Phil Seuling | |
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Born |
Philip Nicholas Seuling January 20, 1934 Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, New York |
Died | August 21, 1984 New York City |
(aged 50)
Education | City College of New York |
Occupation | Comic book distributor; convention organizer |
Spouse(s) | Carole Seuling |
Children | Gwenn; Heather |
Philip Nicholas Seuling (January 20, 1934 – August 21, 1984) was a comic book fan convention organizer and comics distributor primarily active in the 1970s. Seuling was the organizer of the annual New York Comic Art Convention, originally held in New York City every July 4 weekend throughout the 1970s. Later, with his Sea Gate Distributors company, Seuling developed the concept of the direct market distribution system for getting comics directly into comic book specialty shops, bypassing the then established newspaper/magazine distributor method, where no choices of title, quantity, or delivery directions were permitted.
Seuling was born in the Bensonhurst neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York, and spent his entire life as a resident of that borough. He has a sister, Barbara and a brother Dennis, 13 years younger. He graduated from the City College of New York with a Bachelor of Arts degree. and earned several credits beyond.
In 1958, he and a friend began buying and selling back-issue comic books, though his primary career was as an English teacher at Brooklyn's Lafayette High School. By 1970, Seuling was also operating the After Hours Book Shop in Brooklyn.
In 1968, Seuling — who as a sideline was president of the newly founded but short-lived Society for Comic Art Research and Preservation, Inc. (SCARP) — staged the First International Convention of Comic Art under that organization's auspices, holding it at New York City's Statler Hilton Hotel. He held another comics convention at that hotel the following year, launching the New York Comic Art Convention series. On March 11, 1973, Seuling was arrested at the New York Comic Art Convention for allegedly "selling indecent material to a minor". Seuling wrote a guest editorial in Warren Publishing's black-and-white horror-comics magazine Vampirella #25 detailing his experience and denying the claim he had sold an underground comic book to someone under 18.