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'''Eastercon 1944''' was a [[UK]] [[convention]] held April 8–9, 1944 (Easter weekend) by the [[Cosmos Club]] of Teddington, a suburb of [[London]].<ref>28 minutes southwest from Waterloo by the (already electrified!) Kingston Loop Line; Teddington was amalgamated into Greater London in 1965.</ref> [[Walter Gillings]] was the 'Convention President' and [[John Aiken]] the 'Organising Secretary'; the originally announced [[GoH]] (or dinner Guest Speaker) [[Professor A. M. Low]] was 'unable to be present under military exigiencies'.
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{{DISPLAYTITLE: Eastercon}}
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'''Eastercon''' was a [[UK]] [[convention]] held April 8–9, 1944 (Easter weekend) sponsored by the [[Cosmos Club]] of Teddington, a suburb of [[London]]. [[Walter Gillings]] was the 'Convention President' and [[John Aiken]] the 'Organising Secretary'. The originally announced [[GoH]] (or dinner Guest Speaker) [[Professor A. M. Low]] was 'unable to be present under military exigencies'. While it was called 'Eastercon' and it was held at Easter it is not generally regarded as being an [[Eastercon]] in the sense of the ongoing near-annual series dating from 1948.
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 +
== Preparation ==
 +
 
 +
Pages 9 and 10 of ''[[Cosmic Cuts]]'' #5 (December 1943) were issued separately as ''[[Convention Extra]]'' #1 and distributed as a [[rider]] alongside'' [[Futurian War Digest]]'' #32, effectively acting as a first progress report for the projected convention. The convention hall was reported booked and meals arranged for an expected attendance of 'some forty or even more, delegates'. Prospective attendees were encouraged to send a convention fee, refundable in the event of non-attendance, of 15/-<ref>15 shillings. Per https://measuringworth.com/calculators/ukcompare/ this is about £39 of purchasing power in 2022, though thrice more considering average income. To give another comparison, the ''[[Futurian War Digest]]'' cost 3 pence (1/80 of a pound), while the first post-war prozine, the 1946 ''[[Fantasy (UK)|Fantasy]]'' was a shilling. So this seems quite a sum; even the 1949 [[Loncon (Eastercon)]] cost only 7/6d including the buffet, half as much.</ref> for both days, including 'all meals and entertainment'. This may have been the first British convention to charge a [[membership]] fee<ref>There is a caveat on the Eastercon's primacy here as the [[Midvention 1|Midvention]] a year earlier also announced a likely fee of 5 shillings but it is not clear whether in the end the money was collected.</ref>.
  
[[Rob Hansen]] identified 24 or 25 attendees:
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''Convention Extra'' #2 followed in February 1944, announcing [[Professor A. M. Low]] as a guest speaker and predicting 'dozens of famous British and overseas fan personalities to meet'. It also announced advertising rates for the projected souvenir book and invited attendees to lend items to 'The Convention Museum', a display of fan curios and treasures.
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A two-page ''Eastercon Final Notice!'' was issued in March and in April [[E. Frank Parker]]'s ''[[Lamppost]]'' #3 included a map of the area around Shirley's Cafe and effectively acted as a final progress report.
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== Venue ==
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Teddington is about 12 miles south-west of central London <ref>28 minutes from Waterloo station by the (already electrified) Kingston Loop Line; Teddington was amalgamated into Greater London in 1965.</ref>.
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Events on Saturday were to take place in central London. On Sunday, Shirley's Cafe on Park Road, Teddington, the regular meeting place of the Cosmos Club, was seemingly hired for the day. The convention was held in its upstairs room. In 2008 [[Rob Hansen]] confirmed that the building still exists and has become a chemists.
 +
 
 +
== Attendees ==
 +
 
 +
[[Rob Hansen]] has identified 26 attendees named in contemporary accounts:
  
 
<div style="column-count:3; vertical-align:top">
 
<div style="column-count:3; vertical-align:top">
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# [[Sydney Bounds]]
 
# [[Sydney Bounds]]
 
# [[Tommy Bullett]]
 
# [[Tommy Bullett]]
# [[Harry Chibbett]]
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# [[Hal Chibbett]]
# [[W. A. Deveraux]]
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# [[W. Alan Devereux]]
 
