Difference between revisions of "Richard Harter"

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In [[Boston fandom]], he was known as '''Mr. Harter''', a term of respect for his dignified ancientry (when NESFA coalesced, he was in his thirties, a decade older than most of the rest of them).  He was elected [[Fellow of NESFA]] in 1976 and served as President of [[NESFA]].  He was never a member of [[MCFI]], holding that “''someone'' around here had to retain their sanity” and not run [[Worldcons]]. (It did no good.) He was also part of the [[Concord in '80]] [[hoax bid]]. (That did no good, either.)
 
In [[Boston fandom]], he was known as '''Mr. Harter''', a term of respect for his dignified ancientry (when NESFA coalesced, he was in his thirties, a decade older than most of the rest of them).  He was elected [[Fellow of NESFA]] in 1976 and served as President of [[NESFA]].  He was never a member of [[MCFI]], holding that “''someone'' around here had to retain their sanity” and not run [[Worldcons]]. (It did no good.) He was also part of the [[Concord in '80]] [[hoax bid]]. (That did no good, either.)
  
He lived with [[Marsha Brown]] for a time. He was born and raised in [[South Dakota]], but lived most of his working life in the [[Boston]] area where he discovered [[fandom]] by joining the [[MITSFS]]. On retirement, he moved back to Highmore, SD.  Once, at a [[Worldcon]], when asked if there were any [[fans]] in South Dakota, he answered "not this weekend."
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He lived with [[Marsha Brown]] for a time. He was born and raised in [[South Dakota]], but lived most of his working life in the [[Boston]] area where he discovered [[fandom]] by joining the [[MITSFS]]. On retirement, he moved back to Highmore, SD. (He, of course, following his rule of non-involvement in con-running, had nothing to do with the [[Highmore in '76]] bid no matter what scurrilous rumors you may have heard.) Once, at a [[Worldcon]], when asked if there were any [[fans]] in South Dakota, he answered "not this weekend."
  
[http://web.archive.org/web/20130111181834/https://home.tiac.net/~cri/ Archived website] with extensive essays.
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''Richard Harter's World'':
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* [https://richardhartersworld.com/ https://richardhartersworld.com/]
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* [http://web.archive.org/web/20130111181834/https://home.tiac.net/~cri/ Archived copy of website]
  
 
{{fanzines}}
 
{{fanzines}}
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* ''[[Proper Boskonian]]'' (some issues)
 
* ''[[Proper Boskonian]]'' (some issues)
 
* ''[[Stroon]]'' (for [[Technology Amateur Press Association|TAPA]], some issues, with [[Tony Lewis]])
 
* ''[[Stroon]]'' (for [[Technology Amateur Press Association|TAPA]], some issues, with [[Tony Lewis]])
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* ''[[The]]'' [1971-72] (for [[APA-L]])
  
 
{{recognition}}
 
{{recognition}}
 
* 1976 — [[Fellow of NESFA]]
 
* 1976 — [[Fellow of NESFA]]
  
 
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{{person | born=1935 | died=2012  |Locale=Highmore, SD & Boston, MA}}
{{person | born=1935 | died=2012  |Locale=Highmore, SD}}
 
 
[[Category:fan]]
 
[[Category:fan]]
 
[[Category:US]]
 
[[Category:US]]

Latest revision as of 16:41, 14 July 2024

(June 29, 1935 – April 20, 2012)

Richard Harter was a fan, founding member of NESFA, Marine, publisher of the fanzine Personal Notes, and co-conspirator in the Highmore in '76 Worldcon bid. He was a member of APA-NESFA.

He described himself as a "compleat fan, a collector who prizes his mint copy of Dick and Jane meet Robby Robot, a club fan who is not just a club fan but also a diamond fan and a spade fan, a fanzine fan whose multitudinous publications, if not always award winning, certainly ought to be, and a convention fan noted for attending conventions that no one else attended."

In Boston fandom, he was known as Mr. Harter, a term of respect for his dignified ancientry (when NESFA coalesced, he was in his thirties, a decade older than most of the rest of them). He was elected Fellow of NESFA in 1976 and served as President of NESFA. He was never a member of MCFI, holding that “someone around here had to retain their sanity” and not run Worldcons. (It did no good.) He was also part of the Concord in '80 hoax bid. (That did no good, either.)

He lived with Marsha Brown for a time. He was born and raised in South Dakota, but lived most of his working life in the Boston area where he discovered fandom by joining the MITSFS. On retirement, he moved back to Highmore, SD. (He, of course, following his rule of non-involvement in con-running, had nothing to do with the Highmore in '76 bid no matter what scurrilous rumors you may have heard.) Once, at a Worldcon, when asked if there were any fans in South Dakota, he answered "not this weekend."

Richard Harter's World:

Fanzines and Apazines:

Awards, Honors and GoHships:


Person 19352012
This is a biography page. Please extend it by adding more information about the person, such as fanzines and apazines published, awards, clubs, conventions worked on, GoHships, impact on fandom, external links, anecdotes, etc. See Standards for People and The Naming of Names.