The Burnham family spent summers in
Vermont, where Dr. Burnham provided medical care to vacationers. Rogers Burnham, a younger brother of Lois, became friends with a local boy named Bill Wilson (William Griffith Wilson). Lois and Bill met in the summer of 1914, when Lois was 23 and Bill was 19. At that time, Lois was a college graduate and working with the YWCA. Bill was working his way through
Norwich University. The following summer they secretly became engaged. in
Bedford Hills, NY, where she co-founded
Al-Anon. They married on January 24, 1918, in the New York Swedenborgian Church. At that time, Bill was in the
United States Army and they wanted to marry before he was sent to the
Western Front. Lois completed an occupational therapy training programme through the War Department. During Bill's absence and on and off afterwards, Lois worked at the
Walter Reed General Hospital in the 'shell shock' ward for veterans; as a physical therapist at the Brooklyn Navy Hospital and as an
occupational therapist at
Bellevue Hospital, New York in the 1920s. After his return, the couple hoped to start a family, but after
ectopic pregnancies she was advised that pregnancy would be dangerous or impossible. Their attempts to adopt children were unsuccessful. Her marriage to Bill W. began to be challenging due to the combination of a series of ectopic pregnancies and his drinking problem. Lois began to work on programs to help families of alcoholics after Bill had gone through rehabilitation at Towns Hospital in 1934 and cofounded Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) in 1935. The same 12-Steps of recovery used by AA were adopted by Al-Anon
Al-Anon or Al-Anon Family Groups. Her autobiography,
Lois Remembers, was published in 1979. She died in 1988 at age 97, and is buried beside her husband in the East Dorset Cemetery in
East Dorset, Vermont. Without children, she left
Stepping Stones, the family home, gardens, archives and a writing studio (nicknamed "Wit's End" and "The Shack") on 8.5 acres in
Bedford Hills, New York that she and Bill had owned since 1941, to the nonprofit, tax-exempt privately run
Stepping Stones Foundation. She served as Stepping Stones Foundation's first president from 1979 to 1988 and led its programs to increase education, awareness and prevention of alcoholism. Stepping Stones historic site is on the
National Register of Historic Places, was designated a National Historic Landmark in October 2012, and has become a tour destination for members of
12-step organizations, history buffs, and scholars and experts from many fields including those interested in alcoholism, history, spirituality, philosophy, pop culture, addiction, democracy and social movements. Her memoir "Lois Remembers" is published by Al-Anon Family Groups. ==In popular culture==