Difference between revisions of "K. Martin Carlson"

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==The Fan==
 
==The Fan==
(May 14, 1904 -- Dec. 12, 1986)
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(May 14, 1904 Dec. 12, 1986)
  
'''Martin (Kaymar) Carlson''' was introduced to [[fandom]] by [[Walter Dunkelberger]] and became a leader in the [[N3F]] for many years, establishing and personally funding the early [[Kaymar Award]]s.  He was at various times the club's president (1952), vice-president, secretary/treasurer, director, and historian. He published the [[Kaymar Trader]], was a member of [[N'APA]], did an N3F history page in ''[[TNFF]]'' for many years, and wrote the [[NFFF Trader column]] in ''TNFF''.
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'''K. Martin Carlson''', [[nicknamed]] '''Kaymar''', was introduced to [[fandom]] by [[Walter Dunkelberger]] and became a leader in the [[N3F]] for many years, establishing and personally funding the early [[Kaymar Award]]s.  He was at various times the [[club]]'s [[president]] (1952), [[vice-president]], [[secretary]]/[[treasurer]], [[director]], and historian. He published the [[Kaymar Trader]], was a member of [[N'APA]], did an N3F history page in ''[[TNFF]]'' for many years, and wrote the “NFFF Trader” column in ''TNFF''.
  
He originated, maintained and financed the Kaymar Award for 25 years from 1959 to 1984. Since 1985, the award is paid for by the N3F Treasury, which is small compensation for the value of the work done by the winners over the years.  He won the Kaymar Award, named in his honor, in 1984.
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He originated, maintained and financed the Kaymar Award for 25 years from 1959 to 1984. Since 1985, the award is paid for by the N3F Treasury, which is small compensation for the value of the work done by the winners over the years.  He won the Kaymar Award, named in his honor, in 1984.
  
Born in Sweden, he lived from age 5 in Minnesota where he married Stella L. (Lee) Carlson on February 2, 1936. He is buried in Evergreen Memorial Cemetery in Moorhead, Minnesota.
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Born in Sweden, he lived from age 5 in [[Minnesota]] where he married Stella L. (Lee) Carlson on February 2, 1936. He is buried in Evergreen Memorial Cemetery in Moorhead, Minnesota.
  
 
See {{file770 | issue=64 | page=5}} for an obituary.
 
See {{file770 | issue=64 | page=5}} for an obituary.

Revision as of 23:12, 21 December 2020

The Fan[edit]

(May 14, 1904 – Dec. 12, 1986)

K. Martin Carlson, nicknamed Kaymar, was introduced to fandom by Walter Dunkelberger and became a leader in the N3F for many years, establishing and personally funding the early Kaymar Awards. He was at various times the club's president (1952), vice-president, secretary/treasurer, director, and historian. He published the Kaymar Trader, was a member of N'APA, did an N3F history page in TNFF for many years, and wrote the “NFFF Trader” column in TNFF.

He originated, maintained and financed the Kaymar Award for 25 years from 1959 to 1984. Since 1985, the award is paid for by the N3F Treasury, which is small compensation for the value of the work done by the winners over the years. He won the Kaymar Award, named in his honor, in 1984.

Born in Sweden, he lived from age 5 in Minnesota where he married Stella L. (Lee) Carlson on February 2, 1936. He is buried in Evergreen Memorial Cemetery in Moorhead, Minnesota.

See File 770 64, p. 5 for an obituary.

Fanzines and Apazines:

The Apazine[edit]

Kaymar published an apazine for N'APA also named Kaymar:

Issue Date Pages Notes
9 June 1964
10 undated
25 March 1972
30 March 1975


Person 19041986
This is a biography page. Please extend it by adding more information about the person, such as fanzines and apazines published, awards, clubs, conventions worked on, GoHships, impact on fandom, external links, anecdotes, etc. See Standards for People and The Naming of Names.


Publication ????
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.