[RSN, as soon as I have an unencumbered afternoon, the waiting world will be able to read my thoughts on Climaquiddick, the President’s taking refuge in patriotism and other matters. In the meantime, I can hardly let today’s anniversary pass without comment.]
The estimable Patrick Nielsen Hayden, himself reminded by Brit fanhistorian Rob Hansen, reminds us of an event that most of us never knew about:
On December 11, 1929, the world’s first club devoted to science fiction met for the first time. They called themselves the Scienceers. Years later, in 1961, one of their original number recalled those days in a fanzine article which, through the magic of the World Wide Web, can be read here.
Fascinatingly, fandom anticipated Barack Obama by eight decades: “the first president of that first US fan group—indeed, the world’s first fan group—was a black guy, Warren Fitzgerald”.
Patrick suggests that December 11th be honored as the Official Birthday of science fiction fandom. One could argue for such alternatives as the mailing of the first fanzine or the holding of the first SF convention, but the former is probably unknowable and the latter is in dispute. The claims of today’s date seem unambiguous, and, as Patrick observes, the birth of fandom is “a more pleasant thing to associate with December 11 than the assassination of Byzantine emperor Nikephoros II in 969, the abdication of Edward VIII in 1936, or the arrest of Bernard Madoff in 2008”. Or Kansas City’s trade of Roger Maris to the Yankees in 1959.
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