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==The Wensleydale Arms==
==The Wensleydale Arms==
===Description===
===Description===
A large red-brick building.
The Wensleydale Arms Public House is a formerly abandoned, red brick pub on the western side of [[Crooketon]] and is constructed out of solid stone and brick, like so many of [[Crooketon|Crooketon's]] older edifices. A fashionable black and gold clock decorates the building's front gable and a modest bronze bell turret was tops the peak of the rooftop. The exterior is covered with lengths of ivy and a wooden sign from the pub's previous installment as The Hinds Head. In addition, the grounds surrounding the public house are lush with untamed hedges and flowers.
 
Inside the Wensleydale Arms, the interior and fixtures consist mostly of aged wood, polished brass, and worn stone, giving the pub a rustic, yet refined air. The first floor consists of a large taproom - an open lounge comprised of the polished wood bar, a generous seating area of booths and tables, and stone fireplace; an expansive kitchen complete with a wood-burning, cast-iron behemoth of a stove, a massive and wood-burning brick oven, a comfortable and well-stocked pantry, a locked door leading to the cellar; and a comfortably-sized games room. A small gallery of assorted art is laid out on the second floor balcony that encircles and overlooks the taproom, accessed by an open staircase from the bar area.
 
The second floor, spread out through the entire length of the building, consists of countless private rooms of varying sizes and a small common room. The larger private rooms include their own bath - the clean water pumped in by pipe from an unknown source, most likely from outside the quarantine walls. Clean towels and bedsheets are always available in stacks in a large corridor closet and an abundance of shampoo and soap samples are found in every bath. A spiral staircase in the common room climbs up to the
 
The expansive cellar below the kitchen is locked with multiple keycard and number pad door locks and extends via tunnels to the [[The Dewberry Building 0,64|Dewberry building]] and [[Crew Road School]] basements next-door.  The main cellar contains copious stacks of alcohol and wine barrels, crates of dry goods and non-perishables, and trunks of assorted collections of keepsakes. Large kegs filled with delicious drinks are connected by taps to the first floor when the building is powered. The multiple cellar doors in the Wensleydale Arms, [[The Dewberry Building 0,64|Dewberry building]], and the [[Crew Road School]] remain locked and barred at all times so as to prevent theft and vandalism from angry locals.
 
While it isn't on the Wensleydale Arms premises, the [[Crew Road School]] next-door has a large and seasonal rooftop garden protected by a scarecrow dressed up like Winston Churchill, a very small fruit orchard, and a beehive.
 
Various sources of entertainment are found both in the taproom and the games room, including a vintage and working jukebox, a dartboard (patrons must supply their own darts and knives), a scuffed billiards table missing a few balls and all but one pool cue (surprisingly, there is an abundance of pool cue chalk), a foosball table, various decks of cards for poker and blackjack, and when powered, a working Space Invaders® cabinet arcade game...supposedly the last working one in Malton. A working upright piano, liberated from the backroom of [[Club Guyatt]], rests against a wall near the bar. There is usually a powered radio in the building so patrons can listen in on their favorite sports team, whether it be in or out of Malton, in addition to news updates regarding zombie hordes.
 
{{RadioFreq|freq=27.48|coords=[1, 64]}}


===History===
===History===
Records found on the premises of The Wensleydale Arms indicate that the pub was established as early as 1674, but as a coaching inn under the name of The Hitching Post. At that time, The Hitching Post was the only tavern in the vicinity and thus, was extremely successful, especially to the farmers and merchants in the area. As centuries passed, The Hitching Post remained as a local favorite until one night in which the owner of the tavern was murdered in his sleep by his wife, for having committed adulterous acts with the tavern's youngest maid. Unfortunately, a year after that scandalous act, the neighboring village caught fire during a rather dry season and the fire spread, consuming the tavern's magnificent horse stables and windmill.
As centuries passed, The Hitching Post tavern traveled through various ownerships despite the changes in the surrounding area from expansive farms and majestic woods to tidy farms and villages. However, in 1912, The Hitching Post, under the new name of The Jaybird, was purchased by the Wensleydale family, a wealthy and honorable family. Over the course of the following years, the Wensleydale Arms, as it came to be named for the head the family's extreme fondness for hunting game, was refurbished and restored to its former glory. The old stables, once thought to be long-gone, were rebuilt with the help from old paintings found in the inn's expansive cellar, a fashionable clock was inlaid into the inn's gable, a brewery was built behind the inn, and a modest bell turret was constructed at the peak of the rooftop. This bell turret actually proved of use during World War II, when it was used as a siren for enemy air raids. After the war ended, the small amount of damage to the inn was repaired and life continued as usual.
Years flew by until the Spring of 2003, when a man claiming to be the long descendant of The Wensleydale Arms' previous owner fought for ownership of the building, claiming that the successful inn was his by birthright, using old documents and ledgers for evidence. The Wensleydale family, having run into some money trouble in the previous years, had no choice but to sell their pride and joy to the man. Over the course of the following year, the man changed the inn's name from The Wensleydale Arms to The Hind's Head, but unbeknownst to him, the Wensleydale family had, under the assumption that something was amiss, had hired a private investigator to dig into the past of the man. The investigator found that, not only was the man not the descendant of the original owner, that the man had forged the documents and ledgers used to prove the lineage, and that the man was actually a con artist, wanted for forgery and counterfeiting. The man was jailed and the Wensleydale family resumed ownership of The Wensleydale Arms, as far as the suburb of [[Crooketon]] was concerned.
Unfortunately for the Wensleydale family, the zombie virus outbreak prevented the family from making any physical changes to the pub, including the building's front name and hanging crest sign. However, the family did manage to escape the city in time, even though they were unable to ever collect insurance for the building as no assessment could be done. To great tragedy, the separate brewery building found behind the Wensleydale Arms caught fire in the first few months of the quarantine and has been inoperable since then. Over the years, the inn was abandoned in favor of more useful safehouses near [[Tactical Resource Points|tactical resource points]] like malls, forts, and Necrotech facilities. Eventually, "The Hind's Head" was discovered by a young Scottish man by the name of [[User:TheBardofOld/Derek Sutherland|Derek Sutherland]] who decided to take ownership of the inn. Subsequently, he discovered papers detailing the inn as The Wensleydale, in addition to the proper papers and licenses required to officially become the owner and Licensee of the public house. Over time, friends to the owner, [[Subject 19]] and [[Jackie Foster]] have earned stakes in the 'Dale, as it has come to be known, having made their niche in tending to the Wensleydale and the nearby vicinity. In the future, plans have been considered to rebuild the brewery behind the building, but the non-urgency of the reconstruction in a doomed and infected city continue to prolong the rebuild.


