easily, and that helped them to become alcoholics. But when they have found their restoration, they are still as sensitive as ever; responsive to beauty and to truth and eager about the intangible glories of this life. That makes them charming companions. They are possessed with a sense of humor. Even in their cups they have been known to say damnable funny things. Often it was being forced to take seriously the little and mean things of life that make them seek escape in a bottle. But when they have found restoration, their sense of humor finds a blessed freedom, and they are able to reach a godlike state where they can laugh at themselves, the very height of self conquest. Go to the meetings and listen to the laughter. At what are they laughing? At ghoulish memories over which weaker souls would cringe in useless remorse. And that makes them wonderful people to be with by candlelight. And they are possessed of a sense of universal truth. That is often a new thing in their hearts. The fact that this at-one-meant with God's universe had never been awakened in them is sometimes the reason why they drank. The fact that it was at last awakened is almost always the reason why they were restored to the good and simple ways of life. Stand with them when the meeting is over, and listen while they say the "Our Father." They have found a power greater than themselves which they diligently serve. And that gives them a charm that never was elsewhere on land or sea. It makes you know that God, Himself, is really charming, because the AA people reflect His mercy and His forgiveness.

From the Big Book of A.A.
To Whom It May Concern:
I have specialized in the treatment of alcoholism for many years.
In late 1934 I attended a patient who, though he had been a competent businessman of good earning capacity, was an alcoholic of a type I had come to regard as hopeless.
In the course of his third treatment he acquired certain ideas concerning a possible means of recovery.
As part of his rehabilitation he commenced to present his conceptions to other alcoholics, impressing upon them that they must do likewise with still others. This has become the basis of a rapidly growing fellowship of these men and their families. This man and over one hundred others appear to have recovered.
I personally know scores of cases who were of the type with whom other methods had failed completely.
These facts appear to be of extreme medical importance; because of the extraordinary possibilities of rapid growth inherent in this group they may mark a new epoch in the annals of alcoholism. These men may well have a remedy for thousands of such situations.
You may rely absolutely on anything they say about themselves.
Very truly yours,
William D. Silkworth, M.D.
We believe, and so suggested a few years ago, that the action of alcohol on these chronic alcoholics is a manifestation of an allergy; that the phenomenon of craving is limited to this class and never occurs in the average temperate drinker. These allergic types can never safely use alcohol in any form at all; and once having formed the habit and found they connot break it, once having lost their self-confidence, their reliance upon things human, their problems pile up on them and become astonishingly difficult to solve.
Frothy emotional appeal seldom suffices. The message which can interest and hold these alcoholic people must have depth and weight. In nearly all cases, their ideals must be grounded in a power greater than themselves, if they are to re-create their lives.
If any feel that as psychiatrists directing a hospital for alcoholics we appear somewhat sentimental, let them stand with us a while on the firing line, see the tragedies, the despairing wives, the little children; let the solving of these problems become a part of their daily work, and even of their sleeping moments, and the most cynical will not wonder that we have accepted and encouraged this movement. We feel, after many years of experience, that we have found nothing which has contributed more to the rehabilitation of these men than the altruistic movement now growing up among them.
Men and women drink essentially because they like the affect produced by alcohol. The sensation is so elusive that, while they admit it is injurious, they cannot after a time differentiate the true from the false. To them, their alcoholic life seems the only normal one. They are restless, irritable and discontented, unless they can again experience the sense of ease and comfort which comes at once by taking a few drinks-drinks which they see others taking with impunity. After they have succumbed to the desire again, as so many people do, and the phenomenon of craving develops, they pass through the well-known stages of a spree, emerging remorseful, with a firm resolution not to drink again. This is repeated over and over, and unless this person can experience an entire psychic change there is very little hope of his recovery.
On the other hand- and strange as this may seem to those who do not understand-once a psychic change has occurred, the very same person who seemed doomed, who had so many problems he despaired of ever solving them, suddenly finds himself easily able to control his desire for alcohol, the only effort necessary being that required to follow a few simple rules.
When I need a mental uplift, I often think of another case brought in by a physician prominent in New York. The patient had made his own diagnosis, and deciding his situation hopeless. has hidden in a deserted barn determined to die. He was rescued by a searching party, and. in desperate condition, brought to me. Following his physical rehabilitation, he had a talk with me in which he frankly stated he thought the treatment a waste of effort, unless I could assure him, which no one ever had, that in the future he would have the "will power" to resist the impulse to drink.
His alcoholic problem was so complex, and his depression so great, that we felt his only hope would be through what we then called "moral psychology," and we doubted if even that would have any effect.
However, he did become "sold" on the ideas contained in this book. He has not had a drink for a great many years. I see him now and then and he is as fine a specimen of manhood as one could wish to meet.
I earnestly advise every alcoholic to read this book through, and though perhaps he came to scoff, he may remain to pray.
William D. Silkworth, M.D.

Bill W.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. His life changed, and his family situation and marriage were saved. Jim Newton had helped bring to the city the Oxford Group message of his alcoholic friend, Bud Firestone. The message and recovery were broadcast to an interested community by a grateful father, Harvey Firestone, Sr.
In Akron, T. Henry and Clarace Williams and Henrietta Seiberling were attending Oxford Group meetings at the Mayflower Hotel and elsewhere. Dr. Bob Smith 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 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 Wilson 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.
Then, there was Bill. Bill Wison, the "rum hound" from New York, had come to Akron on a business venture that went sour. Having recovered from his disease, he was determined to stay sober by seeking out and helping another drunk, after being tempted by the bar at the Mayflower Hotel. Instead of drinking, 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.
Bill W. made the desperate and fateful phone call. Dr. Bob Smith and Bill Wilson came together at a meeting in Henrietta Seiberling's home in the Gate House of the Firestone Estate, and thus, Alcoholics Anonymous was born.




