In the fall of 1953, I was getting ready to start high school
in Columbus, Ohio. I had been the "new kid" during 8th
grade and hadn't made any friends, so when I read a blurb in Galaxy
magazine that the 11th World Science-Fiction Convention was
to be held in Philadelphia over Labor Day weekend I decided that this
was something that I just had to do.
I saved my money, bought a membership, and somehow managed to
con my mother into taking me to Philadelphia, renting the hotel room,
and then spending the rest of her weekend visiting old friends in the
Philadelphia area while I attended the con. (I still haven't figured
out how I managed that.)
Now Upper Arlington High School and Columbus, Ohio were not
exactly hotbeds of science fiction fandom during the 1950s. So far as I
had been able to determine, the only other person in the school besides
myself who read SF was the speech teacher. As a consequence, when I got
to the con and registered, I wasn't prepared for what I found.
People were running around talking about
corflu and
zines and
locs and
FIAWOL, and enough other
bits of "fanspeak" that made me wonder if somehow Philadelphia had been
moved to another planet. After touring the dealers' room ("feelthy
hucksters") and the art show, I was about ready to go climb under my
bed until it was time to go back to Columbus.
I was lurking in a corner (huddling might be a better term)
when a tall, white-haired man came over and began to talk to me about
what I liked to read. I had just bought a copy of Skylark of
Valeron in the dealers' room (1949 Fantasy Press first edition with
a dust jacket price of $3.00) and began enthusing about this "new"
writer that I had just discovered, E.E. Smith, Ph.D.
Just about that time a grandmotherly woman came over to us and
the white-haired man turned to her and said, "Mother, this is Martin
Gear and he likes the books that you type." He then turned to me, stuck
out his hand and said, "I didn't introduce myself, I'm 'Doc' Smith."
Before I could fade into the woodwork in embarrassment, the Smiths got
on either side of me and escorted me around the convention, introducing
me to other authors and artists. For the remainder of the weekend,
whenever either of them saw me alone they made a point of checking to
see if I was enjoying myself, and of somehow including me in whatever
was going on.
As I remember it, there was a banquet on Sunday night (for
which I had not bought a ticket), and then the Hugo ceremony was held
in the hotel ballroom. Those who had not attended the banquet could
watch the awards from the ballroom's balcony. I was dithering about
whether or not I should go, when Doc Smith came by, said something to
the effect of "Let's go see what this is all about" and led me up to
the balcony, where we joined Isaac Asimov, Sprague deCamp, Robert
Heinlein, Fred Pohl, Lin Carter (who I mistook for Edd Cartier the
illustrator), Mel Hunter and John Campbell, Jr., among others.
I knew who Hugo Gernsback was, but since I this was my first
con, I didn't realize that this was the premiere of the Hugo awards; I
thought that they were a long-time tradition. These first Hugo awards
were primarily given for various fan-related activities, and the pros
that I was surrounded by were not particularly gentle in their comments
about the awards and the winners.
At one point, John Campbell, Jr. suddenly turned to me,
removed his cigarette holder from his mouth, pointed it at me and said,
"You look like a bright young man, what are you going to do with your
life?"
I stammered something to the effect that I really didn't
know. Campbell glared at me and said, "You need to become a scientist
or engineer! Your country needs scientists and engineers!" He then
turned back to the Hugos, supremely confident that he had just arranged
my life for me. (I did study electrical engineering and even started
out at M.I.T. because Campbell had written several Astounding
editorials touting the school and some of its more creative courses,
but that is another story.)
I've long since lost the autographs I collected that weekend
and the pictures that I took, but in addition to my memories and a love
of conventions, there are two other things that I treasure from that
weekend. The first is a small painting done by Mel Hunter which I
bought in the Art Show for $35.00. It hangs beside my desk where I can
see it every day.
The second is that copy of Skylark of Valeron with
the following inscription: