Difference between revisions of "Los Angeles Clubs"

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==Futurian Society of California==
 
==Futurian Society of California==
 
fl. 1942-42<br>
 
fl. 1942-42<br>
Under three different names, this is one of the [[Cosmic_Circle#Fake_Cosmic_Clubs|many ersatz clubs]] started by Claude Degler.  [[James Kepner]] and some other [[neofans]] were members, along with [[Forrest J Ackerman]] as an honorary member. As soon as Degler left L.A., the others dropped off, leaving Ackerman the sole member and when Ackerman went into the Army, it was memberless.
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Under three different names, this is one of the [[Cosmic_Circle#Fake_Cosmic_Clubs|many ersatz clubs]] started by Claude Degler.  But see the later [[Los Angeles Clubs#Los Angeles Futurian Society]].
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 +
[[James Kepner]] and some other [[neofans]] were members, along with [[Forrest J Ackerman]] as an honorary member. As soon as Degler left L.A., the others dropped off, leaving Ackerman the sole member and when Ackerman went into the Army, it was memberless.
  
 
==Harbor Fantasy League==
 
==Harbor Fantasy League==
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* ''[[Have at Thee Knanves]]'' by  [[Samuel D. Russell]]
 
* ''[[Have at Thee Knanves]]'' by  [[Samuel D. Russell]]
 
* ''[[The Knanve]]'' by [[T. Bruce Yerke]]
 
* ''[[The Knanve]]'' by [[T. Bruce Yerke]]
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==Los Angeles Futurian Society==
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Fl. 1944-45<br>
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Starting around June 1944, [[feuding]] within [[LASFS]] took a turn for the worse with the formation of the Los Angeles Futurian Society (the name harks back to [[Degler's]] ersatz 1942 club [[Los Angeles Clubs#Futurian Society of Los Angeles]] , a quasi-formal club-within-a-club founded by [[Jimmy Kepner]], [[Mel Brown]], [[Art Saha]] and [[Alva Rogers]].  It was not separate from the LASFS but within it, with all the members retaining membership in the mother club. The Futurians would continue to be the biggest and strongest clique in the LASFS until its dissolution in September 1945.
  
 
==The Outlanders==
 
==The Outlanders==

Revision as of 06:35, 24 September 2021

When you think of clubs in LA, you think of LASFS, the first club in LA and one which is still active. But there were others -- many others.

LASFS[edit]

LASFS (which was also the LA chapter of the Science Fiction League) rates its own page.

Early Clubs (30s-50s)[edit]

World Girdlers' Correspondence Club[edit]

World Girdlers' International Science League Correspondence Club[edit]

fl. 1937
The WGCC was a club which existed (briefly) around 1937. It was the brainchild of Vernon Harry in Los Angeles and was announced in the January 1937 issue of Fantasy Magazine. It never had more than a few members and folded when Harry went to work on a night shift.

It's unclear whether it was a bit of a scam from the beginning, or the product of teenage megalomania.

T. Bruce Yerke became a member just before it folded.

It was mentioned in Fancy 1 under WGCC:

From Fancyclopedia 1, ca. 1944
World Girdlers' Correspondence Club. One of the mushrooms of the First Transition. No other information available.

United Califans[edit]

Futurian Society of Los Angeles[edit]

Futurian Society of California[edit]

fl. 1942-42
Under three different names, this is one of the many ersatz clubs started by Claude Degler. But see the later Los Angeles Clubs#Los Angeles Futurian Society.

James Kepner and some other neofans were members, along with Forrest J Ackerman as an honorary member. As soon as Degler left L.A., the others dropped off, leaving Ackerman the sole member and when Ackerman went into the Army, it was memberless.

Harbor Fantasy League[edit]

fl. 1942
The HFL was an early club -- perhaps the earliest -- in the greater LA area outside LA itself. It was organized in early 1942 by five married couples (including Pogo (Director), Barbara Steedman (Secretary), Dan Lyons (Treasurer), and Russ Wood (Editor)). It tried to avoid being taken over by kids by limiting membership to married couples. It met bi-weekly.

