Difference between revisions of "San Francisco in '54"
(Bot: Automated import of articles) |
|||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | + | Resulting in [[SFCon]], this was a very odd [[Worldcon bid]] in that no one in [[San Francisco]] knew about it till after it won. | |
The previous year, at [[Chicon II]], in a very complicated and political race (see [[1953 Worldcon Site Selection]] and [[The Story Behind Philly in '53]]), [[Philadelphia in 1953]] narrowly defeated [[San Francisco in '53]] in a vote that one observer described as [[fans]] voting with their feet rather than their hearts. So at [[Philcon II]], there was a widespread feeling that San Francisco deserved the 1954 [[Worldcon]] ([[rotation rules]] had not yet been formalized.) | The previous year, at [[Chicon II]], in a very complicated and political race (see [[1953 Worldcon Site Selection]] and [[The Story Behind Philly in '53]]), [[Philadelphia in 1953]] narrowly defeated [[San Francisco in '53]] in a vote that one observer described as [[fans]] voting with their feet rather than their hearts. So at [[Philcon II]], there was a widespread feeling that San Francisco deserved the 1954 [[Worldcon]] ([[rotation rules]] had not yet been formalized.) | ||
− | Unfortunately, there ''was'' no [[San Francisco]] [[bid]] and only one San Francisco [[fan]], [[Hans Rush]], was in attendance | + | Unfortunately, there ''was'' no [[San Francisco]] [[bid]] and only one San Francisco [[fan]], [[Hans Rush]], was in attendance — and when the voting started, he could not be located. So [[Don Ford]] (of [[Cincinnati]]!) presented the San Francisco bid with [[Fletcher Pratt]] seconding. When the voting was complete, San Francisco had won. |
− | + | In those days, the vote was held at the [[convention]] during the [[WSFS Business Meeting]], which was typically an hour-long item on the single track of program. Hans had played poker till dawn and went to a nearby hotel to sleep and no one knew where. When he finally showed up, he learned that San Francisco had won. [[Howard DeVore]], who was in the poker game, probably convinced [[Don Ford]] to make the bid. | |
{{bid | series=Worldcon | year=1954}} | {{bid | series=Worldcon | year=1954}} | ||
− | |||
[[Category:US]] | [[Category:US]] |
Latest revision as of 17:30, 25 April 2021
Resulting in SFCon, this was a very odd Worldcon bid in that no one in San Francisco knew about it till after it won.
The previous year, at Chicon II, in a very complicated and political race (see 1953 Worldcon Site Selection and The Story Behind Philly in '53), Philadelphia in 1953 narrowly defeated San Francisco in '53 in a vote that one observer described as fans voting with their feet rather than their hearts. So at Philcon II, there was a widespread feeling that San Francisco deserved the 1954 Worldcon (rotation rules had not yet been formalized.)
Unfortunately, there was no San Francisco bid and only one San Francisco fan, Hans Rush, was in attendance — and when the voting started, he could not be located. So Don Ford (of Cincinnati!) presented the San Francisco bid with Fletcher Pratt seconding. When the voting was complete, San Francisco had won.
In those days, the vote was held at the convention during the WSFS Business Meeting, which was typically an hour-long item on the single track of program. Hans had played poker till dawn and went to a nearby hotel to sleep and no one knew where. When he finally showed up, he learned that San Francisco had won. Howard DeVore, who was in the poker game, probably convinced Don Ford to make the bid.
1954 Site Selection | 1954 |
This is a page about a convention bid. Please extend it by adding information about who was bidding, officers, committee list, what they were bidding for, who their opponents were, and who won. |