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In spite of the importance of the Oxford Group to A.A. beginnings, and the way

it shaped some of the phrasing of the Twelve Steps, and so on, the Oxford

Group all by itself had had no great success at all in sobering up alcoholics.

As long as Bill W. had only the Oxford Group, he was still miserable and

desperate a good deal of the time, and hanging onto sobriety only by the skin

of his teeth. Richmond Walker, the author of *Twenty-Four Hours a Day,*

managed to stay sober in the Oxford Group for two and a half years

(1939-1941), but then went back to drinking again. It was only joining the

Jacoby Club-linked Alcoholics Anonymous group in Boston in May 1942 that got

Rich permanently sober. Dr. Bob was never able to stop drinking at all, as

long as the only thing he had was the Oxford Group.

Rowland Hazard was able to get sober when he had both the Oxford Group people

AND the Emmanuel Movement therapist Courtenay Baylor working with him. But he

then stopped going to Baylor for counseling, and by 1936 was back drinking

once again.

The Oxford Group clearly had PART of the vital answer to how alcoholics could

stop drinking, but one must also look at A.A. after the gradual split from the

O.G. started occurring, and at the Emmanuel Movement and the Jacoby Club --

and what these latter three groups all had in common -- in order to see what

else in addition was necessary in order to produce high success rates in

treating alcoholism.

Prof. Dubiel's book gives us an excellent account of the Emmanuel Movement

(which was linked strongly to the Episcopal Church and its spiritual

tradition), and is the only detailed research ever published on the Jacoby

Club, which was spiritually oriented but run by lay people, and was even

closer to A.A. in the way that it was organized and the way it worked with

suffering alcoholics.

But let me now start excerpting from Prof. Dubiel's book, which explains

things much better than I can:

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

CHAPTER 4

Rowland Hazard and the Beginnings of A.A.

Rowland Hazard III was a wealthy Rhode Island businessman who had become an

alcoholic, requiring hospitalization on more than one occasion. He is

well-known to the A.A. tradition as one of the Oxford Group circle who rescued

Ebby Thatcher and got him sober when Ebby was threatened with commitment to

the Brattleboro Asylum in August 1934. Three months later, in November 1934,

Ebby visited Bill Wilson, the co-founder of A.A., and they sat in Bill's

kitchen talking for hours in the famous scene which is reported in the first

chapter of *Alcoholics Anonymous*. Ebby was the messenger to Bill W. of

victory over the alcoholic compulsion through a new spiritual way of life.

But even if Ebby was the one who actually talked with Bill, Rowland Hazard is

recognized in the A.A. tradition as "the messenger behind the messenger," and

two things about him are normally highlighted: He was a member of the Oxford

Group, and he had been a patient of the famous psychiatrist Carl Jung in

Switzerland. In the traditional A.A. version of the latter story, it was said

that Hazard had been unable to stop returning to the bottle in spite of

extensive Jungian therapy, until finally Jung told him that with alcoholics of

his type only a spiritual conversion of some sort, which would enable him to

radically remake and remold his inner spirit, would ever give him freedom from

his overwhelming compulsion to drink.

But there was a third factor involved in Hazard's story, one that up until now

has been omitted in A.A. accounts of his role in their history. During both

1933 and that especially crucial year 1934, he was also a patient of the

Emmanuel Movement author Courtenay Baylor, whose contributions and methods

were discussed in the previous chapter. So early A.A. was influenced by the

Emmanuel Movement from at least two different sources. Bill W. read Richard R.

Peabody's *The Common Sense of Drinking*, which taught a secularized and

intellectualized version of the Emmanuelite methods (as was explained in the

previous chapter), but he was also in secondhand contact (via Ebby) with

Rowland Hazard and hence the ideas of Courtenay Baylor, who taught something

much closer to the original spiritually based Emmanuel therapy as devised in

1906 by the Rev. Elwood Worcester in the basement meetings he conducted in the

church he pastored in downtown Boston..

The discovery that Rowland Hazard was deeply involved with Courtenay Baylor

and the Emmanuelite tradition in addition to his Oxford Group activities was

in fact only made quite recently. The present chapter will discuss the way

this new information can be documented in the Hazard family papers which are

preserved in the Rhode Island Historical Society,. It will also attempt to

sort out some of the perplexing issues surrounding the story of Rowland's

therapy with Carl Jung in 1931, because materials contained in that same

archival source make it clear that he was only in Europe from June to

September of that year as part of a Hazard family trip, and that the dates and

places given in the family's letters from that period would have given Rowland

two months at most to spend in Switzerland with Jung. In fact, as will be

seen, even that may be pressing the matter: Rick Stattler at the Rhode Island

Historical Society, who did the primary research, sorting through all the

family papers searching for relevant items, has stated that he believes that

Rowland would have found it very difficult to have spent more than two weeks

at most talking to Jung in any great depth during that trip to Europe.

