The first APAs were formed by groups of amateur printers. The earliest to become more than a small informal group of friends was the
National Amateur Press Association (NAPA) founded February 19, 1876, by Evan Reed Riale and nine other members in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It is still running as of 2025. The first
British APA was the
British Amateur Press Association founded in 1890. This is a different organisation from that launched by comics fans in 1978 (see below). The second United States APA was the
United Amateur Press Association (
UAPA) founded in 1895 by a group of teenagers including William H. Greenfield (aged 14) and Charles W. Heins (aged 17). A notable contributor to its
The United Amateur was
H. P. Lovecraft. This became a confederation of small amateur publishers which split into two organizations known interchangeably as UAP and UAPAA. Both no longer exist, with UAPAA ending around 2006. The
American Amateur Press Association (AAPA) was formed in 1936 by a secession from what was then called UAPAA and still exists today.
The Brooklynite, published in Plainfield, New Jersey was an amateur press publication edited by Hazel Pratt Adams (1888-1927), a member of the
Blue Pencil Club of Brooklyn, and distributed through the United Amateur Press Association. The first
science fiction APA was the
Fantasy Amateur Press Association (FAPA) formed by a group of
science fiction fans in 1937. It continues to be active in 2025. SAPS, the
Spectator Amateur Press Society, started in 1947 and is still active in 2025. VAPA, The Vanguard Amateur Press Association, formed in 1945 and lasted until 1950. The first comics APA was started by
Jerry Bails in 1964 in the United States. Called
CAPA-alpha (sometimes abbreviated to K-a) it grew to its present limit of 40 members. It has become the archetype for most subsequent comics APAs. Its members have included Dwight Decker,
Mark Evanier,
Carl Gafford,
Fred Patten,
Richard and
Wendy Pini,
Roy Thomas,
Dan Alderson, Rick Norwood,
Don Markstein,
Don and
Maggie Thompson and Jeffrey H. Wasserman.
Michael Barrier's animation
fanzine Funnyworld began as a CAPA-alpha contribution. Decker and Gafford were also founding members of the
minicomics co-op the
United Fanzine Organization. The difference in a co-op and an APA is that an APA is helmed by a central mailer, to whom the members send copies of their publications. The central mailer then compiles all the books into one large volume, which is then mailed out to the membership in "mailings" (called "bundles" by a few APAs). In a co-op, however, there is no central mailer; the members distribute their own works, and are linked by a group newsletter, a group symbol that appears on each member work, and a group checklist in every "member zine." The first
European comics APA was called
PAPA and launched by a group of
comics fans in January 1978. Soon renamed BAPA (for "British APA"), it celebrated its twenty-fifth anniversary in 2003, but folded the following summer. The APA model was picked up by artists in the 1980s. Groups of artists contributed elements of combined duplicated artworks that omitted the conversational elements of the fandom-based APAs (these pieces are sometimes called "assembly art"). During this same period, a group of British science fiction and comics fans also set up a short-lived "tape APA", contributing music and spoken word to a central anthology. The latest innovation is a digital distribution, e-APA. Copies of past "mailings" are archived at the online resource
eFanzines. ==Organization==