Difference between revisions of "1942 Worldcon Site Selection"

From Fancyclopedia 3
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Site selection for the 1942 [[Worldcon]] was conducted at [[Denvention]].  This was before there were formal bid committees, so it is unlikely that the [[bids]] were organized much before [[Denvention]].   
+
[[Site selection]] for the 1942 [[Worldcon]] was conducted at [[Denvention]] in 1941.  This was before there were formal [[bid committee]]s, so it is unlikely that the [[bids]] were organized much before the vote.   
  
Four [[bids]] presented at the [[site selection]] meeting:
+
Four bids were presented at the [[business meeting]]:
 
* [[San Francisco in 1942]] by [[Joe Fortier]]
 
* [[San Francisco in 1942]] by [[Joe Fortier]]
 
* [[Washington, DC in 1942]] by [[Milton Rothman]]
 
* [[Washington, DC in 1942]] by [[Milton Rothman]]
* [[Philidelpha in 1942]] by [[Bob Madle]]
+
* [[Philadelphia in 1942]] by [[Bob Madle]]
* [[Los Angeles in 1942]] by [[Walter Daugherty]].
+
* [[Los Angeles in 1942]] by [[Walter Daugherty]]
 +
 
 +
[[Los Angeles]] won but due to [[WWII]], the [[con]], [[Pacificon]], was not held until 1946.
  
[[Los Angeles]] won but due to [[WWII]] the con was not held until 1946.
 
  
 
{{bidding | series=Worldcon | year=1942 | after=1947}}
 
{{bidding | series=Worldcon | year=1942 | after=1947}}
[[Category:bidding]]
 
 
[[Category:World]]
 
[[Category:World]]
 
[[Category:worldcon]]
 
[[Category:worldcon]]

Latest revision as of 00:11, 11 May 2023

Site selection for the 1942 Worldcon was conducted at Denvention in 1941. This was before there were formal bid committees, so it is unlikely that the bids were organized much before the vote.

Four bids were presented at the business meeting:

Los Angeles won but due to WWII, the con, Pacificon, was not held until 1946.



1941 Worldcon Site Selection 1947 1942
This is page about convention bidding, the competition and its outcome. Please extend it by adding information about who was bidding, and how the race went.