Difference between revisions of "Los Angeles Clubs"

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=Early Clubs=
 
=Early Clubs=
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==World Girdlers' Correspondence Club==
 
==World Girdlers' International Science League Correspondence Club==
 
==World Girdlers' International Science League Correspondence Club==
 
fl. 1937<br>
 
fl. 1937<br>
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Under three different names, this is one of the [[Cosmic_Circle#Fake_Cosmic_Clubs|many ersatz clubs]] started by Claude Degler.  [[James Kepner]] and some other [[neofans]] were members, along with [[Forrest J Ackerman]] as an honorary member. As soon as Degler left L.A., the others dropped off, leaving Ackerman the sole member and when Ackerman went into the Army, it was memberless.
 
Under three different names, this is one of the [[Cosmic_Circle#Fake_Cosmic_Clubs|many ersatz clubs]] started by Claude Degler.  [[James Kepner]] and some other [[neofans]] were members, along with [[Forrest J Ackerman]] as an honorary member. As soon as Degler left L.A., the others dropped off, leaving Ackerman the sole member and when Ackerman went into the Army, it was memberless.
  
[[The Knaves]]
+
==The Knanves==
[[The Outsiders]]
+
fl. 1943-<br>
[[The Outlanders]]
+
A group of [[Insurgents]] which organized around 1943 in opposition to other members of [[LASFS]] over a disputed Directorate election in what was called '''The War of the Knanves'''.  (The name was given to them by [[T. Bruce Yerke]] from a typo in a [[fanzine]]. No, I don't know how to pronounce it.)  Their [[fanzine]] was ''[[The Knanve]]'' and was edited by [[T. Bruce Yerke]].
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* ''[[Have at Thee Knanves]]'' by  [[Samuel D. Russell]]
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* ''[[The Knanve]]'' by [[T. Bruce Yerke]]
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==The Outlanders==
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fl. 1948-<br>
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The '''Outlanders''' (a.k.a. the '''Outlander Society''' or '''OS''') was a former [[Los Angeles]]-area [[fan club]] for members of [[LASFS]] who lived in the "outlands" of [[Los Angeles]], and thus found it difficult to make it to every meeting of [[LASFS]].  The organization was founded in October 1948 and the original eight members were [[Len Moffatt]], [[Rick Sneary]], [[Stan Woolston]], [[John Van Couvering]], [[Con Pederson]], [[Bill Elias]], [[Alan Hershey]] and [[Freddie Hershey]]. It met monthly.
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The [[club]] had the reputation of being one of the more intellectual groups in [[fandom]], in large part because of the [[clubzine]], ''[[The Outlander]]''.  ([[Art Rapp]] called it fandom's "most articulate and intellectual group".) Meetings were all-day sessions, but were not business meetings: there were no dues, officers, or bylaws.  Members stayed connected between meetings by a continuing chain letter.
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When the Outlanders were founded in 1948, some of them began using the slogan "[[South Gate in '58]]" as an [[interlineation]] or filler in their [[fanzines]] – [[South Gate]] being the town where their founder [[Rick Sneary]], a.k.a. "[[the Hermit of South Gate]]," lived. The idea was initially to promote an after 10-year reunion of the Outlanders, but eventually it became a successful [[Worldcon bid]]. The [[Solacon]] was held in a [[Los Angeles]] hotel which was ceded for the Labor Day weekend to the Mayor of South Gate by the Mayor of Los Angeles, as South Gate did not have a hotel large enough to host the event which drew fans in the hundreds.
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{{fancy2|text=
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A [[fanclub]] (formed October 1948) for people living outside the city limits of [[LA]]; [[Rick Sneary]]'s group. It met approximately monthly till mid-52. [[Sneary]], [[Moffatt]], [[Woolston]], [[Con Pederson|Pederson]], [[van Couvering]], and [[Rory Faulkner]] were important members. Thirteen issues of [[OO]] ''[[The Outlander]]'' were published, and the [[Third Westercon]] was produced.
 +
}}
 
[[The Insurgents]]
 
[[The Insurgents]]
 
[[Harbor Fantasy League]]
 
[[Harbor Fantasy League]]

Revision as of 17:15, 23 September 2021

When you think of clubs in LA, you think of LASFS, the first club in LA and one which is still active. But there were others -- many others.

