CLAUDE DEGLERfrom Fancyclopedia 2
was one of the most influential, ghod help us, fans who ever marched
across the Microcosm, and his career deserves to be chronicled at some
length:
Degler had been confined in the Indiana Hospital for the Insane from 1936
to 1937, and released against the advice of the doctors (as Speer learned in
an investigation after the Cosmic Circle fuss had blown over). He attended
the ChiCon I in 1940, and at
Denver in 1941 delivered a speech
purporting to have been written by Martians. He appears to have had some
activity in the Indiana Fantasy Association, and a part in publishing a minor
fanzine, INFINITE. At the 1942 MichiConference several attendees got bad
impressions of him, but he was still virtually unknown when he arrived late
at the 1943 Boskone [in Boston]. In the meantime, as the above-mentioned
investigation later showed, he had (1942) been forced to leave Newcastle
because of illicit relations with a minor.
After the Boskone he appears to have gotten a 4F classification and spent
a month hitch-hiking thru Dixie, with his mother in Newcastle Indiana sending
money orders to him along the route from funds he had saved. Getting names
and addresses from readers' departments in the proz, he contacted various
stfnists unknown to fandom and, whenever they were willing, constituted each
as a local and state organization, which he hoped would grow. Since Degler
was constantly thinking up organization and conference names, they will not
be treated elsewhere; for example, on this trip he created a Circle of Atzor
(Tennessee), Louisiana Fandom, Alabama All-Fans, Valdosta (Georgia)
Philosophers, and Georgia Cosmen; at the "Live Oak Conference" with Raym
Washington and sister he organized the Cosmic Thinkers (a local), the
statewide Florida Cosmos Society, and a revived Dixie Fan
Federation, all with Raym at the head.
From the South he returned to Indiana, where a bunch of locals were
supposed to exist already. After earning some more money, he departed late in
June for the Schenectacon, and thence visited Boston where he "had a long
talk" with Widner on such subjects as Slan Center. After organizing a few
more groups -- even one in Quebec, the Future Fantasy French -- he returned
alone to New York.
He slept on the floor at Little Jarnevon till some
time after Schwartz and Shaw began telling him to leave, and worked on some
Cosmic Circle publications which were supposed to be angelled by someone in
Indiana. In the Cosmic circle, which was to be a union of all persons
everywhere who had a cosmic outlook, these local and regional organizations
Degler had organized were affiliated with the Planet Fantasy Federation,
whose council included Don Rogers (the pseudonym for Degler used in all his
publications of this period), Raym Washington, and some people around
Newcastle. It is claimed that the movement was tested in Newcastle for years
before the missionary work began (1943 was the Year 4 of the Cosmic Concept)
but information from others than Degler is very vague.
Larry Shaw was at first impressed by Degler's ideas, and against his
wishes was named head of Slan Slum (local) and the Empire State Slans. Degler
took down the names and addresses, past and present, on Fantasy Fiction
Field's subscription list; this made up most of his mailing list for the
Cosmic Circle publications. After Coordinator Claude left New York in August,
many of the fanzines from Schwartz' and Unger's collections were missing, and
they charged that Superfan had taken them. Because of this, a personal fight,
and the fact that the Cosmic Circle had begun to look grotesque, Larry Shaw
resigned from the Cosmic ranks and declared feud on Degler.
Meanwhile, the latter's lank form appeared briefly in Philadelphia and
Hagerstown, whence he caught a ride west (visiting some unknown stfnists in
Oklahoma on the way) to Shangri-LA. There he joined
the LASFS and used the clubroom facilities to publish
weekly "news" sheets alternately titled Cosmic Circle Commentator and Fanews
Analyzer, and some publications written by and credited to others tho
reworked by him. In these weekly sheets the Cosmic Circle program reached
full form; Don Rogers answered a resounding "yes!" to the old question,
"are fans slans?" He
proposed to contact cosmic-minded mutants everywhere, even by use of radio
broadcasts. Numerous special service bureaus, for functions such as
purchasing mimeo supplies cooperatively, supplying fans
in the Army with free fanzines and proz, and planning tours for other
travelling fans, were announced as being set up by the Newcastle HQ.
Publications projected included a directory of fans' addresses, True
Fantastic Experiences, Spicy Spaceship Stories, and others. A fan
ational literature was urged to promote cohesiveness in the new race. It was
announced that a piece of land in the Ozarks (owned by Degler's mother) was
available for use as Cosmic Camp for vacationing Cosmen. The Slan Center idea
was pushed to its ultimate extreme, and the coordinator foresaw the day when
those who now "carried" 22 states (that many state organizations were claimed
to exist) would inherit the Solar System. The first step was organization of
just the sort that grotches
Fanarchists. With the demise of the N3F [already
moribund in 1944] Degler said, Third
Fandom had ended, and the Fourth Fandom
was now coming into existence under the aegis of the Planet Fantasy
Federation. Pending their consent (which was emphatically not given)
prominent fans were named as regional representatives, and almost every
actifan he'd visited (and some he hadn't) who received
him civilly and listened to him politely was named as a supporter of the
Cosmic Circle. The weeklies carried a hodge-podge of policy pronouncements by
the Coordinator, recollections of his trips, a few items of general interest
and inaccuracy, and Cosmic Circle news like Rogers being shut out of the
LASFS clubroom one day or Helen Bradleigh conducting a summer school for
Cosmic Children. (Helen Bradleigh was a pseudonym for Joan Domnick, the
teenage girl whom townsmen had prevented from starting the super-race with
Degler; she tended children for working mothers in her spare time.) The most
noticeable characteristic of the publications was that they were the
worst-looking legible fanzines ever published; abounding strikeovers,
paragraphs nonexistent, stencils crowded to the edges, no spacing after
periods, misspelling, overuse of capitals quotemarks and underlines,
wandering unplanned sentences, grammatical errors like "can and has went",
malapropisms like calling Widner a stolid and far- seeing fan, ad
nauseam.
