When Sue Smith Windows declared that the copyright on the Big Book
and Bill's other writings should be allowed to lapse, she probably did not
realize that her wish had already been granted.
There actually was no valid copyright on the Big Book, not ever.
And even if there had been one, it would have had to have been renewed
after 28 years. But it was not. As unbelievable as it may seem, the staff at the
Alcoholics Anonymous headquarters in New York City was so incompetent that they
neglected to renew the copyright on the Big Book. They let the copyright expire.
So the copyright of the first edition (1939) would have lapsed in 1967, and the
copyright of the second edition (1955) would have lapsed in 1983 — if they had
ever been valid, which they weren't. The second edition of the Big Book
contains both The Twelve Steps and The Twelve Traditions, so both have unquestionably
been in the public domain since at least 1983.
An unknown author has sleuthed out some more very revealing
truths about Bill Wilson's handling of the Big Book finances
from Bill Wilson's later book, Alcoholics Anonymous Comes Of Age.
Check it out. That web page also features
a breakdown of the Big Book project's very questionable finances
and obvious fraud.
A newly-organized company, called
Works Publishing Inc. was founded June 20th, 1940.
Herbert Taylor was the President and Horace Crystal was the
Vice-President.
Bill Wilson was not involved, and not allowed to hold any
office in the new company, because he had previously taken
and spent thousands of dollars of stock subscriber cash
plus Charles B. Towns' donations and other moneys, as well as
dishonestly filing for the copyright in his own name.
Note that this was a new corporation. Bill Wilson had
used the name "Works Publishing" on the copyright form,
but there was no such company in existence other than
"Wm. G. Wilson, trading as Works Publishing Co."
until this new company was incorporated in June, 1940.
Henry Parkhurst and Bill Wilson had previously started up
and
sold shares in the
"One Hundred Men Corporation", remember, and that is the
company that was supposed to write and publish the book.
But throughout his Alcoholics Anonymous Comes Of Age book,
Bill Wilson talked constantly about Works Publishing, and
says that it was the company that did it all.
In that book, Wilson did not even admit
that the "One Hundred Men Corporation" ever existed.
He says that they went around selling stock in Works Publishing
to raise the money to support writing the Big Book.
That is false.
William Wilson, Henry Parkhurst and William J. Ruddel were selling
stock in the "One Hundred Men Corporation".
See the
subscription form.
Here is the financial statement that they prepared, that shows the
receipts and disbursements of the early book project. Also note the name
switch.
Stock had been sold in, and moneys collected for,
--> "The One Hundred Men Corporation". <--
But the financial statement purported to explain
the financial operations of a company called "Works Publishing
Co.".
What happened to the One Hundred Men Corporation, and its
shares, and its money?
It seems to have been quietly forgotten.
Actually, what happened is the other members of Alcoholics Anonymous
covered up for Bill Wilson's crimes, to avoid a scandal. They started
telling a story about how they had simply decided to change the name
of the company from "The One Hundred Men Corporation" to
"Works Publishing".
That was after Bill had copyrighted the Big Book in the name of Works Publishing,
claiming that he was the publishing company — that it was a sole proprietorship,
"Wm G. Wilson, dba Works Publishing".
Works
Publishing Company, financial statement for October 1938
through June 1940.
Works Publishing Company, Receipts and Disbursements Statement
for October 1938 through June 1940, only.
Bill Wilson invested $100 in the company, and then was paid $1558 to write
the first 11 chapters of
the Big Book. He was
supposed to be paid $1000 for the work, but he
ended up getting paid $1558. That was very generous:
-
$1558 in Year 1939 dollars
equals $18,407.46 in Year 2000 dollars. Not too bad, for a few months spent
writing or co-writing nine or ten chapters (9 or 10 because Henry
Parkhurst wrote the "To Employers" chapter, and
Joe Worth wrote or rewrote Bill's own story).
-
That was really not too bad, considering that Bill
Wilson was a failed "stock analyst", not a professional writer,
and not an expert on recovery.
-
And that was really, really not too bad, considering that Doctor Bob's
daughter, Sue Smith Windows, says that other people did most of the
writing, and that Bill Wilson was such a bad writer that everything
he wrote had to be rewritten.
-
Bill wasn't even a knowledgeable alcoholism recovery counselor, either.
By December 1938, Bill's sole experience
with recovery was completing 4 years of sobriety for himself,
helping to sober up Doctor Bob, and then
getting about 20 members of his New York group to stay sober for
shorter periods of time, while
surreptitiously indoctrinating them all
with the religion of
Dr. Frank N. D. Buchman and his Oxford Groups,
and then watching the A.A. members relapse repeatedly...
