Difference between revisions of "Con*Stellation"

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A [[convention]] in [[Huntsville, AL]], that ran from 1981 to 2017, run by the [[North Alabama Science Fiction Association]]. The convention names included both a number and a constellation name (e.g., Leo, Orion, etc.).
 
A [[convention]] in [[Huntsville, AL]], that ran from 1981 to 2017, run by the [[North Alabama Science Fiction Association]]. The convention names included both a number and a constellation name (e.g., Leo, Orion, etc.).
  
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__TOC__
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==Table of Conventions==
 
<tab head=top>
 
<tab head=top>
 
  Convention || Dates || [[GoHs]]  
 
  Convention || Dates || [[GoHs]]  
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[[Con*Stellation XXXV]]: Horologium || October 13-15, 2017 || [[Mary Robinette Kowal]], David O. Miller, [[Toni Weisskopf]]  
 
[[Con*Stellation XXXV]]: Horologium || October 13-15, 2017 || [[Mary Robinette Kowal]], David O. Miller, [[Toni Weisskopf]]  
 
</tab>
 
</tab>
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==Founding members: ==
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[[John Axford]], [[Mary Axford]], [[Karen Blassingame]], [[Bruce Butler]], [[Pat Spurlock Butler]], [[Rich Garber]], [[Jack Giles]], [[Jr.]], [[Courtney Clark Griffith]], [[Sunn Hayward]], [[James Jones]], [[Mary Beth Given Jones]], [[Mike Kennedy]], [[Nelda Kennedy]], [[Edward Kenny]], [[David Lateigne]], [[Tom Lemieux]], [[Cathy Mauk]], [[Debbie Lowe Mitchell]], [[Rhett Mitchell]], [[Nancy Adams Parks]], [[Joe Earl Patterson]], [[Mark Paulk]], [[Roger Reynolds]], [[David Seiler]], [[Mike Stone]], [[Becky Suiter]], [[Glenn Valentine]], [[Toni Weisskopf]], and [[Dave Zoller]]
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==History of Con*Stellation==
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By Mike Kennedy
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Well, this year’s convention—ContStellation XXXV—marks the end of the road for ConStellation. While that bare fact is a downer, it also means that our little all-volunteer group has brought the joys of sf/f fannish gatherings to [[Huntsville, AL|Huntsville]] for the better part of four decades. We’re particularly happy that many prior Guests and attendees have chosen to join us this weekend to celebrate.
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And, this occasion also brings some reminiscences to mind.
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The history of ConfStellation in inextricably linked to its parent organization (the [[North Alabama Science Fiction Association]]), to [[Southern Fandom]], and to the wider webs of fandom writ large. Hie earliest sf/f fandom in Huntsville—or at least the earliest known to me—was circa the early ’60s. Probably the most notable aspect of that era is the tiny gathering called [[DeepSouthCon 1]] (or [[MidSouthCon]] as it was known at the time), which was held at [[David Hulan]]’s house in 1963. That was an outgrowth of the [[Southern Fandom Press Alliance]] (fancyclopedia.wikidot.com/sfpa), which in turn was an outgrowth of the shortlived [[Southern Fandom Group]].
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DSC 4 (1966) was also in Huntsville (and by this time it was actually called DeepSouthCon—the renaming happened at DSC 2), having come here because chair [[Lon Atkins]] moved to Huntsville after winning the site selection vote at DSC 3. After this the recorded sources 2 NASFA - ConStellation - Memory Book - 2017 available to me peter out about early Huntsville fandom, though there are rumors of various groups including one oriented toward Star Trek. Those had apparently all disappeared, though, before my then-wife, [[Nelda Kennedy|Nelda]], and I moved to town in January 1978.
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The modern era (if you will) of Huntsville fandom started in June 1980 at another con called MidSouthCon—unrelated to both DSC 1 and the ongoing Memphis con of the same name. [[Andy Purcell]], a dealer living in south Tennessee, wanted to run a convention and Huntsville was the closest sizable town so he located it here. It took place at the now-long-defunct Sheraton Inn on University Drive. Nelda and I had been to a few cons (the 1978 & 1979 DSCs in particular) but we were pretty surprised to find out about a convention coming to our still-new home town. Needless to say, we attended.
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Some years before, our earliest introduction to anything approaching fandom had been though Nelda’s son, Alan, who was very into both gaming and comic books. The comics aspect was thoroughly covered in MidSouthCon’s [[Dealers Room]] but we knew that gaming was an interest among other young con-goers as well, and decided to sponsor an unofficial (and very informal) Game Room—renting a hotel room to do so. We’d been wondering how to get some organized fandom started in Huntsville. Nelda came up with the idea of posting a sign-up sheet in the [[Con Suite]] to get names of and contact info for others so inclined—it worked quite well.
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Within a few months, NASFA was founded. Very quickly—by late 1980 or early 1981—club members were already talking about starting our own annual convention. Meanwhile, some of us tried to learn a bit about running conventions by volunteering at cons in other cities. In the early winter of 1981 the group held [[ZerCon]] (short for Zero Con) as a one-day party/con at what was then the Kings Inn on Memorial Parkway north of University Drive. NASFA included a number of engineers and computer scientists and it seemed “logical” to start our convention numbering with zero so our first full-weekend con could be numbered “one.” I’m convinced that ZerCon holds the all-time record for the Coldest Video Room Ever. The one hotel employee who knew how to turn on the heat in the disused hotel bar—where they were letting us use their (then pretty rare) large-screen TV—was out of town that weekend and quite out of touch in that pre-cellphone era. The sub-freezing temperatures outside easily made their way inside. We tried using space heaters, but the cavernous space swallowed up what little heat they put out.
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{{convention | website=https://www.con-stellation.org | start=1981 | end=2017}}
 
