Alaway Place: Difference between revisions

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==Alaway Place==
===Description===
===Description===
'''Alaway Place''' is a small square in [[Millen Hills]], that borders the [[Rounsefell Library]] and can be found at the end of [[Noonan Avenue]].


===History===
===History===
The paving of Alaway Place was commissioned in 1946, after bombs had reduced the warehouse that had been on the site to rubble during World War II.
In 1968, a hippie protester used the square and the neighbouring library to protest the war. Witnesses reported that the man was ''"slightly deranged"'' and ''"apparently didn't know what war he was protesting exactly."''
The bimonthly members' booklet of [[Rounsefell Library]] often reported on his exploits throughout 1968, but his fate is unknown, as the last known report dates back to the Christmas edition of the ''Rounsefell Readers''.


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{{locations-stub}}
[[Category:Streets]]
[[Category:Streets]]
[[Category:Millen Hills]]
[[Category:Millen Hills]]

Latest revision as of 10:21, 30 May 2013

Alaway Place

Millen Hills [50, 17]

Newbould Place Police Department
(Yagoton)
wasteland Club Hinge
Rounsefell Library
(Yagoton)
Alaway Place Noonan Avenue
the Serrell Building
(Yagoton)
a warehouse Digby Towers

Basic Info:

  • A Street is a city block containing no buildings or monuments. There are a variety of other names besides Street including Alley, Avenue, Boulevard, Drive, Grove, Lane, Row, Square, Walk, Place, etc.
  • This is an empty block, and cannot be barricaded.

Description

Alaway Place is a small square in Millen Hills, that borders the Rounsefell Library and can be found at the end of Noonan Avenue.

History

The paving of Alaway Place was commissioned in 1946, after bombs had reduced the warehouse that had been on the site to rubble during World War II.

In 1968, a hippie protester used the square and the neighbouring library to protest the war. Witnesses reported that the man was "slightly deranged" and "apparently didn't know what war he was protesting exactly." The bimonthly members' booklet of Rounsefell Library often reported on his exploits throughout 1968, but his fate is unknown, as the last known report dates back to the Christmas edition of the Rounsefell Readers.