Difference between revisions of "Toronto in 1948"

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The only [[bidding]] that was done was done ''at'' [[Philcon I]], the 1947 [[Worldcon]].  The [[Toronto]] bidders were [[Beak Thompson]], [[Ned McKeown]] and [[John Millard]].  
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The only [[bidding]] that was done was done ''at'' [[Philcon I]], the 1947 [[Worldcon]].  The [[Toronto]] bidders were [[Beak Taylor]], [[Ned McKeown]] and [[John Millard]].  
  
 
[[Jack Speer]], a [[New York]]er at the time, had driven to [[Toronto]] to bring Thompson and McKeown to the Worldcon.  [[John Millard]], who also lived in Toronto was also at the [[Worldcon]], and they mentioned to him that they had thought about having a Worldcon in Toronto, but were not sure they could do it.  Millard was enthusiastic, and convinced the others to go ahead. They printed up flyers and banners and wrote their bid speech over the weekend.
 
[[Jack Speer]], a [[New York]]er at the time, had driven to [[Toronto]] to bring Thompson and McKeown to the Worldcon.  [[John Millard]], who also lived in Toronto was also at the [[Worldcon]], and they mentioned to him that they had thought about having a Worldcon in Toronto, but were not sure they could do it.  Millard was enthusiastic, and convinced the others to go ahead. They printed up flyers and banners and wrote their bid speech over the weekend.
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The competition was a forgotten [[Milwaukee in 1948]] bid.  See [[1948 Worldcon Site Selection]].
 
The competition was a forgotten [[Milwaukee in 1948]] bid.  See [[1948 Worldcon Site Selection]].
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{{bid | series=Worldcon | year=1948}}
 
{{bid | series=Worldcon | year=1948}}
 
[[Category:canada]]
 
[[Category:canada]]
 
[[Category:worldcon]]
 
[[Category:worldcon]]

Latest revision as of 14:51, 3 November 2022

The only bidding that was done was done at Philcon, the 1947 Worldcon. The Toronto bidders were Beak Taylor, Ned McKeown and John Millard.

Jack Speer, a New Yorker at the time, had driven to Toronto to bring Thompson and McKeown to the Worldcon. John Millard, who also lived in Toronto was also at the Worldcon, and they mentioned to him that they had thought about having a Worldcon in Toronto, but were not sure they could do it. Millard was enthusiastic, and convinced the others to go ahead. They printed up flyers and banners and wrote their bid speech over the weekend.

They won. The result was Torcon.

The competition was a forgotten Milwaukee in 1948 bid. See 1948 Worldcon Site Selection.



1948 Site Selection 1948
This is a page about a convention bid. Please extend it by adding information about who was bidding, officers, committee list, what they were bidding for, who their opponents were, and who won.