The club rather quickly dissolved when the male members started being drafted for the War and was dead by August 1942. But before it collapsed, it managed to outrage Forrest J Ackerman when one of the HFL's members suggested that he needed a psychiatrist!

From Fancyclopedia 1, ca. 1944
The Harbor Fantasy League, a group of married couples in the Los Angeles area, primarily the work of Rus Wood and Pogo. It came into existence in 1942 and shortly fell into inactivity because of members' departure for the wars.

The Knanves[edit]

fl. 1943-
A group of Insurgents which organized around 1943 in opposition to other members of LASFS over a disputed Directorate election in what was called The War of the Knanves. (The name was given to them by T. Bruce Yerke from a typo in a fanzine. No, I don't know how to pronounce it.) Their fanzine was The Knanve and was edited by T. Bruce Yerke.

Los Angeles Futurian Society[edit]

Fl. 1944-45

Starting around June 1944, feuding within LASFS took a turn for the worse with the formation of the Los Angeles Futurian Society (the name harks back to Degler's ersatz 1942 club Los Angeles Clubs#Futurian Society of Los Angeles , a quasi-formal club-within-a-club founded by Jimmy Kepner, Mel Brown, Art Saha and Alva Rogers. It was not separate from the LASFS but within it, with all the members retaining membership in the mother club. The Futurians would continue to be the biggest and strongest clique in the LASFS until its dissolution in September 1945.

The Outlanders[edit]

fl. 1948-
The Outlanders (a.k.a. the Outlander Society or OS) was a former Los Angeles-area fan club for members of LASFS who lived in the "outlands" of Los Angeles, and thus found it difficult to make it to every meeting of LASFS. The organization was founded in October 1948 and the original eight members were Len Moffatt, Rick Sneary, Stan Woolston, John Van Couvering, Con Pederson, Bill Elias, Alan Hershey and Freddie Hershey. It met monthly.

The club had the reputation of being one of the more intellectual groups in fandom, in large part because of the clubzine, The Outlander. (Art Rapp called it fandom's "most articulate and intellectual group".) Meetings were all-day sessions, but were not business meetings: there were no dues, officers, or bylaws. Members stayed connected between meetings by a continuing chain letter.

When the Outlanders were founded in 1948, some of them began using the slogan "South Gate in '58" as an interlineation or filler in their fanzinesSouth Gate being the town where their founder Rick Sneary, a.k.a. "the Hermit of South Gate," lived. The idea was initially to promote an after 10-year reunion of the Outlanders, but eventually it became a successful Worldcon bid. The Solacon was held in a Los Angeles hotel which was ceded for the Labor Day weekend to the Mayor of South Gate by the Mayor of Los Angeles, as South Gate did not have a hotel large enough to host the event which drew fans in the hundreds.

From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959
A fanclub (formed October 1948) for people living outside the city limits of LA; Rick Sneary's group. It met approximately monthly till mid-52. Sneary, Moffatt, Woolston, Pederson, van Couvering, and Rory Faulkner were important members. Thirteen issues of OO The Outlander were published, and the Third Westercon was produced.

The Insurgents[edit]

The Insurgents was a name given to a group of LA fans who were part of the larger insurgents movement.

Mañana Literary Society[edit]

fl. late 40s-50s
The Mañana Literary Society was a formal meeting of SF fiction writers in Los Angeles in the 40s and 50s. Hosted by Robert A. Heinlein, the membership included authors such as Anthony Boucher, Arthur K. Barnes, Edmond Hamilton, L. Ron Hubbard, Henry Kuttner, C. L. Moore, L. Sprague de Camp, Cleve Cartmill, Leigh Brackett, and Jack Williamson.

The characters in the mystery Rocket to the Morgue by H. H. Holmes (Anthony Boucher) were based on members of the Society.