Rowland Hazard III

Rowland Hazard III was born in Peace Dale, Rhode Island, on October 29, 1881.

(Bill Wilson was born in 1895 and Dr. Bob Smith in 1879, so he was closer to

Dr. Bob's age, and fourteen years older than Bill W., who likely seemed to him

but a brash young man.) Rowland ("Roy") represented the tenth generation of

his family in Rhode Island. The first American Hazard, Thomas, was born in

1610; he came over to the New World after the British had begun settling in

Massachusetts, taking up his residence first in Boston, then the Massachusetts

Bay Colony. Roy was the eldest of five children born to woolen manufacturer

Rowland Gibson Hazard and Mary Pierrepont Bushnell. Hazard graduated from the

Taft School in Waterbury, Connecticut, and Yale University (1903) with a B.A.

degree. He sang in the Glee Club and University Choir and was a member of

Alpha Delta Phi fraternity as well as the Elihu Club.

After graduation Hazard worked at family businesses in Chicago and Syracuse

briefly, then entered the woolen textile trade in Rhode Island, where he

joined the Peace Dale Manufacturing Company, which specialized in woolen and

worsted fabrics. The firm had been founded circa 1801 by his

great-great-grandfather and his great-grand-uncle, Rowland Hazard and Joseph

Peace Hazard respectively. He began work in the wool-sorting department and

worked his way up, eventually being elected treasurer of the firm. The firm

was sold in 1918.

Hazard served in the Rhode Island state senate between 1914 and 1916 and spent

World War I as a captain in the Chemical Warfare Service of the Army. Shortly

after the war a number of family deaths left Hazard the eldest member of his

generation. In 1919 he effected a plan originally formulated by his father and

uncle and formed the Allied Chemical and Dye Company. By 1920 he was a

director and so remained throughout his career. By 1921 Hazard had also joined

the New York banking firm of Lee, Higginson and Company and remained there

until 1927. Throughout this period he remained active in Rhode Island

politics.

In the fall of 1927, Hazard went on a hunting expedition to Africa for big

game and specimens for American museums. He contracted a tropical illness, and

on his return to the United States in 1928 settled on the West Coast. He

established a ranch in southern New Mexico, at La Luz, and shortly organized

the La Luz Clay Products Company. He had discovered substantial deposits of

high-grade clay for the manufacture of items ranging from roofing tiles to

decorative urns and vases. Upon establishing La Luz, he returned to the East

Coast to pursue other ventures. By 1931 he had transferred his residence from

Peace Dale, Rhode Island, to a family home in Narragansett, Rhode Island,

originally built in 1884 by his great-grand-uncle, Joseph Peace Hazard, and

known as Druid's Dream. "He also kept residences intermittently at 52nd Street

and other addresses in Manhattan; in La Luz, New Mexico; at 'Ladyhill' in

Shaftsbury, Vermont; and at 'Sugarbush' in Glastonbury, Vermont."

In his later years, following his move to Narragansett, Hazard served as the

executive vice president of the Bristol Manufacturing Company, Waterbury,

Connecticut, manufacturers of precision instruments. He also served as a

director of the Allied Chemical and Dye Company, the Rhode Island Hospital

Trust Company, and the Interlake Iron Company. From 1935 to 1938 he was in a

general partnership with the New York brokerage house of Taylor Robinson

Company, Inc. At one point he was director of the old Merchants' Bank in

Providence.

In 1910 Hazard married Helen Hamilton Campbell, the daughter of a Chicago

banker. The couple were divorced on February 25, 1929, and remarried on April

27, 1931, little more than a month before the trip to Europe during which

Hazard was supposed to have had his crucial encounter with Carl Jung. Rowland

and Helen had four children, Caroline C., Rowland G. III, Peter Hamilton, and

Charles B. Of these four, it was Charles who lived the longest, dying in 1995.

Rowland Hazard III remains somewhat of a mystery, cloaked in a silence that

was partly a feature of his times and his class, but a silence that was

especially impenetrable because he left behind almost no extant letters of his

own. We have to read about his life for the most part through the letters of

other family members. In addition, much of the information concerning Hazard's

relationship with early A.A. is anecdotal, very little of it documented.

On the surface, Hazard's life is mirrored effectively in the descriptions of

some of the characters in F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel *The Great Gatsby*,

though Hazard was more like one of the East Egg crowd, the established wealthy

class, than the upstart Jay Gatsby himself. When Fitzgerald (in a remark to

Ernest Hemingway) spoke of the very rich as being different from you and me,

he might have been speaking of the Hazard family and Rowland. Hazard moved

from place to place with apparent ease, tried his hand in this business and

adventure and then that. His success was seemingly always assured, his

position never tangibly threatened. His alcoholism was spoken of in hushed

terms, if mentioned at all. The information about exactly where he was and

when during his trips to Europe or Africa is vague and not well documented.

