Difference between revisions of "CFG"
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− | The '''Cincinnati Fantasy Group''', of Ohio, an influential [[fan club]]. | + | The '''Cincinnati Fantasy Group''', of [[Ohio]], an influential [[fan club]]. |
Founded by [[Charles R. Tanner]], [[Ross Rocklynne]] and [[Dale Tarr]] in December 1935, the CFG is the third-oldest continuously running [[sf club]]. [[Don Ford]], [[Roy Lavender]], [[Lou Tabakow]] and [[Stan Skirvin]] were notable early members. The [[founding of CFG]] is the subject of several (somewhat conflicting) stories. | Founded by [[Charles R. Tanner]], [[Ross Rocklynne]] and [[Dale Tarr]] in December 1935, the CFG is the third-oldest continuously running [[sf club]]. [[Don Ford]], [[Roy Lavender]], [[Lou Tabakow]] and [[Stan Skirvin]] were notable early members. The [[founding of CFG]] is the subject of several (somewhat conflicting) stories. |
Revision as of 07:12, 19 April 2021
The Cincinnati Fantasy Group, of Ohio, an influential fan club.
Founded by Charles R. Tanner, Ross Rocklynne and Dale Tarr in December 1935, the CFG is the third-oldest continuously running sf club. Don Ford, Roy Lavender, Lou Tabakow and Stan Skirvin were notable early members. The founding of CFG is the subject of several (somewhat conflicting) stories.
Bill Cavin has been the CFG Dictator since 1981, following Tabakow.
The CFG put on the Cinvention in 1949, and sponsors the annual Midwestcon, one of the longest-running cons extant, and the first relaxacon. For many years, it also sponsored the now-defunct Octocon. The club is also the source of the ubiquitous fan-party seating practice, the CFG Rules. Dale Tarr wrote a history of the club, CFG History, in 1957.
The group is informal and meets casually in members' homes every two weeks, but it does have occasional business meetings and votes. To become a member, one must attend several meetings and be voted in unanimously by the voting members in attendance at the meeting where the vote occurs. To retain voting membership, members must attend at least one regular meeting each year. This rule was put into effect in an exclusion act disenfranchising nonlocal members in 2013, following a controversial vote on the future of Midwestcon.
Other CFG events include an annual picnic and a series of New Year's parties. Typically, the CFG hosts a weekend-long party at Worldcons and NASFiCs.
Members listed in the 1949 Cinvention program book were: C. L. Barrett, Jerry Barrett, R. Brueckner, Don Ford, Lee Greenwell, Jim Hanley, Duke Henslee, W. B. Houston, Mrs. W. B. Houston (W. S. Houston?), Ronald Howes, Addie Huddleston, Roy Lavender, Bea Mahaffey, Floyd McClure, Jim McNally, Nancy Moore, Walter Pratt, Darrell Richardson, Alice Sander, Stan Skirvin, Charles Smith, Phil Stevenson, Betty Sullivan, Carrie Tabakow, Lou Tabakow, Arthur Tanner, Charles Tanner and Dale Tarr.
In 1957, Don Ford published a 30-page, mimeographed fanzine titled Cincinnati Fantasy Group, featuring a history of the club, member testimonials, origins of Midwestcon, profiles of members including Roy Lavender, Ben Keifer, Oscar & Mary Ellan Moeller, Jim Holtel, Walter Pratt and Bea Mahaffey, with writing by Ford, Dale Tarr, Bob Madle, Bill Grant, H. Ken Bulmer, Nick & Noreen Falasca, Lou Tabakow, C.L. "Doc" Barrett and Stan Skirvin.
From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959 |
The Cincinnati Fantasy Group, of Ohio; Don Ford, Roy Lavender, Lou Tabakow, and Stan Skirvin are notable members. They put on the Cinvention in 1949, and are sponsors of the annual Midwestcon.
from Fancyclopedia 2 Supplement ca. 1960: The Cincinnati Fantasy Group does not sponsor the Midwestcons; the individual members do. |
Correction: This is no longer true. CFG is now the actual sponsor of Midwestcon.
Club | 1935— |
This is a club page. Please extend it by adding information about when and where the club met, when and by whom it was founded, how long it was active, notable accomplishments, well-known members, clubzines, any conventions it ran, external links to the club's website, other club pages, etc.
When there's a floreat (Fl.), this indicates the time or times for which we have found evidence that the club existed. This is probably not going to represent the club's full lifetime, so please update it if you can! |