SISTER IGNATIA AND
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
Sister Ignatia
1889 - 1966
Sisters of Charity of St. Augustine
The Drunk's "Angel of Hope"
People who know the history of
Alcoholics Anonymous have heard of Dr. Bob Smith
and Bill Wilson, credited with founding the
organization, but few have heard of the woman
who shaped the hospital concept used to this
day. On August 16, 1935, Sister Ignatia Gavin, a
frail but no-nonsense Catholic sister in charge
of admissions at St. Thomas Hospital in Akron,
Ohio, with the help of Dr. Bob Smith, one of the
founders of Alcoholics Anonymous, admitted the
first alcoholic patient under the diagnosis of
acute gastritis, thus making St. Thomas Hospital
the first hospital in the world to treat
alcoholism as a medical condition. Dr. Bob
provided the medical treatment, while a steady
stream of "reformed" alcoholics helped the man
with his "spiritual" needs.
Although the hospital did not
want to admit alcoholics, Sister Ignatia had
previously circumvented the system. Sister
Ignatia's care for alcoholics started back in
1934, when she and emergency room intern, Thomas
Scuderi, M.D., began secretly sobering
alcoholics at the hospital, housing the
alcoholism patient in the hospital's flower
room.
Sister Ignatia increasingly
began to believe that alcoholics should not be
sneaked into the hospital but brought through
the front door just like other sick people.
This belief led to the first
medical admission in 1935. Soon, she provided a
ward for men to sober up and St. Thomas Hospital
became the first religious institution to
recognize the rights of alcoholics to receive
hospital treatment. Today, many of AA's
practices -- including the use of tokens to mark
milestones in sobriety -- find their origins
with Sister Ignatia.
Sister lgnatia
was the first person to use medallions in
Alcoholics Anonymous. She gave the drunks who
were leaving St. Thomas after a five day dry out
a Sacred Heart Medallion and instructed them
that the acceptance of the medallion signified a
commitment to God, to A.A. and to recovery and
that if they were going to drink, they had a
responsibility to return the medallion to her
before drinking. The custom is carried out to
this day with tokens awarded for sobriety. The
sacred heart medallions had been used prior to
A.A. by the Father Matthew Temperance Movement
of the 1840's and the Pioneers, an Irish
Temperance Movement of the 1890's.

Picture of the he sacred
heart medallions
Dr. Bob died in 1950, and in
1952 Sister Ignatia was transferred to
Cleveland's St. Vincent Charity Hospital.
She recalled: "We're just like
people in the Army, you know. We go where we are
sent. . . . I was there [in Akron] for 24 years.
. . and finally the obedience came that I was to
go to Charity and work with AA there."
On August 7, 1952, at age 63,
the "Angel of Alcoholics Anonymous" arrived in
Cleveland for her new assignment. Planning began
for an alcoholism wing at the hospital.
As part of the ward's setup,
Sister Ignatia requested a coffee bar for the
patients, similar to the one in Akron. However,
a board member who reviewed the plan questioned
the need for it. He returned the plan to Sister
Ignatia and said, "A table will have to do."
But. . . Ignatia would not compromise. She knew
what she wanted for the AAs, and she put the
future of the ward on the line with her reply:
"Let's forget about it if you're not going to
give us the proper setup." The coffee bar
remained in the drawings.
With the help and
contributions of the many people Sister Ignatia
had helped, Rosary Hall Solarium (its initials
in memory of Dr. Bob, Robert Holbrook Smith)
accepted its first patient on December 15. It
was a kind of recovery mecca where physical
medicine, spiritual nourishment, and brotherly
love regularly produced miracles of recovery. .
. . Sister Ignatia was Rosary Hall's breath and
spirit.
Through the years, the program
successfully treated thousands of alcoholics.
Sister Ignatia was among the first to
acknowledge alcoholism among priests and nuns.
She was also instrumental in implementing the
first Al-Anon program, for families of
alcoholics.
Even as her health declined,
Sister Ignatia continued to care for alcoholics
at Rosary Hall. Thousands of alcoholics knew
first-hand Sister Ignatia's honesty and
nonjudgmental love.
For more than 30 years, Sister
Mary Ignatia Gavin, CSA, founding both Ignatia
Hall at St. Thomas in Akron and Rosary Hall
Solarium at St. Vincent, was a messenger of hope
for alcoholics and their families. Her
courageous stand for medical treatment and her
caring devotion to the victims of alcoholism
helped Dr. Bob Smith and Bill Wilson, founders
of Alcoholics Anonymous, and thousands who have
come after them.
Sister Ignatia never accepted
recognition for any of her work with alcoholics.
Even in 1961, when she was recognized for her
work by President Kennedy, gracious humility
prevailed, accepting the awards only in the name
of her religious community and profession.
Sister Ignatia retired in May
1965. She died less than a year later on April
1, 1966.