{{convention | website=https://www.con-stellation.org | start=1981 | end=2017}}
 
[[Category:US]]
 
[[Category:US]]

Revision as of 14:05, 24 April 2024

(For other Constellations, see Constellation (Disambiguation).)

A convention in Huntsville, AL, that ran from 1981 to 2017, run by the North Alabama Science Fiction Association. The convention names included both a number and a constellation name (e.g., Leo, Orion, etc.).

Table of Conventions[edit]

Convention Dates GoHs
ZerCon November, 1981 none
Con*Stellation I: The Pleiades July 16-19, 1982 Phyllis Eisenstein, Ken Moore, Lou Moore
Con*Stellation II: Gemini March 25-27, 1983 Jack C. Haldeman II, Joe Haldeman, Kevin Ward, Charlie Williams
Con*Stellation II.V: Ursa Minor December 10-11, 1983 none
Con*Stellation III: Ursa Major October 19-21, 1984 Gordon R. Dickson, Mark Maxwell, Maurine Dorris, "Uncle Timmy" Bolgeo
Con*Stellation IV: Aquarius 11-13 October 1985 Bob Tucker
Con*Stellation V: Andromeda 24-26 October 1986 Orson Scott Card, Ron Lindahn, Val Lakey Lindahn, Rusty Hevelin
Con*Stellation VI: Lyra October 9-11, 1987 Julius Schwartz
Con*Stellation VII: Centaurus October 21-23, 1988 John Varley, Todd Cameron Hamilton, Ricia Mainhardt
Con*Stellation VIII: Cetus October 13-15, 1989 Gary K. Wolfe, Debbie Hughes, Mark Paulk
Con*Stellation IX: Sagittarius October 19-21, 1990 Lois McMaster Bujold, Tom Kidd, Susan Honeck
Con*Stellation X: Draco November 8-10, 1991 Algis Budrys, Bob Giadrosich, Buck Coulson, Juanita Coulson
Con*Stellation XI: Scorpio November 6-8, 1992 Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Dean Wesley Smith, Stephen Hickman, Mike Glicksohn
Con*Stellation XII: Orion November 12-14, 1993 Jim Baen, Julius Schwartz, David O. Miller, Marcia McCoy
Con*Stellation XIII: Musca November 4-6, 1994 Spider Robinson, Alan M. Clark, Sue Thorn
Con*Stellation XIV: Monoceros November 3-5, 1995 Rick Shelley, Ruth Thompson, Adrian Washburn
Con*Stellation XV: Aquila November 8-10, 1996 Stanley Schmidt, Chloie Airoldi
Con*Stellation XVI: Eridanus October 17-19, 1997 Jack L. Chalker, Randy Cleary, Sue Toker
Con*Stellation XVII: Hydra October 9-11, 1998 Mike Resnick, Bob Eggleton, David O. Miller
Con*Stellation XVIII: Lupus October 29-31, 1999 Allen Steele, Charles Keegan, Anita Feller, Tom Feller
Con*Stellation XIX: Virgo October 13-15, 2000 Debra Doyle, James D. Macdonald, Kenneth Waters, Julie Wall
Con*Stellation XX: Camelopardalis October 19-21, 2001 John Ringo, David Mattingly, Steve Francis, Sue Francis
Con*Stellation XXI: Pavo October 18-20, 2002 Eric Flint, Darrell K. Sweet, Sandy McDade
Con*Stellation XXII: Pegasus October 10-12, 2003 Mercedes Lackey, Don Maitz, Guy H. Lillian III, Rosy Lillian
Con*Stellation XXIII: Delphinus October 15-17, 2004 Lawrence Watt-Evans, Kinuko Y. Craft, Grant Kruger
Con*Stellation XXIV: Lepus October 7-9, 2005 James P. Hogan, Guy Gordon
Con*Stellation XXV: Cygnus October 20-22, 2006 David Drake, Theresa Mather, Glen Cook
Con*Stellation XXVI: Ophiuchus October 12-14, 2007 Mike Shepherd Moscoe, Pat McAdams
Con*Stellation XXVII: Cassiopeia October 17-19, 2008 Diana Duane, Bill Holbrook
Con*Stellation XXVIII: Vupecula September 18-20, 2009 David Weber, John Picacio, Gary Shelton
Con*Stellation XXIX: Leo September 17-19, 2010 Wen Spencer, Vincent Di Fate, Warren Buff
Con*Stellation XXX: Corona Borealis September 16-18, 2011 Gene Wolfe, Lubov, Gay Haldeman, Joe Haldeman
Con*Stellation XXXI: Perseus October 12-14, 2012 David B. Coe, Melissa Gay, Julie Wall, Toni Weisskopf, Linda Zielke
Con*Stellation XXXII: Columba October 11-13, 2013 Larry Correia
Not-A-Con October 18 2014
Con*Stellation XXXIII: Coma Berenices October 16-18, 2015 Orson Scott Card
Con*Stellation XXXIV: Mensa October 14-16, 2016 Jody-Lynn Nye, Howard Tayler, Stephanie Osborn
Con*Stellation XXXV: Horologium October 13-15, 2017 Mary Robinette Kowal, David O. Miller, Toni Weisskopf