# [[George Ellis]]
 
# [[George Ellis]]
 
# [[Bruce Gaffron]]
 
# [[Bruce Gaffron]]
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# [[K. W. Gatland]]
 
# [[K. W. Gatland]]
 
# [[Walter Gillings]]
 
# [[Walter Gillings]]
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# Madeline Gillings *
 
# [[H. Gomberg]]
 
# [[H. Gomberg]]
 
# [[Fred Goodier]]
 
# [[Fred Goodier]]
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# [[Michael Lord]]
 
# [[Michael Lord]]
 
# [[John Millard]]
 
# [[John Millard]]
# [[S. G. J. Ouseley]] (+1? see&nbsp;below)
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# [[S. G. J. Ouseley]]
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# Mrs Ouseley *
 
# [[E. Frank Parker]]
 
# [[E. Frank Parker]]
 
# [[Laurence Sandfield]]
 
# [[Laurence Sandfield]]
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</div>
 
</div>
  
Con reports refer to 'the Ouseleys of the [[Stoke-on-Trent Science Fiction Club|Stoke-on-Trent]] group' so the assumption is that Mrs Ouseley was also present but there is no indication that she was a fan per se. [[Michigan]]ian [[John Millard]] was in the UK serving in the [[Canadian]] airforce. [[Gus Willmorth]] from [[Los Angeles]], also stationed in Norwich, had hoped to attend but his leave was cancelled at last minute, reportedly due to armywide preparations for D-Day.
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For names marked *, John Aiken's report refer to 'the Ouseleys of the [[Stoke-on-Trent Science Fiction Club|Stoke-on-Trent]] group' so the assumption is that Mrs Ouseley was present, as was Madeline Gillings, Walter's wife. There is however no evidence that either was a fan per se. [[Michigan]]ian [[John Millard]] was in the UK serving in the [[Canadian]] airforce. [[Gus Willmorth]] from [[Los Angeles]], also stationed in the UK, had hoped to attend but his leave was cancelled at the last minute, reportedly due to army-wide preparations for D-Day.
  
This may have been the first British convention to charge a [[membership]] fee: 15/-<ref>15 shillings, i. e. three quarters of a pound. Per https://measuringworth.com/calculators/ukcompare/ this is about £39 of purchasing power in 2022, though thrice more considering average income. To give another comparison, the ''[[Futurian War Digest]]'' cost 3 pence (1/80 of a pound), while the first post-war prozine, the 1946 ''[[Fantasy (UK)|Fantasy]]'' was a shilling. So this seems quite a sum; even the 1949 [[Loncon (Eastercon)]] cost only 7/6d including the buffet, half as much. <br> There is a caveat on the Eastercon's primacy to charge, as the [[Midvention 1|Midvention]] a year earlier also announced a fee of 5 shillings; however this was a much smaller and informal event, a kind of [[relaxacon]] ''avant le mot'', and it is not clear whether in the end the money was collected, in the addition to expenses incurred by lodging and food.</ref> for both days, including 'all meals and entertainment', or half for one day.
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== The convention ==
  
The Saturday afternoon session in central [[London]] involved a visit to the bookshops of Charing Cross Road, a screening of some Disney shorts at the Cameo News Theatre, and a trip to the Pillars of Hercules pub followed by dinner in the Shanghai Restaurant.
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The Saturday afternoon session in central London involved a visit to the bookshops of Charing Cross Road, a screening of some Disney shorts at the Cameo News Theatre, and a trip to the Pillars of Hercules pub followed by dinner in the Shanghai Restaurant.
  
The Sunday session with a proper con programming started at noon at Shirley's, a cafe in Teddington where the [[Cosmos Club]] was located: there was a comedy quiz panel, "Presidential Address" by Gillings on future of fandom, [[auction]], film show and a pub evening for those who didn't have to leave.
+
The Sunday session saw a more conventional programme. Starting at noon at Shirley's Cafe, there was a comedy quiz panel, a 'Presidential Address' by Gillings on future of fandom, an [[auction]] conducted by Parker, a film show, and a later a gathering in a nearby pub.
  
 
The advance publicity said some informal events were planned for the Monday but these did not happen based on reports.
 
The advance publicity said some informal events were planned for the Monday but these did not happen based on reports.
  
