Difference between revisions of "Albert Griffiths"

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'''Albert Griffiths''' was [[fan]] from [[Bradford]] active in the 1930s.
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'''Albert Griffiths''' was a [[fan]] from [[Bradford]] active in the 1930s.  
  
He attended the [[1937 Leeds Convention]] and the [[Second British Convention]] in London in 1938, but wasn’t in evidence after that.
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He joined the [[Leeds]] branch of the [[Science Fiction League]] at its first meeting in May 1935 and produced three issues of a [[fanzine]], ''[[The Scientifictionaleodensian]]'', for the Leeds branch of the [[Science Fiction Association]]. He attended the [[1937 Leeds Convention]] and the [[Second British Convention]] in London in 1938 and contributed to ''[[Novae Terrae]]'' and ''[[Tomorrow]]''.  In ''[[The Immortal Storm]]'', [[Sam Moskowitz]] spoke of:
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Albert Griffiths' article [in ''Novae Terrae'' #18] 'The Future' declared dramatically that if fans put aside 'Utopian dreams' and examined the world of practicability a world beyond their wildest imaginings might be attained.
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[[Herbert Warnes]] said in a letter to [[Rob Hansen]]:
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[[George Airey|George [Airey]]] tells me he bumped into Albert Griffiths shortly after [[WW2]], but Albert was no longer interested in [[scifi]] and moreover wanted no more to do with it.
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He is not listed in the 1945 ''[[Directory of Anglo-Fandom]]''.
  
 
{{person | born=???? |Locale=Bradford, UK}}
 
{{person | born=???? |Locale=Bradford, UK}}
 
[[Category:Fan]]
 
[[Category:Fan]]
 
[[Category:UK]]
 
[[Category:UK]]

Latest revision as of 02:09, 28 May 2024

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Albert Griffiths was a fan from Bradford active in the 1930s.

He joined the Leeds branch of the Science Fiction League at its first meeting in May 1935 and produced three issues of a fanzine, The Scientifictionaleodensian, for the Leeds branch of the Science Fiction Association. He attended the 1937 Leeds Convention and the Second British Convention in London in 1938 and contributed to Novae Terrae and Tomorrow. In The Immortal Storm, Sam Moskowitz spoke of:

Albert Griffiths' article [in Novae Terrae #18] 'The Future' declared dramatically that if fans put aside 'Utopian dreams' and examined the world of practicability a world beyond their wildest imaginings might be attained.

Herbert Warnes said in a letter to Rob Hansen:

George [Airey] tells me he bumped into Albert Griffiths shortly after WW2, but Albert was no longer interested in scifi and moreover wanted no more to do with it.

He is not listed in the 1945 Directory of Anglo-Fandom.


Person ????
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