The New Book by Gary Neidhardt
More than seveny years before the Betty Ford Clinic opened in 1982, Charles Townes opened a treatment center on Central Park in Manhattan in one of the wealthiest neighborhoods in the United States. The likes of W. C. Fields, Lillian Russell, and John Barrymore eventually required the services that Towns Hospital provided. He had perfected what been called the world’s only known opium cure in China after having been sent there as a United States drug treatment ambassador. Upon his return, he gave his secret remedy away and had it published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. How can it be that this most persuasive and influential personality of the 1910s can be almost entirely forgotten today?


Gary Neidhardt, Author
Author of Poseidon and the PC, Gary Neidhardt is a retired software executive and American history lover living in Lilburn, Georgia. He has been interested in the history of recovery from alcohol and drugs for many years.
He literally stumbled upon Habits That Handicap by Towns, which is his only work that remains in print. At first, this book mainly gathered dust until a friend of his had his picture taken in front of the building that used to be Towns Hospital. Eventually that picture peaked Gary’s curiosity, which has led to this book and Gary’s ongoing research into the history of this fascinating personality.
5/16″ Away from Death
the WWII Patrol Craft

Poseidon and the PC:
The Letters of Lt. Paul W. Neidhardt
The hull of the ship consisted of 5/16-inch welded steel plate. Crews joked that this thin hull was just thick enough to keep out the water and small fish. They also said it protected the ship from tin fish—torpedoes. Her hull was so thin a “tin fish” can go right through without exploding. Poseidon and the PC documents the adventures of Lt. Paul W. Neidhardt (USNR) through one hundred and fifteen of his letters written to his wife during World War II.
Long before ‘PC’ became equated with a “personal computer” or “politically correct,” the two letters were associated with “Patrol Craft.” These World War II ships had the mission of performing convoy escort duty and antisubmarine warfare. The PCs were meant to relieve the larger, far more valuable ships from the often monotonous duties of sailing at the speed of the slowest ship in a convoy. The 174 foot long PCs were so small that they were considered safe duty as more worthy targets were always available…
Blog
Alcoholism – Laymen Join Science to Cure It
The American Weekly magazine published an article on July 25, 1943 titled ‘Alcoholism – Laymen Join Science to Cure It’ written by Genevieve Parkhurst (couldn’t possibly be a relative of Hank, could it?). I suspect that the article I have is the third in a series, for...
The Solon of Narcotics
Some called him “an undisputed king, or perhaps emperor, so magnificent were his accomplishments.” Another called him a “Solon of Narcotics.” A prominent Boston doctor said he was “one of the most persuasive and dominating personalities in the world.” Towns achieved a...
How the Atom Bomb May Have Saved American and British Lives
Memoirs by Harry S. Truman, Harry S. Truman, Vol 1, Year of Decisions, pages 417, 419 General Marshall told me [Harry S. Truman] that it might cost a half a million American lives to force the enemy’s surrender on his home grounds.” It was the recommendation [of the...