The Sumption Museum: Difference between revisions
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==The Sumption Museum== | ==The Sumption Museum== | ||
===Description=== | ===Description=== | ||
You are inside the Sumption Museum, its collection of conceptual sculpture now thick with dust. | |||
===History=== | ===History=== | ||
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===Barricade Policy=== | ===Barricade Policy=== | ||
Keep at EHB. | |||
===Current Status=== | ===Current Status=== |
Revision as of 04:10, 10 October 2008
The Sumption Museum
Paynterton [92,32]
Basic Info:
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The Sumption Museum
Description
You are inside the Sumption Museum, its collection of conceptual sculpture now thick with dust.
History
'The Assumption Museum', as it was originally known, was built on a site that was cleared by the Great Fire of 1912. Largely funded by the Catholic Church, The Assumption Museum would be a testament to the Assumption of Mary are assorted other important catholic theological concepts.
Unfortunately the extensive rioting in nearby Heytown in relation to the The Longman Monument had flow on effects in Paynterton and the Museum was forced to close. Years of neglect eventually resulted in youthful hooligans stealing the As part of the museum's signs, so it simply read 'The Sumption Musuem', exactly why this was done nobody knows.
Years later, when Paynterton was gentrified the museum was reopened under its existing name (which locals had become attached to) as a conceptual sculpture museum, whatever the fuck that shit is.
Barricade Policy
Keep at EHB.
Current Status
The Sumption Museum is, as of Decmeber 28, 2007, very strongly barricaded and unoccupied. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Noah Kling (talk • contribs) at an unknown time.