===Barricade Policy===
===Barricade Policy===
In keeping with the Crooketon Barricade Plan, the owner requests that all patrons assist in maintaining the barricades at Extremely Heavily Barricaded (EHB) at all times. Patrons can be rewarded for their efforts by free beer, a hot meal, and a clean bed.


===Current Status===
===Current Status===
Recent news of an approaching horde has resulted in patrons and management preparing for destruction and departure. --[[User:TheBardofOld|TheBardofOld]] 00:16, 2 April 2012 (BST)


<br style='clear: both' />
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{{locations-stub}}
[[Category:Arms|Wensleydale Arms]]
[[Category:Arms|Wensleydale Arms]]
[[Category:Crooketon|Wensleydale Arms]]
[[Category:Crooketon|Wensleydale Arms]]

Revision as of 23:16, 1 April 2012

Mall-safe-small.jpg

The Wensleydale Arms
--Mallrat The Spanish Inquisition TSI The Kilt Store TKS Clubbed to Death CTD 06:56, 24 June 2023 (UTC)
the Wensleydale Arms

Crooketon [1, 64]

a junkyard a carpark Dymock Drive
the Dewberry Building the Wensleydale Arms a junkyard
Leggatt Grove Crew Road School Hame Park

Basic Info:

  • Pubs have no internal descriptions, apart from "...an abandoned pub."
  • Arms can be barricaded normally.

The Wensleydale Arms

Description

The Wensleydale Arms Public House is a formerly abandoned, red brick pub on the western side of Crooketon and is constructed out of solid stone and brick, like so many of Crooketon's older edifices. A fashionable black and gold clock decorates the building's front gable and a modest bronze bell turret was tops the peak of the rooftop. The exterior is covered with lengths of ivy and a wooden sign from the pub's previous installment as The Hinds Head. In addition, the grounds surrounding the public house are lush with untamed hedges and flowers.

Inside the Wensleydale Arms, the interior and fixtures consist mostly of aged wood, polished brass, and worn stone, giving the pub a rustic, yet refined air. The first floor consists of a large taproom - an open lounge comprised of the polished wood bar, a generous seating area of booths and tables, and stone fireplace; an expansive kitchen complete with a wood-burning, cast-iron behemoth of a stove, a massive and wood-burning brick oven, a comfortable and well-stocked pantry, a locked door leading to the cellar; and a comfortably-sized games room. A small gallery of assorted art is laid out on the second floor balcony that encircles and overlooks the taproom, accessed by an open staircase from the bar area.

The second floor, spread out through the entire length of the building, consists of countless private rooms of varying sizes and a small common room. The larger private rooms include their own bath - the clean water pumped in by pipe from an unknown source, most likely from outside the quarantine walls. Clean towels and bedsheets are always available in stacks in a large corridor closet and an abundance of shampoo and soap samples are found in every bath. A spiral staircase in the common room climbs up to the

The expansive cellar below the kitchen is locked with multiple keycard and number pad door locks and extends via tunnels to the Dewberry building and Crew Road School basements next-door. The main cellar contains copious stacks of alcohol and wine barrels, crates of dry goods and non-perishables, and trunks of assorted collections of keepsakes. Large kegs filled with delicious drinks are connected by taps to the first floor when the building is powered. The multiple cellar doors in the Wensleydale Arms, Dewberry building, and the Crew Road School remain locked and barred at all times so as to prevent theft and vandalism from angry locals.