Founding members:[edit]

John Axford, Mary Axford, Karen Blassingame, Bruce Butler, Pat Spurlock Butler, Rich Garber, Jack Giles, Jr., Courtney Clark Griffith, Sunn Hayward, James Jones, Mary Beth Given Jones, Mike Kennedy, Nelda Kennedy, Edward Kenny, David Lateigne, Tom Lemieux, Cathy Mauk, Debbie Lowe Mitchell, Rhett Mitchell, Nancy Adams Parks, Joe Earl Patterson, Mark Paulk, Roger Reynolds, David Seiler, Mike Stone, Becky Suiter, Glenn Valentine, Toni Weisskopf, and Dave Zoller

History of Con*Stellation[edit]

By Mike Kennedy

Well, this year’s convention—ContStellation XXXV—marks the end of the road for ConStellation. While that bare fact is a downer, it also means that our little all-volunteer group has brought the joys of sf/f fannish gatherings to Huntsville for the better part of four decades. We’re particularly happy that many prior Guests and attendees have chosen to join us this weekend to celebrate. 

And, this occasion also brings some reminiscences to mind.

The history of ConfStellation in inextricably linked to its parent organization (the North Alabama Science Fiction Association), to Southern Fandom, and to the wider webs of fandom writ large. Hie earliest sf/f fandom in Huntsville—or at least the earliest known to me—was circa the early ’60s. Probably the most notable aspect of that era is the tiny gathering called DeepSouthCon 1 (or MidSouthCon as it was known at the time), which was held at David Hulan’s house in 1963. That was an outgrowth of the Southern Fandom Press Alliance (fancyclopedia.wikidot.com/sfpa), which in turn was an outgrowth of the shortlived Southern Fandom Group.

DSC 4 (1966) was also in Huntsville (and by this time it was actually called DeepSouthCon—the renaming happened at DSC 2), having come here because chair Lon Atkins moved to Huntsville after winning the site selection vote at DSC 3. After this the recorded sources 2 NASFA - ConStellation - Memory Book - 2017 available to me peter out about early Huntsville fandom, though there are rumors of various groups including one oriented toward Star Trek. Those had apparently all disappeared, though, before my then-wife, Nelda, and I moved to town in January 1978.

The modern era (if you will) of Huntsville fandom started in June 1980 at another con called MidSouthCon—unrelated to both DSC 1 and the ongoing Memphis con of the same name. Andy Purcell, a dealer living in south Tennessee, wanted to run a convention and Huntsville was the closest sizable town so he located it here. It took place at the now-long-defunct Sheraton Inn on University Drive. Nelda and I had been to a few cons (the 1978 & 1979 DSCs in particular) but we were pretty surprised to find out about a convention coming to our still-new home town. Needless to say, we attended. 

Some years before, our earliest introduction to anything approaching fandom had been though Nelda’s son, Alan, who was very into both gaming and comic books. The comics aspect was thoroughly covered in MidSouthCon’s Dealers Room but we knew that gaming was an interest among other young con-goers as well, and decided to sponsor an unofficial (and very informal) Game Room—renting a hotel room to do so. We’d been wondering how to get some organized fandom started in Huntsville. Nelda came up with the idea of posting a sign-up sheet in the Con Suite to get names of and contact info for others so inclined—it worked quite well. 

Within a few months, NASFA was founded. Very quickly—by late 1980 or early 1981—club members were already talking about starting our own annual convention. Meanwhile, some of us tried to learn a bit about running conventions by volunteering at cons in other cities. In the early winter of 1981 the group held ZerCon (short for Zero Con) as a one-day party/con at what was then the Kings Inn on Memorial Parkway north of University Drive. NASFA included a number of engineers and computer scientists and it seemed “logical” to start our convention numbering with zero so our first full-weekend con could be numbered “one.” I’m convinced that ZerCon holds the all-time record for the Coldest Video Room Ever. The one hotel employee who knew how to turn on the heat in the disused hotel bar—where they were letting us use their (then pretty rare) large-screen TV—was out of town that weekend and quite out of touch in that pre-cellphone era. The sub-freezing temperatures outside easily made their way inside. We tried using space heaters, but the cavernous space swallowed up what little heat they put out. 



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