World of Banished

Sightseeing => Village Blogs => Topic started by: Abandoned on October 31, 2021, 05:53:41 AM

Title: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on October 31, 2021, 05:53:41 AM
Intro

  This is the 74th story in the Smallville Series and tells of the settlement where the east coast railroad first began.  The Pilgrim settlers of Plimoth came by ship from the old county, their town is one of the oldest towns in Smallville's world and was settled before Smallville Time even began.  The Pilgrim's ship, the Maybelle, brought many settler from the old countries, like the O'Leary ancestors of Mayville story #68 and would bring many more. It brought the well-to-do railroad tycoon from the old country to Plimoth.  He and his people were responsible for the loggers who jammed the river and abandoned the logging camp that was later to become Smallville of story #1. The first railroad tracks were laid in Plimoth and got as far as the town of Chattachoo of story # 4 in year 27 SVT.  Later the railroad was extended to Ironwood of story #72 and would continue on to carry immigrants further west.   This story is being told in Plimoth in the early 80's SVT.


The map seed   # 671489305     Valley,   Small,   Fair,   Disasters Off,   Easy 8 -  Deer, Geese, Boar, Bear


Mods activated for this map and load order are:


Map Changing and Starting Mods:   Banished UI Maps, Labor Window, RK Minimized Status, CC Light Rain,  Cold Realism, New Maps, Settlers Deco, Jinxie Natural Decorations, Kid Tree Replacer Light, New Flora Edit, Override Fewer Trees, Wildlife Start

Tweak Mods:    Better Fields, Fishing Dock +25%, Hunting, Increased CC, 1:1 Alternative (Voeille), override New Outfits, Rocks Respawn, Tiny Smoke

Major or Must Have Mods:    An Empty Square, Nomads (Kid), override Uneducated, Storage Crates,  Jinxie Bitty Chicken Coop, Rabbit Hutch, Village Set, & Jinxie Festival Park, Kid Abandoned Places SE,  Kid Colonial City Center, Kid Forest Trader, Kid Gothic Tithes & Tributes, Kid Native Village, Kid Old Town, Kid Plimoth Harmonized, Kid Plimoth Plantation, Kid Workplace Village, Mini Warehouse.

Supporting Mods:    Campfire, Choo Choo, Kid Broadway Tower, Kid Deco Farm Animals, Kid Deadwood,  Kid Deco People, Kid Deco Wreaths, Kid Farmyard,  Kid Hedgerow, Kid Fruit & Nut, Kid Jam and Wine (new, testing), Kid Market Foods, Kid Stagecoach (new, testing), Kid Traveling Trader, Kid Washing Mod, Kid Work Shop, Tiny Chopper


Mod note:   Kid Jam and Wine makers were made to match Kid Plimoth Plantation & Plimoth Harmonized, Kid Settlers, and vanilla wood and stone.  There are grape and elderberry patches to make the jams and wines with.


Story Note:  This story and the town's location is not historically accurate.  I chose the name Plimoth because that is the name of the main mod I am using the most to create this fall town with its historic first Thanksgiving.  Real life Plymouth (English Plimouth) was settled by Pilgrims who came on the Mayflower in December of 1620, the first Thanksgiving was in 1621. Plimoth Plantation in Massachusetts is a recreation of that original settlement.  The railroad in England was developed much later, in the early 1800's and later still in the US in the late 1800's. The real Pilgrims had no idea what a railroad was. 



So, with that said, welcome to Plimoth, weary traveler.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 01, 2021, 06:18:05 AM
Chapter 1


  My ancestors got no welcome when they arrived here many years ago.   It was a rough sea voyage that lasted more than 2 seasons and ended with a fierce storm that blow them farther south then intended.  The captain managed to steer the Maybelle into a sheltered inlet and dumped them onshore with their few belongings, milk cows, and chickens.  He seemed glad to get rid of them; the ship was overcrowded and many passengers were sick.  The cows made a mess of the deck and more than once he threatened to kill the noisy rooster.   He set sail with a reminder that he would return in 5 years to pick up all the furs they could amass in that time to pay for their passage.  That first year they doubted they would even survive much less pay for their passage on that merchant ship.

  The settlers were Pilgrims, some called them Quakers, some called them Puritans.  They had been town's people, not farmers, hunters, or fisherman.  The first year was very rough, only half of them survived.  Some died from disease, some from starvation, two died from eating poison berries, one fell in the water and drowned while fishing, one was killed by a wild boar and one by a bear, a few women died in childbirth.  The survivors paired up forming 8 families, 16 adults with 15 children.

  By autumn the survivors had a small settlement built with houses for all the families.  They had little food or firewood.  They feared they would not survive the winter.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 02, 2021, 06:12:57 AM
Chapter 2

  The first thing the Pilgrims built was an animal shed for the cows and chickens. They built a storage barn where they slept until their houses were built.  They spend many wakeful nights trying to keep the foxes from killing off all the chickens or the rooster. They could not lose that rooster if they wanted baby chicks so they brought that noisy rooster into the barn at night. They slept little but at least they had eggs and milk for the children.

The river water was salty and the small stream of fresh water was some distance away and there were bears there.  They dug a well next to the school that was built even before the houses were all built.  There were several children that were already 6 years old.  School would be good for them and help keep their minds off the parents they had lost, at least for a little while each day.