But that wasn't enough money for Bill, not nearly enough. He then
took and spent much of the money
that had been raised to print the book.
Henrietta Seiberling
was rather upset about it.
Bill Wilson was so eager to make money off of the book that he printed up
a premature multilith edition that contained no copyright notice
and sold copies for $3.50 each.
That immediately, permanently, voided any possible copyright on the book.
(Once a copyright is lost, it can never be regained. If something is first published
without a copyright notice, or if the first printing is not properly copyrighted,
then the work immediately falls into the public domain, and remains there forevermore.)
When Wilson learned of the seriousness of his error, he fraudulently
filed
for the copyright in his own name, claiming that he was the sole author of the book,
and doing business as the publishing company "Works Publishing" (which did
not exist).
Note that the resulting copyright was invalid, and has always been invalid,
and
is still invalid.
(That is why
you can
legally download copies
of the first edition Big Book
from the Internet for free.)
Then Bill Wilson traded the copyright that he had stolen
for a lifetime income in what looks suspiciously like a blackmail deal.
The "Alcoholic Foundation" absolutely had to have the copyright to
be able to continue publishing the Big Book,
and Bill Wilson had it, so Bill dictated terms that gave him an income
for the rest of his life. (The other alcoholics did not realize that the
copyright was invalid.)
First, the deal was that Bill got $100 per month
(if available from book sales),
for the use of the book's copyright, in addition to
a $120 per month stipend that came from outside donations,
like from John D. Rockefeller Jr.. (Yes,
those outside donations that are forbidden by the Seventh
Tradition.)
Later, the agreement was changed (by Bill) to Bill receiving royalties for life
(and beyond) on the sales of the book.
By 1944, the royalties had climbed to $200 per month, and kept going up.
Bill never worked again. Bill died rich.
(Lois Wilson's heirs still collect over $1 million per year in royalties
from this deal and Bill's other writings.)
None of the other co-authors, except Doctor Bob, got a penny from
the Big Book. Bill took it all.
Original Big Book assignment of copyright to Works Publishing, Inc.
document.
Note that the deal is not explicitly spelled out in this document; it
simply says that Bill Wilson got $1 and "other good and lawful
consideration." And he got a whole lot of "other good and lawful
consideration"; in the end, millions of dollars.
In that document where Bill assigns all rights in the Big Book to
Works Publishing, Inc.,
Bill stated:
I WILLIAM G. WILSON doing business as Works Publishing Company, of New York
City, N. Y. ... do sell, assign and transfer over unto WORKS PUBLISHING, INC. ...
all my right, title, and interest in and to the copyright, Class A, No.
128036 heretofore taken out by me for the book entitled "ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS,"
of which I am author and proprietor ...
Another person who cast a critical eye on the Big Book deal asked
whether all of the authors of the stories in the Big Book signed
over the rights to their stories to Bill Wilson. If not, then Bill Wilson
could not sign over all of the rights to the Big Book to Works Publishing, Inc.
He could not sell what he did not own.
There is no record of any such signing party. In fact, the authors
of the stories were angry
that Bill had stolen the copyright after he promised them that the book would
be owned by the group, so they didn't sign anything over to Bill.
|
The
www.AApublicControversy.com website points out,
"A post card needed a 1 Cent stamp only,
and the average monthly income of an employed worker was around $40."
At
$120 to $320 per month, Bill was giving himself a
salary three to eight times higher than that of the average worker.
In addition, the A.A. organization gave Bill a $27,000 house,
which they named "Stepping Stones", and a Cadillac car.
He had all of that while he was technically
unemployed for
nine years.
They [narcissists]
often usurp special privileges and extra resources that they
believe they deserve because they are so special.
DSM-IV == Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition;
Published by the American Psychiatric Association, Washington, DC. 1994;
page 659.
|
And while all of this was going on, Bill hypocritically exhorted the
other members of A.A. to work unselfishly, abandon self-seeking,
and to have no thought of the profit motive:
The unselfishness of these men as we have come to know
them, the entire absence of profit motive, and their community
spirit, is indeed inspiring to one who has labored
long and wearily in this alcoholic field.
— The Big Book, 3rd Edition, The Doctor's Opinion, page XXV.
"Selfishness, self-centeredness! That, we think, is the root of our
troubles."
"Above everything, we alcoholics must be rid of this selfishness.