T Bruce Yerke became alarmed at the prospect of publicity for fandom
directed at potential fans and the general public appearing in such garments,
and sent several fans a request for information about Degler, on which to
base a report on the Cosmic Circle. Degler reacted with violent denunciation
of Yerke, but was persuaded to cease firing till the report was prepared and
published. In the report, Yerke stated his belief that Cosmic Clod was a
nearly precipitated case of schizophrenia, a paranoiac with delusions of
grandeur and a persecution complex, and called for a ban on him if he refused
to reform his practices. Leading Angelenoes endorsed his report.
While he was new in LA, Superfan had gained James Kepner and other new
fen as members, and Ackerman let himself be named honorary member of one more
organization. Before long, everyone except 4e had resigned and the branches
of the CC set up in California were memberless after Degler left.
Upon learning thru Fanewscard of the Michiconference date, Degler gave up
plans to expand the Cosmic Circle in the West Coast area in order to attend.
He arrived on 29 October as the Ashleys were beginning to move to
Slan Shack. Al Ashley told him the Conference didn't
want him, and tried to explain why, but only got arguments in return. Finally
Degler said he had no place to sleep and only 60¢, but the Ashleys
refused to loan him anything.
When Superfan came back to Newcastle, Frankfort Nelson Stein (whose
existence has been questioned, for obvious reasons) was imputed with having
taken over an Oakgrove Fantasy Society and reestablishing Slan Slum there;
Frank N. Stein formed a Futurian Alliance to fight the old-fan clique who
were responsible for this new Exclusion Act, the Ashley Atrocity, and were
trying to keep down the new and young fans (--all this per Claude Degler).
The Cosmic One claimed that the CC was neutral in this war, but left no doubt
where his sympathies lay in the fight against the "National Fantasy Fascist
Federation", and seemed to identify his cause historically with the old
Futurian movement. By this time Raym Washington was the only active fan who
supported him; Raym had privately deplored the "morass" of publishing, and
urged Degler to moderate his statements, but still hoped that some good might
be done with the Cosmic Circle. In the face of this situation, a Cosmic
Circle Conference (Councilcon) in Newcastle announced the resurrection of the
MWFFF.
Meanwhile, a copy of the Cosmic Circle Commentator had come into the hands
of Amazing Stories' Ray Palmer. The declaration of existence of a super race
smelled to him of Nazism, and the fanationalistic program seemed the horrid
ultima of fans' movement away from the proz which he, as a fan of the
First Fandom and now a frankly
commercialistic editor, decried. Because of this, and because fans were now
not the type of readers his publications catered to, he made it known through
FFF Newsweekly that fans of fandom would not get into the letter departments
in future, originals would not be contributed for auction at fan gatherings,
and so on. Some fen reacted by saying that Degler's ideas in some form had
all been spoken in fandom before, and who the hell was Palmer to try to
dictate to fandom or criticize others as crackpots, and as for Amazing and
Fantastic Adventures, good riddance to bad rubbish. But others, alarmed at
the possibility that other proz might follow Ziff-Davis' lead and cut fandom
off from financial, recruiting, and publicity assistance, made haste to
inform Palmer that Degler didn't speak for fandom. Palmer modified his
statement of the ban, but urged fen to return to the ways of their
fathers.
On the theory that the Cosmic Circle could best be laughed out of
existence, the Boston boys had issued a Trivial Triangle Troubadour, FTLaney
produced the Comic Circle Commentator, Kepner followed with Caustic Square
Commentator, and Tucker announced formation of the
Cosworms. When the Z-D affair broke proceedings were started to expel Clod
from FAPA, which he had lately joined (Laney and others
made up specimen batches of surplus CCCommentators Degler had left in LA to
send around FAPA in illustration of their criticisms of the Coordinator.) And
Clod found it expedient to let his LASFS membership lapse because of the
overwhelming sentiment against him there. It wasn't a joke any longer.
After the war the Cosmic One, using a new pename of "John Crisman",
published Weird Unsolved Mysteries, a flying saucer review thing, which he
circulated at the PhilCon I. Future issues
(which apparently never appeared) were to feature such articles as "EE Smith
is Earthbound and Unimaginative". He also announced Monster Stories, to
feature "Behind the Super-Nova" ("a tale of sheer cosmic horror and weird
vengeance"). Later he crossed out the "Crisman" and inserted a new pseudonym,
"John York", and used WUM to exchange for fanzines. Any further history he
may have made is unknown to your Gibbon.
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