A [[souvenir book]] ''Eastercon 1944'' edited by [[Bruce Gaffron]] was published in November, 'badly delayed by the interference of doodle-bugs'.<ref I. e. the German V-1 flying bombs, launched mid-June; not only these disrupted life in London and around per se, but [[Cosmos Club]] was originally based around a fire watch unit.</ref>
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Rob Hansen summed up his detailed history:
 +
 
 +
… the thing that most impresses about it is that it happened at all. The other [[war]]time cons were small affairs, but the 1944 Eastercon was as full and complete a convention as any that had been seen in Britain to that point. Organising and running it under wartime conditions was a magnificent achievement. Both it and those responsible for it, the Cosmos Club, deserve to be better remembered and more celebrated than they have been.
 +
 
 +
== Publications ==
  
Rob Hansen summed up his detailed history:
+
Peter Hawkins produced a convention booklet on the day that was generally regarded as unreadable due to poor quality paper. A [[souvenir book]] ''Eastercon 1944'' edited by [[Bruce Gaffron]] was published in November, 'badly delayed by the interference of doodle-bugs'<ref>The nickname for the German V-1 flying bombs that had begun to hit London from mid-June.</ref>.
  
… from 2010, the thing that most impresses about it is that it happened at all. The other [[war]]time cons were small affairs, but the 1944 Eastercon was as full and complete a convention as any that had been seen in Britain to that point. Organising and running it under wartime conditions was a magnificent achievement. Both it and those responsible for it, the Cosmos Club, deserve to be better remembered and more celebrated than they have been.
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== Future conventions ==
  
Eastercon was the sixth UK convention ever (if the 1941 informal [[fan gathering]] [[Bombcon]] is discounted, as fanhistorians tend to), and as noted above, largest and most representative since the [[Third British Convention]] in May 1939. In spite of the con's name, it being de facto UK [[natcon]], and second at Easter after 1943 [[Midvention]], it was ''not'' included in the list of [[Eastercon]]s (i. e. UK natcons) when their series was retroactively codified in 1971; the numbering started from the 1948 [[Whitcon]] notwithstanding their names, dates and the incredible 4 years separating them without any similar con despite the end of the war. ''Then'' again, perhaps the point is that it was Whitcon that started a new regular tradition in new conditions without such gaps.
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Eastercon would be followed by [[Midventionette]] and [[Norcon II (UK)]], both later in 1944, but they were on a much smaller scale. The UK would not see a convention of comparable size and scope until the [[Whitcon]] of 1948. When the list of past Eastercons was codified in 1971 the sequence was dated from Whitcon and so ''this'' Eastercon is not generally regarded as being ''an'' Eastercon.
  
 
* [http://www.fiawol.org.uk/fanstuff/THEN%20Archive/Eas44.htm Eastercon 1944 detailed history] at Rob Hansen's website. Includes the Programme Book but not the souvenir one
 
* [http://www.fiawol.org.uk/fanstuff/THEN%20Archive/Eas44.htm Eastercon 1944 detailed history] at Rob Hansen's website. Includes the Programme Book but not the souvenir one
* [https://fiawol.org.uk//FanStuff/THEN%20Archive/FWD/FWD35.htm "Eastercon Diary"] by Aiken in ''[[Futurian War Digest]]'' 35 (Vol. 4, Number 5), June 1944 (summarised/quoted above)
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* [https://fiawol.org.uk//FanStuff/THEN%20Archive/FWD/FWD35.htm 'Eastercon Diary'] by Aiken in ''[[Futurian War Digest]]'' 35 (Vol. 4, Number 5), June 1944 (summarised/quoted above)
 
* [https://eFanzines.com/AOY/AOY-40.htm Summary/quotes of the above in Column 40] of [[Harry Warner, Jr.]]'s ''[[All Our Yesterdays]]'' dealing with the ''FWD'' in general
 
* [https://eFanzines.com/AOY/AOY-40.htm Summary/quotes of the above in Column 40] of [[Harry Warner, Jr.]]'s ''[[All Our Yesterdays]]'' dealing with the ''FWD'' in general
  
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{{convention | year=1944| locale=London, UK| series =early conventions| before =Norcon I (UK)| after= Midventionette}}
 
{{convention | year=1944| locale=London, UK| series =early conventions| before =Norcon I (UK)| after= Midventionette}}
 
[[Category:UK]]
 
[[Category:UK]]
{{DISPLAYTITLE: Eastercon}}
 

Latest revision as of 07:10, 10 October 2024

Eastercon was a UK convention held April 8–9, 1944 (Easter weekend) sponsored by the Cosmos Club of Teddington, a suburb of London. Walter Gillings was the 'Convention President' and John Aiken the 'Organising Secretary'. The originally announced GoH (or dinner Guest Speaker) Professor A. M. Low was 'unable to be present under military exigencies'. While it was called 'Eastercon' and it was held at Easter it is not generally regarded as being an Eastercon in the sense of the ongoing near-annual series dating from 1948.