LASFS[edit]

LASFS rates its own page.

Early Clubs[edit]

World Girdlers' Correspondence Club[edit]

World Girdlers' International Science League Correspondence Club[edit]

fl. 1937
The WGCC was a club which existed (briefly) around 1937. It was the brainchild of Vernon Harry in Los Angeles and was announced in the January 1937 issue of Fantasy Magazine. It never had more than a few members and folded when Harry went to work on a night shift.

It's unclear whether it was a bit of a scam from the beginning, or the product of teenage megalomania.

T. Bruce Yerke became a member just before it folded.

It was mentioned in Fancy 1 under WGCC:

From Fancyclopedia 1, ca. 1944
World Girdlers' Correspondence Club. One of the mushrooms of the First Transition. No other information available.

United Califans[edit]

Futurian Society of Los Angeles[edit]

Futurian Society of California[edit]

fl. 1942-42
Under three different names, this is one of the many ersatz clubs started by Claude Degler. James Kepner and some other neofans were members, along with Forrest J Ackerman as an honorary member. As soon as Degler left L.A., the others dropped off, leaving Ackerman the sole member and when Ackerman went into the Army, it was memberless.

The Knanves[edit]

fl. 1943-
A group of Insurgents which organized around 1943 in opposition to other members of LASFS over a disputed Directorate election in what was called The War of the Knanves. (The name was given to them by T. Bruce Yerke from a typo in a fanzine. No, I don't know how to pronounce it.) Their fanzine was The Knanve and was edited by T. Bruce Yerke.

The Outlanders[edit]

fl. 1948-
The Outlanders (a.k.a. the Outlander Society or OS) was a former Los Angeles-area fan club for members of LASFS who lived in the "outlands" of Los Angeles, and thus found it difficult to make it to every meeting of LASFS. The organization was founded in October 1948 and the original eight members were Len Moffatt, Rick Sneary, Stan Woolston, John Van Couvering, Con Pederson, Bill Elias, Alan Hershey and Freddie Hershey. It met monthly.

The club had the reputation of being one of the more intellectual groups in fandom, in large part because of the clubzine, The Outlander. (Art Rapp called it fandom's "most articulate and intellectual group".) Meetings were all-day sessions, but were not business meetings: there were no dues, officers, or bylaws. Members stayed connected between meetings by a continuing chain letter.

When the Outlanders were founded in 1948, some of them began using the slogan "South Gate in '58" as an interlineation or filler in their fanzinesSouth Gate being the town where their founder Rick Sneary, a.k.a. "the Hermit of South Gate," lived. The idea was initially to promote an after 10-year reunion of the Outlanders, but eventually it became a successful Worldcon bid. The Solacon was held in a Los Angeles hotel which was ceded for the Labor Day weekend to the Mayor of South Gate by the Mayor of Los Angeles, as South Gate did not have a hotel large enough to host the event which drew fans in the hundreds.

From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959
A fanclub (formed October 1948) for people living outside the city limits of LA; Rick Sneary's group. It met approximately monthly till mid-52. Sneary, Moffatt, Woolston, Pederson, van Couvering, and Rory Faulkner were important members. Thirteen issues of OO The Outlander were published, and the Third Westercon was produced.

The Insurgents Harbor Fantasy League Weird Tales Club Mañana Literary Society Science Fiction League

Central L. A. Club Desolation of Smaug Mydgard Lothlorien Nargothrond Time Meddlers of Los Angeles Southwest Association of Fans SCIFI Tolkien Forever Fellowship of Southern California

Non-Local Clubs HQed in LA[edit]

The Fantasy Association Fantasy Artist Network Mythopoeic Society ARS

College Clubs[edit]

Bruin Science Fiction Club