The Thornhill Museum: Difference between revisions

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===History===
===History===
Once a prestigious art gallery during the 1960's, the Thornhill Museum was owned by an eccentric South African millionaire, Hermann Pretorius, who finally closed it down for unknown reasons in 1977.
The museum was bought out by another Malton millionaire, Thornton Mallett, who leased out the structure in question as offices. In 2005, as the Zombie outbreak began to engulf Malton, the Thornhill Museum was used as a military screening area for those wishing to flee the city. As the soldiers soon became swamped with desperate civilians who had already been infected, they were forced to shoot nearly a hundred people seeking refuge here.
Those who were deemed 'infected' were, according to rumor, then dragged into the museum's back rooms and shot, since there were far too many to process and the military had no idea if curing these men and women was even possible. About four weeks into the outbreak, the soldiers were replaced by members of a private security company, which fortified the building with barbed wire fences, and made overhead passes with an armored helicopter to ensure that no unauthorized persons got in--or out. Bulldozers dumped the bodies of all infected Survivors slain into a bonfire to ensure they did not rise again as Zombies, but eventually there were too many corpses to destroy, and some had already began to resurrect as undead.
Panicking, the security personnel evacuated in a hurry, leaving the rooms of the Thornhill Museum still filled with Survivors who were awaiting screening. In the bloodbath that followed, the museum became one of the most infamous locations in Shore Hills. Men, women, and children were massacred indiscriminately. Many were never recovered. Zombies also began to rise out of the mass burial pits outside, and soon the river of blood flowing from Thornhill's open doors indicated that the building had been overrun. A collection of old paintings can still be found in storage, but today many of the museum's rooms sit empty. The stench of death still fills its murky maze of corridors, and the hearts of all those brave enough to seek shelter there.




[[Category:Shore Hills|Thornhill Museum,The]]
[[Category:Shore Hills|Thornhill Museum,The]]
[[Category:Museums|Thornhill Museum,The]]
[[Category:Museums|Thornhill Museum,The]]

Revision as of 18:17, 2 June 2011

Mall-safe-small.jpg

The Thornhill Museum
--VVV RPMBG 05:29, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
the Thornhill Museum

Shore Hills [35,59]

Stephens Street Carslake Towers Squibbs Row
Burlton Park the Thornhill Museum Foote Park
St. John's Hospital
(Brooksville)
Langbrick Street
(Brooksville)
Guyatt Plaza
(Brooksville)

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.

Description

The Thornhill Museum is a Conceptual Art Museum. It has a collection of work by conceptual artists now thick with dust. Conceptual paintings can be found here.

Barricade Policy

The Thornhill Museum can be barricaded normally.

Current Status

Ruined --Squibman 14:49, 2 November 2007 (UTC)

History

Once a prestigious art gallery during the 1960's, the Thornhill Museum was owned by an eccentric South African millionaire, Hermann Pretorius, who finally closed it down for unknown reasons in 1977.

The museum was bought out by another Malton millionaire, Thornton Mallett, who leased out the structure in question as offices. In 2005, as the Zombie outbreak began to engulf Malton, the Thornhill Museum was used as a military screening area for those wishing to flee the city. As the soldiers soon became swamped with desperate civilians who had already been infected, they were forced to shoot nearly a hundred people seeking refuge here.

Those who were deemed 'infected' were, according to rumor, then dragged into the museum's back rooms and shot, since there were far too many to process and the military had no idea if curing these men and women was even possible. About four weeks into the outbreak, the soldiers were replaced by members of a private security company, which fortified the building with barbed wire fences, and made overhead passes with an armored helicopter to ensure that no unauthorized persons got in--or out. Bulldozers dumped the bodies of all infected Survivors slain into a bonfire to ensure they did not rise again as Zombies, but eventually there were too many corpses to destroy, and some had already began to resurrect as undead.

Panicking, the security personnel evacuated in a hurry, leaving the rooms of the Thornhill Museum still filled with Survivors who were awaiting screening. In the bloodbath that followed, the museum became one of the most infamous locations in Shore Hills. Men, women, and children were massacred indiscriminately. Many were never recovered. Zombies also began to rise out of the mass burial pits outside, and soon the river of blood flowing from Thornhill's open doors indicated that the building had been overrun. A collection of old paintings can still be found in storage, but today many of the museum's rooms sit empty. The stench of death still fills its murky maze of corridors, and the hearts of all those brave enough to seek shelter there.