Difference between revisions of "The Crump Museum"

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[[Image:Smallcrumpmuseum.jpg| The museum's sign remains till this day.]]
[[Image:Smallcrumpmuseum.jpg| The museum's sign remains till this day.]]
===Description===
===Description===
Its exhibition of tapestries ransacked by looters. The building has been completely ransacked, and has fallen into ruin. A thin layer of dust covers the debris.
It's exhibition of tapestries has been ransacked by [[zombies]] and torn up for bandages by passing [[Survivors]]. The building has been completely ransacked, and has fallen into ruin. A thin layer of dust and lint covers the debris.


===History===
===History===
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Another ruined husk in Gulsonside.
Another ruined husk in Gulsonside.


{{Locations-stub}}
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[[Category:Museums|Crump Museum,The]]
[[Category:Museums|Crump Museum,The]]
[[Category:Gulsonside]]
[[Category:Gulsonside]]

Revision as of 20:34, 29 January 2019

Mall-unknown-small.jpg

The Crump Museum
Last update July 2020
BoogieDinosaur (talk) 13:55, 9 June 2023 (UTC)
The Crump Museum

Gulsonside [74,74]

a warehouse Shearley Place The Bane Museum
The Gollop Building The Crump Museum Ponder Grove
Tatchel Street Jewell Lane Shean Alley Railway Station

Basic Info:

  • Museums have a wide range of different collections and exhibitions, although previously they were not lootable. Nowadays, different decorative items may be found there.
  • Generally, the descriptions found in Museums fall along the lines of "…currently displaying a(n) exhibition/installation/collection of _____________"
  • Museums can be barricaded normally.

The Crump Museum

The museum's sign remains till this day.

Description

It's exhibition of tapestries has been ransacked by zombies and torn up for bandages by passing Survivors. The building has been completely ransacked, and has fallen into ruin. A thin layer of dust and lint covers the debris.

History

The Crump Museum once had the largest exhibition of tapestries in the United States in 25 years. The first extensive survey of tapestry production between 1460 and 1560, this exhibition highlights the great cycles of the late 15th and first half of the 16th centuries as the unsung glories of Renaissance-era art. After the events that caused the city to fall to it's knees, it has become a shadow of it's former self, it's once exquisite cloth works now stained and tattered, hanging like death shrouds.

Barricade Policy

EHB

Current Status

Another ruined husk in Gulsonside.