Difference between revisions of "First Convention"

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Retrospectively (though it was common usage by 1939), it was given the name '''First Eastern''' or '''First Eastern Science Fiction Convention'''. (By a year later, at the [[Third Eastern Science Fiction Convention]], again in Philadelphia, it was being referred to as the "[previous] Philly convention."  See: {{link | website=http://fanac.org/fanzines/PSFS_News/PSFS_News105-02.html|text=here.}}
 
Retrospectively (though it was common usage by 1939), it was given the name '''First Eastern''' or '''First Eastern Science Fiction Convention'''. (By a year later, at the [[Third Eastern Science Fiction Convention]], again in Philadelphia, it was being referred to as the "[previous] Philly convention."  See: {{link | website=http://fanac.org/fanzines/PSFS_News/PSFS_News105-02.html|text=here.}}
  
The [[NYB-ISA]] members attending were Don Wollheim, John Michel, [[Will Sykora]], [[David Kyle]], [[Herbert E. Goudket]], and [[Fred Pohl]]); the [[Philadelphia SFL]] members included [[Milt Rothman]], [[Bob Madle]], and [[Ossie Train]]). They toured the town and had a get-together at Rothman's house for the afternoon. It was "marked with horseplay and camaraderie". Rothman was elected convention [[chairman]] and Pohl [[secretary]].  The only other official business was to plan the [[Second Eastern Convention]] for [[New York]] in February 1938.
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The [[NYB-ISA]] members attending were Don Wollheim, John Michel, [[Will Sykora]], [[David Kyle]], [[Herbert E. Goudket]], and [[Fred Pohl]]; the [[Philadelphia SFL]] members included [[Milt Rothman]], [[Bob Madle]], and [[Ossie Train]]). They toured the town and had a get-together at Rothman's house for the afternoon. It was "marked with horseplay and camaraderie". Rothman was elected convention [[chairman]] and Pohl [[secretary]].  The only other official business was to plan the [[Second Eastern Convention]] for [[New York]] in February 1938.
  
 
This was the first of all [[stf]] conventions, though this has been challenged.  See [[Which Was the First SF Convention?]] for details.
 
This was the first of all [[stf]] conventions, though this has been challenged.  See [[Which Was the First SF Convention?]] for details.

Revision as of 00:37, 26 April 2021

The very first sf convention was held Oct 22, 1936, in Philadelphia, PA.

According to Sam Moskowitz, "It was suggested by John B. Michel that the club [the NYB-ISA] plan a social outing of some sort; this was agreed to, great controversy ensued as to the destination. Philadelphia was decided upon, chiefly because Wollheim had hit upon the novel idea of meeting with out-of-town fans and thereby calling the affair a science fiction convention."

Retrospectively (though it was common usage by 1939), it was given the name First Eastern or First Eastern Science Fiction Convention. (By a year later, at the Third Eastern Science Fiction Convention, again in Philadelphia, it was being referred to as the "[previous] Philly convention." See: here.

The NYB-ISA members attending were Don Wollheim, John Michel, Will Sykora, David Kyle, Herbert E. Goudket, and Fred Pohl; the Philadelphia SFL members included Milt Rothman, Bob Madle, and Ossie Train). They toured the town and had a get-together at Rothman's house for the afternoon. It was "marked with horseplay and camaraderie". Rothman was elected convention chairman and Pohl secretary. The only other official business was to plan the Second Eastern Convention for New York in February 1938.

This was the first of all stf conventions, though this has been challenged. See Which Was the First SF Convention? for details.

See Phoxphyre for reminiscences by those who were there.

See also Early Conventions.


first Early Conventions Second Eastern
1936
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.