Preparation[edit]

Pages 9 and 10 of Cosmic Cuts #5 (December 1943) were issued separately as Convention Extra #1 and distributed as a rider alongside Futurian War Digest #32, effectively acting as a first progress report for the projected convention. The convention hall was reported booked and meals arranged for an expected attendance of 'some forty or even more, delegates'. Prospective attendees were encouraged to send a convention fee, refundable in the event of non-attendance, of 15/-[1] for both days, including 'all meals and entertainment'. This may have been the first British convention to charge a membership fee[2].

Convention Extra #2 followed in February 1944, announcing Professor A. M. Low as a guest speaker and predicting 'dozens of famous British and overseas fan personalities to meet'. It also announced advertising rates for the projected souvenir book and invited attendees to lend items to 'The Convention Museum', a display of fan curios and treasures.

A two-page Eastercon Final Notice! was issued in March and in April E. Frank Parker's Lamppost #3 included a map of the area around Shirley's Cafe and effectively acted as a final progress report.

Venue[edit]

Teddington is about 12 miles south-west of central London [3]. Events on Saturday were to take place in central London. On Sunday, Shirley's Cafe on Park Road, Teddington, the regular meeting place of the Cosmos Club, was seemingly hired for the day. The convention was held in its upstairs room. In 2008 Rob Hansen confirmed that the building still exists and has become a chemists.

Attendees[edit]

Rob Hansen has identified 26 attendees named in contemporary accounts:

For names marked *, John Aiken's report refer to 'the Ouseleys of the Stoke-on-Trent group' so the assumption is that Mrs Ouseley was present, as was Madeline Gillings, Walter's wife. There is however no evidence that either was a fan per se. Michiganian John Millard was in the UK serving in the Canadian airforce. Gus Willmorth from Los Angeles, also stationed in the UK, had hoped to attend but his leave was cancelled at the last minute, reportedly due to army-wide preparations for D-Day.

The convention[edit]

The Saturday afternoon session in central London involved a visit to the bookshops of Charing Cross Road, a screening of some Disney shorts at the Cameo News Theatre, and a trip to the Pillars of Hercules pub followed by dinner in the Shanghai Restaurant.

The Sunday session saw a more conventional programme. Starting at noon at Shirley's Cafe, there was a comedy quiz panel, a 'Presidential Address' by Gillings on future of fandom, an auction conducted by Parker, a film show, and a later a gathering in a nearby pub.

The advance publicity said some informal events were planned for the Monday but these did not happen based on reports.

Rob Hansen summed up his detailed history:

… the thing that most impresses about it is that it happened at all. The other wartime cons were small affairs, but the 1944 Eastercon was as full and complete a convention as any that had been seen in Britain to that point. Organising and running it under wartime conditions was a magnificent achievement. Both it and those responsible for it, the Cosmos Club, deserve to be better remembered and more celebrated than they have been.

Publications[edit]

Peter Hawkins produced a convention booklet on the day that was generally regarded as unreadable due to poor quality paper. A souvenir book Eastercon 1944 edited by Bruce Gaffron was published in November, 'badly delayed by the interference of doodle-bugs'[4].

Future conventions[edit]

Eastercon would be followed by Midventionette and Norcon II, both later in 1944, but they were on a much smaller scale. The UK would not see a convention of comparable size and scope until the Whitcon of 1948. When the list of past Eastercons was codified in 1971 the sequence was dated from Whitcon and so this Eastercon is not generally regarded as being an Eastercon.

See also Early Conventions.


Norcon early conventions Midventionette
1944
This is a convention page. Please extend it by adding information about the convention, including dates, GoHs, convention chairman, locale, sponsoring organization, external links to convention pages, awards given, the program, notable events, anecdotes, pictures, scans of publications, pictures of T-shirts, con reports, etc.

  1. 15 shillings. Per https://measuringworth.com/calculators/ukcompare/ this is about £39 of purchasing power in 2022, though thrice more considering average income. To give another comparison, the Futurian War Digest cost 3 pence (1/80 of a pound), while the first post-war prozine, the 1946 Fantasy was a shilling. So this seems quite a sum; even the 1949 Loncon cost only 7/6d including the buffet, half as much.
  2. There is a caveat on the Eastercon's primacy here as the Midvention a year earlier also announced a likely fee of 5 shillings but it is not clear whether in the end the money was collected.
  3. 28 minutes from Waterloo station by the (already electrified) Kingston Loop Line; Teddington was amalgamated into Greater London in 1965.
  4. The nickname for the German V-1 flying bombs that had begun to hit London from mid-June.