History
of the Matt Talbot Movement

Jim
O'R related the following account. Though he has related the
history of the movement to various men over the years, the following
was taped at the 1999 spring retreat of Men's group #8. Jim
O'R is a member of that retreat group and was also one of the
original members of the "gang in the kitchen at Loyola" (paragraph
three).
"As
I understand it, in 1941, three alcoholics, AA members from
up around Ridgewood, NJ made a Laymen's retreat up at Loyola
Retreat House in Morristown, NJ. They liked it so much that
they returned the following year with eleven men. Those eleven
men liked it so much that they decided to try to get a retreat
group of their own.
And
so, in 1943, they made an arrangement with the officials of
the retreat house to have a certain weekend set aside especially
for this group of Alcoholics Anonymous it was only men
in those days. The man in charge of the retreat, Tom P., had
76 retreatants who all agreed to show up and make the retreat
a success. However, when it came time for the actual retreat,
they only had 27 men.
It
was on that retreat that Horace P. (a non-Catholic who was a
very prominent and active member of AA) was talking to some
of the gang in the kitchen at Loyola. He said, 'You Catholic
fellows are very fortunate because you always carry a medallion
or a rosary and when you get angry or upset or in a tough spot,
you can always turn to this little medal or medallion to sort
of give you solace and strength.' And that was the beginning
of our medallion.
The man who was the treasurer at the time, John O'C. from the
Bronx, had been reading about the life of Matt Talbot during
the retreat. He suggested using the name "Matt Talbot" for the
retreats.
Father
Collins, one of the Jesuits stationed at Loyola, designed the
medallion. In 1944, during the war, member Al C. from Yonkers
furnished the material for the medallions. Al was in the precious
metals business and he got the sterling silver for the medallions.
And
from that small beginning of 27 men and one group, I now understand
that we have 190 groups of men and women in the US and Canada.
The last membership figure I heard was several years ago when
our national secretary told us that there were 44,000 men and
women who have made these retreats.*
I think that is remarkable when you realize that there has been
no publicity at all. When or where have you ever seen anything
on TV, radio, newspaper, magazine about the Matt Talbot Retreat
Movement? I've only seen one newspaper from New England and
our secretary sent that down to me. But otherwise it's been
all by word of mouth, which I think is fantastic.
That's
about the story of the Matt Talbot Retreat Movement as I understand
it to date. It's functioning well; it's alive and vital. God
willing, it will keep on being alive and vital."
That
is the end of the story as told by Jim O'R. Once again, a chance
group of people with varying areas of knowledge and expertise
and an urgent desire to stay sober helped to create an enormously
valuable tool for all of us to use.

*
In the year 2000, there are approximately 190 groups and
67,000 members.