While it isn't on the Wensleydale Arms premises, the Crew Road School next-door has a large and seasonal rooftop garden protected by a scarecrow dressed up like Winston Churchill, a very small fruit orchard, and a beehive.

Various sources of entertainment are found both in the taproom and the games room, including a vintage and working jukebox, a dartboard (patrons must supply their own darts and knives), a scuffed billiards table missing a few balls and all but one pool cue (surprisingly, there is an abundance of pool cue chalk), a foosball table, various decks of cards for poker and blackjack, and when powered, a working Space Invaders® cabinet arcade game...supposedly the last working one in Malton. A working upright piano, liberated from the backroom of Club Guyatt, rests against a wall near the bar. There is usually a powered radio in the building so patrons can listen in on their favorite sports team, whether it be in or out of Malton, in addition to news updates regarding zombie hordes.

know what you are talking about Short-wave Radio Info
This group or location has a dedicated radio frequency.

Frequency: 27.48 MHz
Transmitter Coordinates: [1, 64]

History

Records found on the premises of The Wensleydale Arms indicate that the pub was established as early as 1674, but as a coaching inn under the name of The Hitching Post. At that time, The Hitching Post was the only tavern in the vicinity and thus, was extremely successful, especially to the farmers and merchants in the area. As centuries passed, The Hitching Post remained as a local favorite until one night in which the owner of the tavern was murdered in his sleep by his wife, for having committed adulterous acts with the tavern's youngest maid. Unfortunately, a year after that scandalous act, the neighboring village caught fire during a rather dry season and the fire spread, consuming the tavern's magnificent horse stables and windmill.

As centuries passed, The Hitching Post tavern traveled through various ownerships despite the changes in the surrounding area from expansive farms and majestic woods to tidy farms and villages. However, in 1912, The Hitching Post, under the new name of The Jaybird, was purchased by the Wensleydale family, a wealthy and honorable family. Over the course of the following years, the Wensleydale Arms, as it came to be named for the head the family's extreme fondness for hunting game, was refurbished and restored to its former glory. The old stables, once thought to be long-gone, were rebuilt with the help from old paintings found in the inn's expansive cellar, a fashionable clock was inlaid into the inn's gable, a brewery was built behind the inn, and a modest bell turret was constructed at the peak of the rooftop. This bell turret actually proved of use during World War II, when it was used as a siren for enemy air raids. After the war ended, the small amount of damage to the inn was repaired and life continued as usual.

Years flew by until the Spring of 2003, when a man claiming to be the long descendant of The Wensleydale Arms' previous owner fought for ownership of the building, claiming that the successful inn was his by birthright, using old documents and ledgers for evidence. The Wensleydale family, having run into some money trouble in the previous years, had no choice but to sell their pride and joy to the man. Over the course of the following year, the man changed the inn's name from The Wensleydale Arms to The Hind's Head, but unbeknownst to him, the Wensleydale family had, under the assumption that something was amiss, had hired a private investigator to dig into the past of the man. The investigator found that, not only was the man not the descendant of the original owner, that the man had forged the documents and ledgers used to prove the lineage, and that the man was actually a con artist, wanted for forgery and counterfeiting. The man was jailed and the Wensleydale family resumed ownership of The Wensleydale Arms, as far as the suburb of Crooketon was concerned.

Unfortunately for the Wensleydale family, the zombie virus outbreak prevented the family from making any physical changes to the pub, including the building's front name and hanging crest sign. However, the family did manage to escape the city in time, even though they were unable to ever collect insurance for the building as no assessment could be done. To great tragedy, the separate brewery building found behind the Wensleydale Arms caught fire in the first few months of the quarantine and has been inoperable since then. Over the years, the inn was abandoned in favor of more useful safehouses near tactical resource points like malls, forts, and Necrotech facilities. Eventually, "The Hind's Head" was discovered by a young Scottish man by the name of Derek Sutherland who decided to take ownership of the inn. Subsequently, he discovered papers detailing the inn as The Wensleydale, in addition to the proper papers and licenses required to officially become the owner and Licensee of the public house. Over time, friends to the owner, Subject 19 and Jackie Foster have earned stakes in the 'Dale, as it has come to be known, having made their niche in tending to the Wensleydale and the nearby vicinity. In the future, plans have been considered to rebuild the brewery behind the building, but the non-urgency of the reconstruction in a doomed and infected city continue to prolong the rebuild.

Barricade Policy

In keeping with the Crooketon Barricade Plan, the owner requests that all patrons assist in maintaining the barricades at Extremely Heavily Barricaded (EHB) at all times. Patrons can be rewarded for their efforts by free beer, a hot meal, and a clean bed.

Current Status

Recent news of an approaching horde has resulted in patrons and management preparing for destruction and departure. --TheBardofOld 00:16, 2 April 2012 (BST)