Difference between revisions of "Osmond Robb"
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− | Osmond P. H. Robb was a [[fan]] from [[Edinburgh, Scotland]] active in the 1930s and early 1940s. He may be the earliest known Scottish fan although the honour may go to [[Marion Eadie]] or indeed somebody else. | + | '''Osmond P. H. Robb''' was a [[fan]] from [[Edinburgh, Scotland]] active in the 1930s and early 1940s. He may be the earliest known Scottish fan although the honour may go to [[Marion Eadie]] or indeed somebody else. |
Robb was reading pulp magazines as early as 1937. According to online sources he had letters in ''[[Amazing Stories]]'', April 1937, and ''[[Weird Tales]]'', November 1938. | Robb was reading pulp magazines as early as 1937. According to online sources he had letters in ''[[Amazing Stories]]'', April 1937, and ''[[Weird Tales]]'', November 1938. |
Revision as of 02:13, 11 January 2024
(? - ?)
Osmond P. H. Robb was a fan from Edinburgh, Scotland active in the 1930s and early 1940s. He may be the earliest known Scottish fan although the honour may go to Marion Eadie or indeed somebody else.
Robb was reading pulp magazines as early as 1937. According to online sources he had letters in Amazing Stories, April 1937, and Weird Tales, November 1938.
He contributed a cover to the first issue of The Fantast in April 1939 as well as material for other issues, and was mentioned several times in Futurian War Digest, in the June 1944 issue of which Bill Temple wrote, ‘Someone’s just sent me the Dec. 43 issue of the Leftish review Our Time (never ’eard of it!) & the first thing I see is a long letter of criticism in the correspondence columns by Osmond Robb. Is this a fan going serious?’
In the April 1942 issue of Futurian War Digest, it was reported that as a conscientious objector he was given ‘non-combatant service’ by his local tribunal and granted conditional exemption. He received enrolment notices for the National Fire Service.
There seem to be no references to him in fandom after 1944. He was later a left-wing journalist. According to Timothy Heat in Hamish Henderson: Poetry Becomes People (1952-2002), he was at some later point in the Crichton Royal Infirmary in Dumfries for some years where he was, per a letter to Henderson, ‘as happy here as you can be in the loony bin.’
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This is a biography page. Please extend it by adding more information about the person, such as fanzines and apazines published, awards, clubs, conventions worked on, GoHships, impact on fandom, external links, anecdotes, etc. See Standards for People and The Naming of Names. |