Shearston Walk: Difference between revisions
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NW_location=[[the Lodge Motel|the Lodge Motel]]|NW_color=Motel| | NW_location=[[the Lodge Motel|the Lodge Motel]]|NW_color=Motel| | ||
N_location=[[Gwinn Bank | Gwinn Bank]]|N_color=Bank| | N_location=[[Gwinn Bank | Gwinn Bank]]|N_color=Bank| | ||
NE_location=[[ | NE_location=[[the Barrell Monument| the Barell Monument]]|NE_color=Monument| | ||
W_location=[[Stroude Bank]]|W_color=Bank| | W_location=[[Stroude Bank]]|W_color=Bank| | ||
This_location= Shearston Walk|location_color=Street| | This_location= Shearston Walk|location_color=Street| |
Revision as of 10:49, 6 September 2009
Shearston Walk
Shore Hills [32,51]
Basic Info:
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Description
Shearston Walk was a quiet neighborhood before the outbreak, and still is, as all the inhabitants have either fled or been eaten. Shearston walk is so named for a Civil War General by the name of Robert J. Shearston. Shearston was know to have been fierce on the battlefield, and is thought to have died charging a Confederate cannon battery as it fired on his horse. He is said to have exploded into "A million pieces" as one soldier said as he saw his general die, but the sword is said to have flown out of his hand and stabbed a Confedate soldier through the throat.
History
Shearston Walk is a neighborhood in Shore Hills that used to be home to a number of Polish immigrants. They reflected their homesickness in the architecture of the buildings as can be seen below in the picture. After the outbreak, a number fled, and a number stayed behind to help defend Shore Hills.
Uses as of the moment
None as of the current time.
A Picture
A picture of the street, pre-outbreak. None exist of it post-outbreak.