Difference between revisions of "Early Conventions"
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Line 39: | Line 39: | ||
||"around the end" 1943 || [[Fancon]] || || [[Bloomington, IL]] || | ||"around the end" 1943 || [[Fancon]] || || [[Bloomington, IL]] || | ||
|| "over the year end" || [[Norcon (UK)]] || small || [[Manchester, UK]] || | || "over the year end" || [[Norcon (UK)]] || small || [[Manchester, UK]] || | ||
− | 1944 || | + | 1944 ||April 8, 1944 || [[Eastercon 1944]] || || [[London]] || |
||May 28, 1944 || [[Staplecon 3]] ||9 || [[San Francisco]] || | ||May 28, 1944 || [[Staplecon 3]] ||9 || [[San Francisco]] || | ||
||June 17-19, 1944 || [[Michicon 4]] ||23 || [[Battle Creek, MI]] || | ||June 17-19, 1944 || [[Michicon 4]] ||23 || [[Battle Creek, MI]] || |
Revision as of 06:58, 11 January 2021
The first ten years of SF conventions were a mixed bag, but even the largest was small by modern standards, and some were literally a few guys getting together for a day. But travel was difficult and the tendency of the time was to call nearly any planned get-together of fans from different cities a "convention" (Or a "conference". See con for the baroque early terminology.)
Anglofan historians tend to take a a hard line on what was or wasn’t a convention (they would omit the First Convention if they could). We are inclined to take the participants’ estimation, even if they declared conhood after the event.
See the Fancyclopedia 2 article on Conventions.
Fanhistory | 1936—1946 |
This is a fanhistory page. Please add more detail. |