Sunday, August 28, 2011

Akron, OH, Birthplace of AA

This is the stained glass window on the front of Akron Intergroup Office, taken from inside. On the outside, the glass does not show any of the people's faces, displaying the importance of Anonymity! It is absolutely gorgeous, and was done over months time, and visitors could pick out and cut a small piece of the artwork. (9/7 Just added the picture from the street.)

























This is inside of the Mayflower Hotel where Bill made that infamous phone call looking for an alcoholic to help. It must have been a magnificent hotel in its day, although now, the hotel is permanent apartments , but they have preserved the original telephone booth and church directoryto, as well as have a display put together by the residents during the last Founder's Day in June.












Here, we are sitting in 2 of the original chairs from the Mayflower Hotel. They are now part of the Archives at the Akron Intergroup Office.







Below is the Gate Lodge, where Henrietta Seiberling invited both Bob and Bill to her home so they could meet each other in the hopes that Bill could help Bob get sober. It is on the grounds of Stan Hywet Hall and Gardens, which was owned by Henrietta's parents. (that is the mansion in some of these photos.) The grounds were magnificent! Henrietta's home was small, and had stories of her daughters' impressions of Bill and Bob. We were disappointed, as the upstairs and the kitchen were closed off














Then we visited Dr. Bob's home. A non-profit foundation was formed to buy his home and turn it into a museum , as well as the house next door where many of Dr. Bob's medical supplies and photos are displayed and a gift shop in the garage next door. The home is manned by a volunteer daily noon to 3pm. We were first guest in, and last to leave,
ibecause we immensely enjoyed Wayne A., the volunteer who made it seem like he knew Bob and Anne personally.




The little door on the huge bathroom wall, was a laundry chute in which of course Dr. Bob had a hiding place for his booze. The cigarette stuff on the living room coffee table had a story. Anne never smoked until she was 56 years old, and she wanted to roll her own to save money. Her kids did not want her to smoke, so they put ground-up pencil shavings in the tobacco so it would not taste as good as the commercial cigarettes which were more $. So, she decided to quit smoking!
The bed with the satchel and coat was obviously in Dr. Bob's room. The first photo shows the finished upstairs attic, which was sparsely furnished, but also had a TV for viewing a video of the story of the first members.
The room showing Al talking with Wayne was the room in which Bill stayed for a time at their home. later, it was used for drunks needed to sober up, as there were not enough beds at the hospital. The bed with a Bible on the bed was the "surrender room" where the new alki's were taken to do their 3rd step, and the 3rd step Prayer was written on the paper.





































































































These were photos from inside Dr. Bob and Anne's home. Sorry they are all out of order. Not sure about moving the photos where I want them. Living room has some of original furniture (these chairs have been recovered), and some just period furniture. The books in the bookcase were actually those of Dr. Bob's. They are behind glass to preserve them.


The furniture in the dining room is original







































Interestingly, the refrigerator has a foot pedal that opens the door! Why don't they make them like that these days??? The bottles on the bedside table were representative of what Dr. Bob may have given the alkis to help sober up.






That's all for now. May add more later, when I come across more photos. it is an amazingly awesome experience to be here, and we are so grateful to be doing it. Only wish I could bring these photos to life for you so you could experience what we did. love to all,






Al & Sylvia












































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Thursday, August 25, 2011

Hudson Auto & the RV Museums













While we waited for the fridge, we visited the Hudson Auto Museum. Have posted a few pics. Pretty interesting old vehicles! We both finally (at our age) realized why the storage in back of a vehicle is called a trunk! They used to strap a trunk on the back of the car, then actually began making a trunk a part of the car. Just never thought of the verbage.













Also went to the RV Museum in Elkhart, and the Entegra RV Factory at Middlebury, and Newmar Factory at Nappanee, IN. The RV Museum was a hoot! The blue and white one was Mae West's Housecar, paid for by Paramount Studios! There was a solid-sided trailer pulled by a 1913 model T, Piggy-back rigs from 1915...not pick-ups, but runabouts with the trunk removed, and camper box put on top.







Of, course, I had to keep an eye on Al. He found this gal resting on a bench and had to make friends.



The final night at Shipshewana, we were invited to JR's home to meet his wife and have dessert. They live on a beautiful property in a huge home made by her brother. It was absolutely gorgeous. We had a very peaceful 2 hr visit with them at their huge granite table, where she served homemade raspberry cream dessert. They also gave us a basket (same one we had given them filled with fruit) filled with fresh vegetables from their garden! We felt we have wonderful friends here and almost hated to leave.




Shipshewana was named for a Potawatommi Indian Chief. Population of the town in 2009 was 536. It was founded by the Anabaptists, Amish and Memonite cultures. When the kids leave the Amish faith to see what the world is about, it is called, "Rumspringa" which means "running around" in Pennsylvania-Dutch, which is cross between German and English, and is the Amish "tongue". They do not worship in churches, but the 3-hour services rotate among the members' homes. Alsok, they do not have health insurance, but if one is in need of medical help, all the members chip in. The kids only go to school through the 8thy grade and begin working and learning their trade. Also, one Amish stated their love of the word, "JOY"...Jesus 1st, Others 2nd, Yourself last. What a beautiful thought!


We finally left Shipshewana on Tuesday morning, after JR installed an additional fan. The fridge seems to be cooling well, even though the digital thermometer must be off. The cheapo one reads where it is supposed to be. Stayed in Toledo, OH at a Wal-Mart lot that night, then on to Sandusky where we walked on dock on Lk. Erie. Didn't know Lk Erie is the entire northern border of Ohio! We talked with a very informative Border Patrol police who told us about Hwy 2 through Put-In-Bay. So. We took the beautiful drive along the lake shore to Vermilion, OH. There we parked in big parking lot where Al asked people in the hardware store if it was ok. Yes! Ok, while fixing dinner, a lady knocked on our door and asked why we hadn't called HER to ask permission. She liked our cat, Rusty, so said we could stay. About 11:30, there was a lightning bolt that lit the whole area and the thunder came at the same time. It must have just missed us. Then for the next few hours, it BLEW (wasn't sure the RV wouldn't tip over!), RAINED, thunder and lightning. Should've taken a movie!!!! Pretty scarey! Lots of power outages, trees down, etc. Whew! Glad the sun was out again this morning.

Today, Al drove us along Hwy 6 East through downtown Cleveland, where we got on Hwy 77 and headed south to Akron, Home of Doctor Bob. We will go see that tomorrow. Tonight, we are in a quiet RV park about 20 mi away. Glad to be settled in for 4 nights here.


8/26: Spent this morning in Akron at the AA Intergroup Office seeing all the Archives of AA history and learning all about where to go to see where it all happened. What an amazing place. We planned to spend about an hour, then go to Dr. Bob's home, but that will need to happen tomorrow. Went to a funky "Dry People's Club" after the meeting last night and met some very interesting people. Getting quite a colorful history here and we are blessed.

I realized I sent this yesterday with a non-working link, so will try to send it again. Hopefully it will work better this time. All for now!