BAY AREAfrom Fancyclopedia 2
The San Francisco Bay area, like Washington DC, has supported various fan
clubs with no mutual connections. Just before the Korean War the Golden Gate
Futurian Society was in existence; it consisted, first, of Kepner, Mel Brown,
Bill Knapheide, Donald Moore, D Bruce Berry and others, a motley crew. This
was a science fiction club pure and simple; in '51-'52 all but Knapheide
disappeared and the ACC group took it over. "We couldn't run a really good
stf-centered club", confesses Carr, but they didn't really want to; they
wanted a faaanish one. Eventually the club got so very fannish that the
meetings were set up as one-shot sessions only, but
this brought on the folding of the club; since one- shot sessions could be
held any old time anyway, a club organization was unnecessary.
In the late 40s and early 50s the Elves, Gnomes, and
Little Men's Chowder, Science Fiction, and Marching Society flourished
here. (In the comic strip "Barnaby", Mr O'Malley [the fairy godfather]
belonged to the EG&LMC&M Society.) It attracted people like the Coles, Tony
Boucher, DB Moore, Thomas Quinn, Poul and Karen Anderson, and Lloyd Eaton. At
various times they produced the fanzine Rhodomagnetic Digest (which was
probably more famous than all the GGFS publications put together), an award
for pros called the Invisible Little Man
[it was a pedestal with nothing on it, but two hollow footprints on top] and
an annual convention, the SFCon. Clashes arising
from this last caused it to fade from the scene after 1954. In recent times
it has been the publishing center of "Carl Brandon
", Terry Carr, Dave Rike, Ron Ellik, Pete Graham and others, and the site of
the Tower to the Moon Built of Beer Cans.
Editor's note: In Crockett Johnson's Barnaby cartoons, Mr O'Malley
was a member of the Elves, Leprechauns, Gnomes and Little Men's Chowder and
Marching Society. The leprechauns were lost to euphony in the fan
organization. --JC
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