We must, or it kills us!"
— The Big Book, 3rd Edition, Chapter 5, page 62.
"We will lose interest in selfish things and gain interest in
our fellows.
Self-seeking will slip away. Our whole attitude and outlook upon life will
change."
— The Promises, in The Big Book, 3rd Edition, Chapter 6,
page 84.
"On awakening let us think about the twenty-four hours ahead.
We consider our plans for the day. Before we begin, we ask God to direct
our thinking, especially asking that it be divorced from self-pity,
dishonest or self-seeking motives."
— The Big Book, 3rd Edition, Chapter 6, page 86.
"To be vital, faith must be accompanied by self sacrifice
and unselfish, constructive action."
— The Big Book, 3rd Edition, Chapter 7, page 93.
Bill Wilson's psychiatrist, Dr. Harry Tiebout, was irritated with
Wilson's distortion of the history of A.A. and the Big Book.
Ernest Kurtz reported in his book,
Not-God: A History of Alcoholics Anonymous, that:
A report on this first meeting of the General Service Conference
of Alcoholics Anonymous in the June 1951 A.A. Grapevine
again roused the ire of Dr. Harry Tiebout. The psychiatrist wrote
Wilson an accusing letter, "pointing out the dangers of
historical distortion, egotism, and damaging ingratitude."
His special objection was that Bill had unjustly ignored the role
of A.A.'s non-alcoholic friends in saving Works Publishing, Inc.,
in its troubled early days. This particularly irked the doctor
because he himself had been an open-pursed purchaser of the apparently
worthless stock.
In rejoinder, Wilson acknowledged that some clarity had indeed been
lacking in his brief description of that episode of history, but Bill
went on to deny vigorously an intentional "historical
distortion" in the interests of making Alcoholics Anonymous
appear "self-sufficient" and so more maturely independent
than had actually been the case in its early days. He pointed out,
in obvious high dudgeon, that "in the past year we've
tremendously spread information concerning the vital roles
played by Silkworth, Tiebout, Dowling, Fosdick, Rockefeller,
Richardson, Alexander and a dozen others."
Not-God: A History of Alcoholics Anonymous, Ernest Kurtz, page 130.
But, Bill, you forget to say anything about the One Hundred Men
Corporation, or
where all of that money went...
|
Here is an exchange of letters, to and from Clarence Snyder,
the Chairman of the Cleveland Central Committee of A.A., in Cleveland,
Ohio
(and also the author of the Big Book chapter
"Home Brewmeister"),
complaining about the whole arrangement
between Bill Wilson and the A.A. organization, ending in his resignation.
With a name change, "Works Publishing, Inc." morphed into
"Alcoholics Anonymous Publishing, Inc.", which was a private,
for-profit corporation.
Original Works Publishing Company name change document, page 1.
Original Works Publishing Company name change document, page 2.
Original Works Publishing Company name change document, page 3.
Bill Wilson's royalty agreement of 1963 with A.A.W.S., Inc.
Bill Wilson's Last Will and Testament, leaving ten percent of his estate
to his favorite mistress, Helen Wynn, and the other ninety percent
to his wife Lois.
Lois Wilson's Last Will and Testament, where the royalty money
for all of Bill's books leaves the A.A. fellowship forever, and goes to
some people who just heard about A.A., or who maybe just saw the
made-for-TV movie "My Name Is Bill W.".
Note that, when the second edition of the Big Book was
published in 1955, Bill Wilson carried out a Stalin-like purge of
almost all of the original A.A. Big Book authors, those
other old-timers
who had almost as much seniority as Bill Wilson, and who could
complain that Wilson had broken his promise to them.
(Stalin got rid of all of the other old-timers who could possibly be
rivals and threaten his supremacy, and so did Bill.)
Bill Wilson had promised them that they would all own the book in
common, and that the profits would go to the Alcoholic Foundation.
What really happened was that Bill Wilson ended up owning the copyright,
and Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob got all of the royalties from the book,
and nobody else got anything.
Wilson removed the other old-timers' stories and replaced them with new
stories by other authors who had not been promised anything.
There was also the problem of relapsers.
Fully fifty percent of the
Big Book authors had failed to maintain sobriety. Bill Wilson
never publicized that fact; he just silently replaced their stories with new
stories from some other A.A. enthusiasts who also grandly declared that A.A. had
miraculously saved them from a life of drunkenness.