Clubs of the 60s-90s[edit]

Southwest Association of Fans[edit]

Fl. late 70s
SWAF was an organization started in the late 70s in Los Angeles. It cost nothing to join and promised to issue a bimonthly zine listing only "only honest fan organizations, individuals and businesses." Its goal was to prevent dishonest, non-fan speculators from ripping fans off, to keep fans up-to-date on the latest news in fandom, and to assist fans on fandom-related projects such as publishing fanzines, putting on conventions, and so forth.

Central L. A. Club[edit]

Fl. 1982
A club in Los Angeles organized by Lee Gold and Barry Gold. It met monthly on Sunday for socializing and a dinner expedition.

Desolation of Smaug[edit]

Fl. 1982
A discussion group of the Mythopoeic Society located in the Pomona Valley region of Los Angeles, CA.

Mydgard[edit]

Fl. 1982
A Mythopoeic Society Discussion Group located in the Hollywood-Wilshire area of Los Angeles. It is headed by Lee Speth.

Lothlorien[edit]

Fl. 1982
A Mythopoeic Society Discussion Group located in the San Gabriel Valley area of Los Angeles. (N.b., Lothlorien was also a name of the Dartford Tolkien Society.)

Nargothrond[edit]

Fl. 1982

A Mythopoeic Society Discussion Group located in the Orange County area of Los Angeles. (N.b., it was also the title of a Rick Brooks fanzine.)

Fantasy Artist Network[edit]

Fl. 1982
FAN was a club located in Los Angeles which was aimed at sf artists who illustrate fanzines, exhibit at convention art shows, and who aspire to pro careers in fantasy art. It met monthly and published the clubzine Fantasy Artist.

Tolkien Forever Fellowship of Southern California[edit]

A smial of The Tolkien Society located LA.

Clubs of the 2000s[edit]

SCIFI[edit]

Fl. 1980s-present
(There is also a Florida club with this name.)

SCIFI, the Southern California Institute for Fan Interests, is a 501(c)(3) non-profit founded in the 1980s by Bruce Pelz and others. It ran the last three LA Worldcons, L.A.con II, L.A.con III and L.A.con IV and it announced the Los Angeles in 2026 Worldcon bid at SMOFcon in 2020. Its name, pronounced "skiffy," is a play on the dreaded sci-fi and a nod to its coiner, beloved LA BNF Forry Ackerman.

The organization has an odd membership structure with a large board (25 members) which wields complete power within the organization. The Board is elected annually. Because the Board is so large, it functions more like a club than a more traditional board of directors. SCIFI is unrelated to LASFS, though the two organizations have many members in common.

After LACon II, it was criticized for keeping too much of its profits and putting them to local uses, such as air-conditioning the LASFS Clubhouse, and subsequently became more active at distributing money and publicizing the fact.

It has also run the 1989 Westercon - Conosaurus, the 1994 Westercon - Conozoic, the 1999 NASFiC - Conucopia and the 2002 Westercon - Conagerie and several World Fantasy Conventions.

It sponsors the Rotsler Award and the Fan Gallery.

SCIFI Press, its small press, published only one book, A Wealth of Fable by Harry Warner, Jr., in 1992.

Time Meddlers of Los Angeles[edit]

The Time Meddlers of Los Angeles is one of America's largest and most visible Doctor Who fan clubs. Members gather each month to socialize and celebrate matters relating to the fictional Doctor Who time-traveling character.

Non-Local Clubs HQed in LA[edit]

The Fantasy Association[edit]

Fl. 1973-78.
An international club devoted to fantasy headquartered in Los Angeles. It was founded in 1973 or earlier and published its main fanzine Fantasiae and the more occiasional The Elidon Tree.

Mythopoeic Society[edit]

Fl. 1960s-present
The Mythopoeic Society is old enough and large enough to have its own page, which see.

American Rocket Society[edit]

Fl. pre-War through 1950s
The ARS seems to have been centered in LA and included enough fans to warrant an entry in all editions of Fancyclopedia -- see American Rocket Society for more.

College Clubs[edit]

Bruin Science Fiction Club[edit]

A club at UCLA in Los Angeles.

Unsorted-out[edit]

Details needed: Are these LA clubs?