And this has bearing on the claim that has been long accepted: that Hazard met

with Carl Jung and was in therapy with him for an extensive period of time

("over a year" in the version frequently seen in the later A.A. tradition).

Since Rowland's own letters are no longer in existence, the correspondence

between his mother and his brother, Thomas Pierre Hazard, provide the bulk of

what we do know about "Roy," but they do not ever mention him going to Jung

for psychiatric treatment. This may have been a matter which he did not fully

share with his mother and brother, or they may have avoided talking about it

in their letters out of embarrassment that a member of a family so solid and

distinguished as theirs would need a psychiatrist. But these letters do

provide enough information about where Rowland was during the period from 1930

to 1934 to make it clear that the only opportunity he would have had to see

the Swiss psychiatrist Jung in Zurich in any kind of extensive fashion was for

a couple of months in 1931.

Hazard clearly struggled with alcoholism throughout his life, even though

mentions of it in the letters are scant. It embarrassed the family and it made

them uncomfortable to acknowledge his drinking problem even to other family

members. We do know that he eventually became acquainted with Ebby Thatcher, a

friend of Bill Wilson's from their days as classmates at the Burr and Burton

boarding school. And we know that Hazard's connection to A.A., that is, to

Bill W., came through his meeting Ebby and helping rescue him from commitment

to an asylum in August 1934.

Hazard and Courtenay Baylor

Whatever his relationship to Jung -- an issue which will be discussed in more

detail later in this chapter -- Rowland Hazard had considerable involvement

with Courtenay Baylor, establishing a direct link between the Emanuel Movement

and the formation of Alcoholics Anonymous. The documentation of Hazard's

treatment by Baylor is contained in the list of Hazard family documents

prepared by Rick Stattler.

The relationship between Hazard and Baylor, though provable, is lacking in

detail: ample evidence at the Rhode Island Historical Society documents that

Hazard was a client or patient of Baylor during 1933 and 1934. The Hazard

family papers also show that after January 1933, Rowland went through a long

period when he was virtually incapacitated by his personal problems. He ceased

being actively involved in the ventures he had begun in New Mexico, and his

brother-in-law Wallace Campbell had to take over all his regular business.

Rowland's canceled checks showed only routine payments (although they were

still signed by him) for many months afterward. Finally in late 1933 he

completely stopped writing any checks at all. During most or all of this

period, he seems to have been in Vermont under the care of Courtenay Baylor,

and only occasionally made trips to New York to see family and sign checks. He

was unable to return to his normal high level of activity until October 1934.

So the period when Hazard was Courtenay Baylor's patient corresponded to the

deepest slump in his life, the time between January 1933 and October 1934,

when this normally aggressive and continuously active businessman,

industrialist, and entrepreneur seems to have been rendered almost totally

nonfunctional by his psychological and alcohol-related problems.

Baylor may in fact have been first called in when Hazard was hospitalized for

his alcoholism in February and March of 1932, but this would be merely

supposition. We do know that Baylor visited the family and worked in some

fashion with other family members also during 1933 and 1934. But the lack of

full detail means that though we know that their continuing relationship

existed during this period, we know little else about it. The available

documents thus do not allow us to discover whether Hazard's enthusiasm for the

Oxford Group was aided by his work with Baylor or diminished by it. We do know

that Hazard did not remain sober throughout his life, and did drink again

after 1934.

The first mention of Baylor in the surviving family documents occurs in a list

of acquaintances compiled by Hazard on April 13, 1933. Hazard was attempting

to sell maple syrup from his farm in Vermont and a "C. Baylor" is listed.

According to Stattler's notes, Baylor responded but did not order syrup. The

next reference to Baylor occurs on July 24, 1933, when his mother writes to

Thomas Hazard from Vermont: "Mr. Baylor just arrived. Am to have a talk with

him today, Roy goes to N.Y. and Baylor will go to Burlington tonight and come

back here tomorrow." The first therapeutic contact, as mentioned previously,

may of course have arisen much earlier, and may have been related to Hazard's

hospitalization for alcoholism in February and March 1932. Perhaps the

severity of that episode triggered a serious recovery effort on Rowland's

part, or caused his family to call in Baylor for an intervention. But this

must be conjecture. And it is also possible that Baylor may not have become

involved in trying to help until after Rowland's further breakdown in January

1933.

Of the fourteen letters in the RIHS material pertaining to Baylor, most



concern bills from him paid by Thomas Hazard. As Stattler summarizes, "It

collectively indicates that Hazard hired Baylor from at least December 15,

1933 to October 16, 1934 for unspecified services" There is also reference to

the fact that Baylor worked with the entire family, not simply on a personal

basis with Hazard alone. In one letter (November 20, 1934), Thomas Hazard

wrote: "Inasmuch as throughout 1933 and 1934 you were working with Helen,

Carol and Rowley as well as Roy, it seemed to me that it would be proper to

estimate that one-third of your remuneration could be considered as a gift to

my brother."