Henry Parkhurst's chapter in the front of the book, To Employers,
was left in, but his autobiographical story, The Unbeliever,
was discarded. Hank was not in a position to complain, because he
was dead. (He died drunk.)
Dr. Bob's autobiographical chapter was left in, but he had been
sharing in the money, so he wouldn't complain.
Besides, he was a co-founder, and his writings were considered sacred.
Besides, he was also dead, so he couldn't complain either.
Three other people were left in, but they were vastly outnumbered,
if not dead, so they couldn't make much of a fuss, even if they
wished to.
One of them was Fitz M., whose story Our Southern Friend
had to be left in because his story was also described at the end
of the We Agnostics chapter — he was the one who allegedly
heard God say,
"Who are you to say there is no God?"
Besides which, Fitz was also a true believer, and he wouldn't complain.
Clarence Snyder, the founder of A.A. in Cleveland was retained (only to be
dumped out of the 4th edition).
But almost everybody else was purged.
The new Big Book authors got no promises about how
"We will all share the ownership of the book."
The new generation of authors clearly understood that Bill Wilson
was the King who would be supported in comfort for the rest of his life,
while they would get nothing for their stories.
Bill's behavior was typical of someone with a
Narcissistic Personality Disorder.
Dr. Alexander Lowen said of narcissists:
A striving for power and control characterizes all narcissistic individuals.
Not every narcissist gains power and not every person with power is a narcissist,
but a need for power is part of the narcissistic disorder.
Narcissism, Denial of the True Self, Alexander Lowen, M.D.,
page 75.
For narcissists, control serves the same function as power — it protects
them from possible humiliation. First, they control themselves by denying those
feelings which might make them vulnerable. But they also have to control
situations in which they find themselves; they have to make sure that there
is no possibility that some other person will have power over them.
Power and control are two sides of the same coin. Together, they work to protect
the individual from feeling vulnerable, from feeling powerless to prevent
a humiliation.
Narcissism, Denial of the True Self, Alexander Lowen, M.D.,
page 77.
|
The first edition Big Book authors fared like this:
Henry "Hank" Parkhurst
(The Unbeliever) — NYC/NJ |
Gone |
Dr. Robert H. Smith (Dr. Bob's Nightmare) — Akron |
Stayed |
Dr. William D. Silkworth ("The Doctor's Opinion") — NYC |
Stayed |
Fitz M. (Our Southern Friend) — Washington, DC/Maryland |
Stayed |
Clarence Snyder (Home Brewmeister) — Cleveland |
Stayed
Removed from the 4th edition because he criticized Bill Wilson.
|
Ernie Galbraith
(The Seven Month Slip) — Akron
"AA #4", Dr. Bob's constantly—relapsing son—in—law.
|
Gone |
Charlie Simonson (Riding The Rods) — Akron |
Gone |
Bob Oviatt (The Salesman) — Akron |
Gone |
Arch T. (The Fearful One) — Detroit/Grosse Point |
Gone |
Dick S. (The Car Smasher) — Akron |
Gone |
Joe D. (The European Drinker) — Akron |
Stayed |
Florence Rankin (A Feminine Victory) — NYC |
Gone
Note: The REAL First A.A. Woman, who relapsed and disappeared.)
|
William 'Bill' Ruddel (A Business Man's Recovery) — NYC |
Gone |
Harry Brick (A Different Slant) — probably NYC |
Gone |
Jim Scott (Traveler, Editor, Scholar) — Akron |
Gone |
Walter Bray (The Back—Slider) — Akron |
Gone |
Marie Bray (An Alcoholic's Wife) — Akron |
Gone |
Tom and Maybell Lucas (My Wife and I) — Akron |
Gone |
William 'Bill' Van Horn (A Ward of the Probate Court) — Akron |
Gone |
Wallace 'Wally' Gilliam (Fired Again) — Akron |
Gone |
Paul Stanley (Truth Freed Me!) — Akron |
Gone |
Harold Sears (Smile With Me, At Me) — NYC |
Gone |
Henry J. 'Harry' Zoeller (A Close Shave) — Akron (later moved to NY) |
Gone |
Norman Hunt (Educated Agnostic) — Akron |
Gone |
Ralph Furlong (Another Prodigal Story) — NYC |
Gone |
Myron Williams (Hindsight) — NYC |
Gone |
Horace R. 'Popsy' Mayer (On His Way) — NYC |
Gone |
Ray Campbell ( An Artist's Concept) — NYC/Carmel NY |
Gone |
Lloyd Tate (The Rolling Stone) — Akron/Cleveland |
Gone |