Difference between revisions of "VAPA"

From Fancyclopedia 3
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 55: Line 55:
  
 
==VAPA Mailings==
 
==VAPA Mailings==
 +
VAPA mailing were nominally five times per year.
 +
 
<tab head=top>
 
<tab head=top>
 
  mailing || Date || [[OE]]
 
  mailing || Date || [[OE]]
Line 67: Line 69:
 
13 || June 1947 ||
 
13 || June 1947 ||
 
15 || 1948 ||
 
15 || 1948 ||
 +
last || late 1950 ||
 
</tab>
 
</tab>
  
 
+
{{publication |start=1945 |end=1950}}
{{publication |start=1945|end=1950}}
 
  
 
[[Category:APA]]
 
[[Category:APA]]
 
[[Category:Fancy2]]
 
[[Category:Fancy2]]
 
[[Category:US]]
 
[[Category:US]]

Latest revision as of 10:45, 1 May 2023

(Do you mean the Seattle fan group or a prozine?)


The Vanguard Amateur Press Association (VAPA), AKA the Gothic Amateur Press Association (GAPA), and The Modern APA was fandom's second apa. It was a spin-off from FAPA that fancied itself fanzine fandom's intellectual elite.

Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't, but it had among its members at various times a number of well-known fans, some of whom became or already were well-known pros, including James Blish, Robert Bloch, Mel Brown, Russell Chauvenet, Bill Danner, George Ebey, Virginia Kidd Emden (who later became Virginia Blish), Dale Hart, Joe Kennedy, Jim Kepner, Damon Knight, Robert A. W. Lowndes, John Michel, Alva Rogers, Samuel D. Russell, Art Saha, Larry Shaw, Norm Stanley, Raymond Washington, Jr., Harry Warner, Jr., Bill Watson, Basil Wells, Don and Elsie Wollheim and Dan and Judy Zissman (later Judith Merril).

Its OO was Vanguard Amateur.

From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959
Vanguard or VAPA. The Vanguard Amateur Press Association was announced by the Futurians in March '45. Since key Futurian FAPAtes had quit in the Little Interregnum of Feb '45, and since Futurian control of the new organization was solid, much hard feeling over "attempts to torpedo FAPA" resulted, and it was alleged that, having failed to dominate FAPA (which they had founded) the Futurians wanted to destroy it and start a new organization they could rule. (Actually, informs Larry Shaw, it was true that VAPA was formed by Futurians as an organization they could control, but not that their intention was to scuttle FAPA; they didn't care what happened to the older group.)

The group was originally conceived as the Gothic Amateur Press Association, and the first publication (Wollheim's GAPA Vanguard) came out with that name. Shortly afterward, a move began to change the name to Modern APA, and Jim Blish put that name on the first issue of Tumbrils. Finally a compromise was reached between Gothic and Moderns in the title Vanguard (and the first mag to bear this tag was Lowndes' Agenbite of Inwit).

(Vanguard, for obvious semantic reasons, was a popular name with Futurians anyway; Blish and Lowndes about this time planned a Vanguard Record Company that came to naught after a few discs; in the stf boom of the middle '50s, Blish edited a prozine titled Vanguard, which aroused discussion because people thought he was trying to capitalize on the use of that name by the US Govt for a rocket/missile.)

VAPA's setup was, to say the least, peculiar. An Official Manager ran the club -- put out the mailings (5 a year), handled funds and records, published the OO Vanguard Amateur, and interpreted the Constitution; he was the only officer elected by the club. But a Board of Advisors (First, Second, and Third) dealt with admission to and renewal of membership. The idea was that each year the Third Advisor would drop out, the others move down one place, and the outgoing Official Manager become the new First Advisor. Since the OM for the first year (Lowndes) and all three advisers (Wollheim, Larry Shaw, and Virginia Kidd Emden, in that order) were pre-selected by the Futurians, accusations of a Plot to Dominate, whether or not true, had a certain plausibility. If such a plan existed, the Futurian split over the X Document, later in the year, ruined it.

VAPA folded late in 1950 of inanition, for tho it contained such illustrious braintrusters as Lowndes, Blish, Norm Stanley, Harry Warner, Jr., Bill Danner, Damon Knight and C. Burton Stevenson, only the New Yorkers showed much activity; when their energy leaked away, there wasn't anything left. 'Tis said the treasury was turned over to CARE or some similar charity.

As of the 2nd mailing, May 1945, the following were VAPA members: James Blish, Russell Chauvenet, George Ebey, V. K. Emden (who of course was later Virginia Blish), Joe Kennedy, Jim Kepner, Damon Knight, Robert Lowndes, John Michel, Benson Perry, Alva Rogers, Art Saha, H. Loren Sinn, Larry Shaw, Norm Stanley, Raymond Washington, Jr., Bill Watson, Felix Wilsey, Don Wollheim, Elsie Wollheim, Dan Zissman and Judy Zissman (later Merril). VAPA also had subscribers, who were at this point: F. Lee Baldwin, C. L. Barrett MD, Capt. Jack B. Emden, Walter Kubilius, Walt Liebscher, A. L. Schwartz and Graph Waldeyer. Lowndes was the "Provisional Manager," and Wollheim, Larry Shaw and V. K. Emden were the 1st, 2nd and 3rd "Advisors," respectively.

By the 5th mailing, November 1945, the membership had changed considerably. Chauvenet was gone, and the following had been added: Robert Bloch, Mel Brown, William Danner, Dale Hart, John Hollis Mason, William R. Rau, Jr., Samuel D. Russell, Henry Sostman and Basil Wells. Additional subscribers were Barbara Bliss, Donn Brazier, Walt Dunkelberger, Emil Petaja, Fred Pohl and Frank Wilimczyk -- Barrett had apparently let his subscription lapse.

Given some of the members and subscribers, I would question whether VAPA really was "fandom's intellectual elite." Certainly no one would accuse Dunkelberger of that! 
        -- Robert Lichtman

Members and Apazines:[edit]

OEs:[edit]

  1. Doc Lowndes

VAPA Mailings[edit]

VAPA mailing were nominally five times per year.

mailing Date OE
1 March 1945
2 May 1945
3 July 1945
4 September 1945
5 November 1945
6 January 1946
8 April 1946
10 September 1946
13 June 1947
15 1948
last late 1950


Publication 19451950
This is a publication page. Please extend it by adding information about when and by whom it was published, how many issues it has had, (including adding a partial or complete checklist), its contents (including perhaps a ToC listing), its size and repro method, regular columnists, its impact on fandom, or by adding scans or links to scans. See Standards for Publications.