Difference between revisions of "Stranger Club"
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[[World War II]] was slowing activity to nothing, but a ''tiny'' (5 members) [[Boskone IV]] was held in February 1945 at the home of [[R. D. Swisher|R. D.]] and [[F. N. Swisher]]. (Mrs. Swisher apparently regularly attended meetings and was mentioned as a club member in contemporary accounts, but her involvement seems to have been forgotten/discounted later.) All of the members were declared to be [[GoHs]]! [[Boskone V]] was held that September, but it is not clear that there was any Strangers Club involvement. | [[World War II]] was slowing activity to nothing, but a ''tiny'' (5 members) [[Boskone IV]] was held in February 1945 at the home of [[R. D. Swisher|R. D.]] and [[F. N. Swisher]]. (Mrs. Swisher apparently regularly attended meetings and was mentioned as a club member in contemporary accounts, but her involvement seems to have been forgotten/discounted later.) All of the members were declared to be [[GoHs]]! [[Boskone V]] was held that September, but it is not clear that there was any Strangers Club involvement. | ||
− | In the fall of 1946, the club was revived in [[Cambridge, MA]], though [[Art Widner]] was the only important holdover, as most of the rest of the membership has [[gafiated]] or moved elsewhere. | + | In the fall of 1946, the club was revived in [[Cambridge, MA]], though [[Art Widner]] was the only important holdover, as most of the rest of the membership has [[gafiated]] or moved elsewhere. [[Timothy Orrok]] was a particularly active new member, while [[Harry Stubbs]], [[Dave Thomas]], [[Chan Davis]], [[Boff Perry]], [[Bill Mason]], and [[John Pomeroy]] were also active. Other members included [[Henry Spellman]]. |
− | It's not clear when the club finally dissolved, but | + | It's not clear when the club finally dissolved, but when [[MITSFS]] was organized in 1949, The Stranger Club was a fading memory, and by the time [[BoSF]] and then [[NESFA]] were created in the 1960s, it had been utterly forgotten by everyone in the area but [[Harry Stubbs]]. |
Read [[The Stranger Club by Art Widner]] for a long and lively account of the club's activities. | Read [[The Stranger Club by Art Widner]] for a long and lively account of the club's activities. |
Latest revision as of 13:35, 3 October 2023
The Stranger Club, the first SF club in Boston, was active during the early 40s and ran the First Series of Boskones. The club (high school and college age kids) was formed February 18, 1940, and petered out during the later part of World War II as members were drafted or moved. It mostly met at members Frances and Robert D. Swisher's house.
Art Widner organized the first meeting (as The Nameless Ones) at Louis Russell Chauvenet's home in Cambridge, MA. Attending the meeting of sf and chess were were Widner, Chauvenet, Francis Paro, William Schrange, John Ferrari and R. D. Swisher. In March, a second meeting elected Widner as Director and Paro as Secretary-Treasurer and changed the name to the Eastern Massachusetts Fantasy Society (EMFS) and decided to publish a clubzine, Fanfare.
The next meeting (held at MIT) added more members and changed the name again to The Strangers. (The name came from stories of the Stranger Club written by Laurence Manning for Wonder Stories. The fourth meeting, also at MIT at the grad house, brought the club up to 15 members -- amusingly, for a Boston club, they had no member who actually lived in Boston!
In spite of being very informal (by the standards of sf clubs of the time), they got a gift of 250 prozines and began a library, and had some very big name speakers, attracting a group of mature and intelligent members. On July 19, 1942, John W. Campbell, Jr. came to a meeting and while his ship was being outfitted, (a pre-Dianetics) L. Ron Hubbard attended a Strangers meeting as his first fan event.
In February, 1941, the Strangers ran their first convention, Boskone I, which seems to have been a one-day affair somewhat like an extended meeting with about 25 fans mostly from Boston with some from New York. This was the first of four held before the War; one more took place in 1945.
In 1941, Tom Gardner, a fan and scientist who had made pro sales, began to attend meetings before moving to Tennessee. Earl Singleton -- he of the pseuicide -- was elected treasurer in late 1940. Meetings were held on an irregular schedule (every 2-4 weeks) for the next year or two, at the homes of members and at MIT.
In February 1942, Boskone II was held at the Boston Ritz-Plaza, and again about 25 fans showed up, including fans from Columbia, SC, and Columbus, OH. By 1942, 14 of Massachusetts' 22 known fans were members and five fanzines were being published by members. Boskone III was held February 28, 1943, and was much smaller -- only 14 members only a couple of which were from out of town -- but one of them was Claude Degler! Suddsy Schwartz called the meeting to order, and the group did its usual discussion of the NFFF. They played Art Widner's new game of "Interplanetary" and Jules Lazar won a Finlay original.
World War II was slowing activity to nothing, but a tiny (5 members) Boskone IV was held in February 1945 at the home of R. D. and F. N. Swisher. (Mrs. Swisher apparently regularly attended meetings and was mentioned as a club member in contemporary accounts, but her involvement seems to have been forgotten/discounted later.) All of the members were declared to be GoHs! Boskone V was held that September, but it is not clear that there was any Strangers Club involvement.
In the fall of 1946, the club was revived in Cambridge, MA, though Art Widner was the only important holdover, as most of the rest of the membership has gafiated or moved elsewhere. Timothy Orrok was a particularly active new member, while Harry Stubbs, Dave Thomas, Chan Davis, Boff Perry, Bill Mason, and John Pomeroy were also active. Other members included Henry Spellman.
It's not clear when the club finally dissolved, but when MITSFS was organized in 1949, The Stranger Club was a fading memory, and by the time BoSF and then NESFA were created in the 1960s, it had been utterly forgotten by everyone in the area but Harry Stubbs.
Read The Stranger Club by Art Widner for a long and lively account of the club's activities.
The club (collectively) was Fan GoH at Noreascon 3 the 1989 Worldcon. Members in attendance included Art Widner, Chan Davis, Harry Stubbs (Hal Clement), Louis Russell Chauvenet, Timothy Orrok, Norman Stanley, and Robert D. Swisher. Honoring their FGoHship, #11 of the club fanzine, Fanfare, was published (the previous issue, #10 was published in December 1943.)
Many of the surviving members wrote about the club for the Noreascon Three Program Book (See fanac.org/conpubs/Noreascon 3 for a scan of it):
- The Stranger Club by G. Timothy Orrok
- Strangers by Harry Stubbs
- Tales of a Stranger by Russell Chauvenet
- The Stranger Club by Art Widner
From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959 |
In a stf series by Laurence Manning, a club (motto, "Truth is Stranger Than Fiction") where members met to tell and hear "true" fantastic experiences. The name was taken by the Eastern Massachusetts fan organization when they formed in February '40, and the members called themselves Strangers. Members included Swisher, Widner, Suddsy Schwartz, Singleton and a number of others; it was elements of this club that formed the foundation for the N3F. The group threw a number of annual conferences in Boston ("Boskones") and apparently got along with absolutely no internal friction. |
From Fancyclopedia 1, ca. 1944 |
(Manning) - In a stf series by Laurence Manning, a club which had for its motto "Truth is stranger than fiction", where members met to tell and hear "true" fantastic experiences. The name was taken by the Eastern Massachusetts fan organization when they formed in Feb 40, and the members call themselves Strangers. Members include Swisher, Widner, Suddsy Schwartz, (ex-) Singleton, and a number of others. The organization puts on the Boskones and apparently gets along with absolutely no internal friction. |
Club | 1940—1940s |
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! |