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Historic recovery literature, rare AA books, and archival collectibles — new items added regularly.
Historic recovery literature, rare AA books, and archival collectibles — new items added regularly.

Saturday Evening Post from January 1962 - The Housewife’s Secret Sickness

Original price $125 - Original price $125
Original price
$125
$125 - $125
Current price $125
Description Preview

This issue of Time includes one of the earliest national magazine articles on Alcoholics Anonymous, covering the famous Rockefeller Dinner in New York City. Hosted by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., the event brought public attention to the fledgling fellowship, then only five years old with about 400 members nationwide.

The Saturday Evening Post — January 27, 1962
Featuring “The Housewife’s Secret Sickness” by Don Murray

Alcoholism Among Women / Marty Mann / National Council on Alcoholism

Offered here is the January 27, 1962 issue of The Saturday Evening Post, featuring the important article “The Housewife’s Secret Sickness” by Don Murray.

This article examines the often-hidden problem of alcoholism among women during a time when public discussion of female alcoholism was still heavily shaped by shame, secrecy, and social stigma. The phrase “secret sickness” refers to the way many alcoholic women suffered privately, often hiding their drinking from family, neighbors, doctors, and the wider community rather than seeking help.

The piece is especially significant for recovery-history collectors because it includes interviews and commentary connected to women’s alcoholism and recovery, including Marty Mann—an early A.A. member and founder of the National Council on Alcoholism—as well as Mrs. Thomas Delaney, founder and director of CHRILL (“chronically ill”) Service and its alcoholism information center in East Orange, New Jersey.

Published in a major national magazine, this article helped bring attention to alcoholism from a woman’s perspective and contributed to the broader public conversation about treatment, stigma, and the need for women alcoholics to be seen, understood, and helped.

This issue is a meaningful collectible for those interested in A.A.-related history, Marty Mann, women in recovery, public education on alcoholism, and the changing understanding of alcoholism in mid-century America.

Condition

This magazine is in good condition overall. The magazine shows general age-related handling wear.

Please review all photos carefully for the most accurate representation of condition.

A strong period piece documenting the public discussion of women’s alcoholism, recovery, and the work of early alcoholism advocates during the early 1960s.

Good - Cover and interior pages clean.

  • Historic Feature: Early coverage of Alcoholics Anonymous in a major national magazine.
  • Rockefeller Connection: Details the crucial dinner that helped establish A.A.’s legitimacy.
  • Early A.A. History: Documents the fellowship just five years after its founding.
  • Condition: Well-preserved copy, good overall with only wear to front cover.

This issue is a historically significant artifact, capturing the moment Alcoholics Anonymous first entered the public spotlight, an event that shaped the fellowship’s future growth into a worldwide movement.

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Saturday Evening Post from January 1962 - The Housewife’s Secret Sickness
Saturday Evening Post from January 1962 - The Housewife’s Secret Sickness