Difference between revisions of "Philcon II"

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The [[1953]] [[Worldcon]] held September 5-7 at the Bellevue-Strafford Hotel in [[Philadelphia]], PA. The [[GoH]] was [[Willy Ley]].  It was [[chaired]] by [[Milton Rothman]] and [[Isaac Asimov]] was [[Toastmaster]].  It was officially known as "The '''11th Worldcon'''", but it was popularly known as Philcon II and that's how it is remembered. Milton Rothman replaced [[James A. Williams]], the original chairman, upon his death. [[Tom Clareson]], PhD was Vice-Chairman.
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The 1953 [[Worldcon]] held September 5-7 at the Bellevue-Strafford Hotel in [[Philadelphia]], PA. The [[GoH]] was [[Willy Ley]].  It was [[chaired]] by [[Milton Rothman]] and [[Isaac Asimov]] was [[Toastmaster]].  It was officially known as "The '''11th Worldcon'''", but it was popularly known as Philcon II and that's how it is remembered. Milton Rothman replaced [[James A. Williams]], the original chairman, upon his death. [[Tom Clareson]], PhD was Vice-Chairman.
  
 
[[PR]] 1 was edited by [[Dave Hammond]] and [[Alan E. Nourse]], PRs 2 and 3 by Nourse and [[William J. Jenkins]], PR 4 by Jenkins, and the [[Program Book]] by [[Dave Kyle]]. This seems to have been the first [[Worldcon]] with a [[convention newsletter]].
 
[[PR]] 1 was edited by [[Dave Hammond]] and [[Alan E. Nourse]], PRs 2 and 3 by Nourse and [[William J. Jenkins]], PR 4 by Jenkins, and the [[Program Book]] by [[Dave Kyle]]. This seems to have been the first [[Worldcon]] with a [[convention newsletter]].
  
Philcon II instituted the [[Hugos]]: See [[The First Hugos]] and [[1953 Hugos]].
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Philcon II instituted the [[Hugos]]: See [[The First Hugos]].
  
 
There was some ill-feeling at [[Chicon II]] when the spur-of-the-moment [[1953 Philly Bid| Philadelphia bid]] (see [[The Story Behind Philly in '53]]) beat a [[1953 San Francisco bid|San Francisco bid]] for the con.  This led to the adoption of the [[rotation plan]]. Other bidders were [[Cleveland in 1953]], [[Indianapolis in '53]], [[Queens SFL in '53]], and [[Niagara Falls in '53]].  See [[1953 Worldcon Site Selection]] for details.
 
There was some ill-feeling at [[Chicon II]] when the spur-of-the-moment [[1953 Philly Bid| Philadelphia bid]] (see [[The Story Behind Philly in '53]]) beat a [[1953 San Francisco bid|San Francisco bid]] for the con.  This led to the adoption of the [[rotation plan]]. Other bidders were [[Cleveland in 1953]], [[Indianapolis in '53]], [[Queens SFL in '53]], and [[Niagara Falls in '53]].  See [[1953 Worldcon Site Selection]] for details.
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* ''[[Fantasy Times]] #183'' p1
 
* ''[[Fantasy Times]] #183'' p1
  
{{Sequence | before=Philcon I | after=MilPhil}}
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{{convention | series=Worldcon | year=1953 | before=TASFiC | after=SFCon | files=http://files.fancyclopedia.org/Philcon II | before1=Philcon I | after1=MilPhil}}
 
 
{{convention | series=Worldcon | year=1953 | before=TASFiC | after=SFCon | files=http://files.fancyclopedia.org/Philcon II}}
 
  
 
[[Category:condex]]
 
[[Category:condex]]
[[Category:convention]]
 
 
[[Category:US]]
 
[[Category:US]]
 
[[Category:worldcon]]
 
[[Category:worldcon]]

Revision as of 15:24, 21 December 2019

The 1953 Worldcon held September 5-7 at the Bellevue-Strafford Hotel in Philadelphia, PA. The GoH was Willy Ley. It was chaired by Milton Rothman and Isaac Asimov was Toastmaster. It was officially known as "The 11th Worldcon", but it was popularly known as Philcon II and that's how it is remembered. Milton Rothman replaced James A. Williams, the original chairman, upon his death. Tom Clareson, PhD was Vice-Chairman.

PR 1 was edited by Dave Hammond and Alan E. Nourse, PRs 2 and 3 by Nourse and William J. Jenkins, PR 4 by Jenkins, and the Program Book by Dave Kyle. This seems to have been the first Worldcon with a convention newsletter.

Philcon II instituted the Hugos: See The First Hugos.

There was some ill-feeling at Chicon II when the spur-of-the-moment Philadelphia bid (see The Story Behind Philly in '53) beat a San Francisco bid for the con. This led to the adoption of the rotation plan. Other bidders were Cleveland in 1953, Indianapolis in '53, Queens SFL in '53, and Niagara Falls in '53. See 1953 Worldcon Site Selection for details.

Because so many fans felt that Philly had unfairly taken the 1953 Worldcon from San Francisco, they awarded them the 1954 Worldcon -- in spite of there being no San Francisco bid and only one San Francisco fan at the convention: and he was playing poker at the time! See 1954 Worldcon Site Selection.

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