Baylor seemed to have become rather a part of the family in some ways. While

brother Thomas was signing checks, he was also a potential business partner,

or so it seemed in Baylor's eyes. On Feb. 2, 1934, Baylor sent Thomas Hazard a

long letter detailing the opportunity to buy into a Nevada gold and silver

mine. Baylor referred to the deal as one which he believed to be as "clean a

proposition as could be found in mining." Thomas checked this out with

business friends who advised him against the deal. On February 13, Thomas's

secretary curtly informed Baylor that "Mr. T. P. Hazard has directed me to

advise you that all the individuals have been heard from, in connection with

your letter, and are not in favor of going into the venture." The letter

concludes with a reference to an Internal Revenue tax matter covering payments

to Baylor by Hazard's mother.

The RIHS packet of Hazard-Baylor letters concludes with a rare document of

Emmanuel Movement history. In 1949 a letter was written to Thomas Hazard at

Peace Dale, the family home, by the Courtenay Baylor Memorial Committee, so

indicated by the letterhead. The letter is a request for donations for a

memorial to Baylor, consisting of lighting fixtures at the entrance of the

Parish House of the Emmanuel Church. They were to be wrought-iron lanterns,

"one to be fixed to the outside of the Parish House entrance, and the other to

be placed inside the entrance porch. A dedicatory inscription will be carved

into the stone wall of the porch." The author of the letter preceded this

description with the comment that "the idea [of the lighting] is a

particularly happy one as it is symbolic of the light shed by him on the paths

of so many people."

The bills from Baylor to Hazard document the continued existence of the

Emmanuel Movement, renamed the Craigie Foundation, as manifested in Baylor's

work. The full nature of the foundation's activities during this time are not

easy to document. The bills do not explicitly specify that Baylor was paid

this money for treating Hazard for his alcoholism, but it is difficult to see

anything else Baylor could have provided them for which payments of this sort

would be due.

Baylor knew that a person had to rethink and reformulate himself, that is,

"remake himself," if he were to escape from alcoholism. Attempting to bring

this message to a person of Rowland Hazard's stature and accomplishments could

only have been a vexing task.

Just how Baylor related to the rest of the Hazard family raises questions the

surviving documents cannot answer. Baylor believed "every alcoholic came from

what might be called an alcoholic or neurotic atmosphere" and that "we can

hardly expect a patient to become or stay cured if he must remain in an

environment which has in all probability contributed to his own abnormal

nervous condition. This environment must in its turn be 'cured.'" So in terms

of Baylor's normal methodological assumptions, it would make sense if, in the

process of attempting to treat Rowland for his alcoholism, he also made some

efforts to change the way the other members of his family interacted with one

another. Nevertheless, given the accomplishments and self-confidence of the

Hazard family as evidenced by their letters to one another, it is difficult to

believe that Baylor would have remained a popular guest if he had pushed too

hard on the other members of the family to change their ways also. Hazard's

mother in particular does not appear to be the type of person who would take

kindly to the suggestion that she too needed to be cured.

Hazard was also participating in the Oxford Group during this same period. The

earliest reference in the Rhode Island Historical Society collection is a

letter from Thomas P. Hazard to his mother in February of 1934 which refers to

Rowland as being a member of the Oxford Group, but he could in fact have

joined them much earlier.

Whether from his therapy with Courtenay Baylor or his participation in the

Oxford Group (or both combined), Rowland Hazard was ultimately apparently able

to achieve at least significant periods of continuous sobriety; whether he

achieved real serenity and happiness we cannot know.

A linked chain did however exist, starting with the Rev. Elwood Worcester at

Emmanuel Episcopal Church in Boston, and linking him to Courtenay Baylor, who

in turn worked with Rowland Hazard during the years 1933 and 1934. Hazard in

turn was linked, through Ebby Thatcher, to Bill Wilson at the decisive moment

at the beginning of the A.A. movement. Hazard also knew the people at Calvary

Church in New York, where Bill W. started going in 1934 for further spiritual

help with his alcoholism. So he definitely moved in the same orbits as the

early members of A.A. and was present during the time period when Bill W. was

first getting sober.

How and to what degree Hazard influenced events must remain more conjectural,

beyond a few bare bones facts such as his major role in helping to rescue Ebby

Thatcher and get him sober in August 1934. Nevertheless A.A. historians must

take seriously not only his continual and important presence behind the scenes

during that key period, but also the possible ways that he could have been of

major influence.

IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII

++++Message 1822. . . . . . . . . . . . Richard Dubiel on Rowland Hazard (Part


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