  A chapel was built a short way from the school and a cemetery across from it.  Alongside the chapel were berry bushes in a hedgerow that was not thriving.  It did provide branches for firewood and some berries.  There was another similar hedgerow by the large dead tree extending out into the river which served as a fishing tree so there was fish to go with the eggs and berries.  There was some wild foods to be gathered but that would end with the first frost and it was not safe to venture far because of the bears. Hunting was not good, they got 1 bear but lost 2 men, one to that bear and one to a wild boar.  The Pilgrims planted a small farmyard with cabbage and potatoes but even that was not enough, they had a lot of hungry children to feed.  It would be winter soon.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 03, 2021, 05:49:50 AM
Chapter 3


  The food and water supply and bears were not the Pilgrims only concern.  When out looking for fresh water and deer, the men saw there was a Native hunting grounds across the stream and a dead tree formed a bridge leading to it.  There were bear, deer, and wild boar in that area and a very large game bird we had not seen before. Further downstream was a lake and a Native Village.  There were several teepees and what looked like the chief's hut.  The women were growing vegetables and drying meat and fish, the men were hunting and fishing.  There were birch bark canoes out on the lake.  They were too close to the Pilgrims settlement for comfort.  We children heard stories of how our ancestors often saw smoke signals in the distance and heard native drums in the evening.  It was not just hunger, foxes, and rooster that kept them awake.  It was fear.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 04, 2021, 06:28:23 AM
Chapter 4


  If they were to survive at all they had to protect themselves from the Natives and from the bears.  They had to protect their meager food supply from the wild animals.  As hungry, tired, and weak as they were they began building a stockade around their settlement. 

  The summer had been warm with a gentle wind from the south and west but it was much cooler and rainier when the wind came from the east off that big expanse of water they crossed to get here.  When the wind came from the north and northeast it was very cold.  The Pilgrims clothes were not nearly warm enough.  What extra clothes they had were in short supply.  They could not spend long periods of time outside and the days were getting shorter.  They were near despair when the first snow arrived in autumn.

  With that first snowfall help arrived.  Four Native braves with 2 carts of supplies arrived in town.  They indicated with sign language that they came in peace and brought gifts.  One of the carts was full of gathered wild foods and the other cart had venison and rabbit meat plus leather and furs.  They also brought one of the big game birds and several smaller ones they called turkeys.  They indicated to the Pilgrims that the birds were like our chickens there in the animal shed only bigger.  The Pilgrims would set aside an area for the big birds by the apple tree and work on building that section of stockade fence to protect them.

  The Pilgrims tried to give the Natives tools in exchange for their gifts but they would only accept a few.  As best they could the Pilgrims indicated their heartfelt thanks for the life saving gifts they were given.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 05, 2021, 05:44:27 AM
Chapter 5


  Those gifts of food and furs indeed saved the lives of the Pilgrims that winter.  To their surprise the Natives returned in spring. They brought venison, rabbit meat, several large pumpkins, and several stalks of what looked like miniature cabbages.  The Natives called them Brussels Sprouts that, like pumpkins, kept well over the winter. 

  The Natives also brought seeds for the pumpkins and Brussels as well as for corn, squash, and bean seed.  They called them the Three Sister because when grown together they help each other.  Our ancestors later learned the 3 vegetable represented a Native Legend.  They were shown how to plant these vegetables and how to plant fish with them to help them grow.  The Natives also showed them which wild mushrooms and berries were safe to eat.  There was a bog of good tart berries called cranberries by the stream not far from the Pilgrim's settlement.  Again the Natives would accept only a few meager tools as thanks for the gifts and help they gave.

  The ancestors built a notice board between the school and the chapel to keep count of certain supplies.  The records showed they were low on both tools and coats.  They had emptied 2 of the 3 supply carts into the barn and in their place they set up an anvil to immediately start making tools while the supply shed was being built.  It was decided that the smith would work there and the tailor would make coats out back of her house in the summer months when the weather was warm. 

  The warm weather and planting instructions from the Natives produced a bountiful harvest.  The Three Sisters, pumpkins, Brussels, as well as the potatoes and cabbage all did exceptionally well.  Our ancestors invited the Natives for a harvest feast of Thanksgiving to celebrate the good harvest and to thank them for their help.  That feast in late autumn of their 3rd year here became a yearly tradition in Plimoth and still is to this day, weary traveler. 

Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: taniu on November 05, 2021, 02:38:06 PM
@Abandoned ;D ;D ;D Great new story - I'm reading and waiting for what will happen next. Regards
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Kristahfer on November 05, 2021, 07:25:09 PM
As usual, a great story...


I really look forward to each installment.


Thank you @Abandoned
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 05, 2021, 08:44:44 PM
oh How nice ;D Thank you both  :)
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 06, 2021, 06:43:36 AM
Chapter 6


  The Pilgrims had set up a small market roaster to cook turkey and chickens.  They served corn, squash, beans, potatoes, Brussels sprouts, and cranberries.  The woman made special little tarts filled with  pumpkin. It was a grand feast.   

  After the Thanksgiving celebration the Pilgrims kept the roaster going, the children would gather round for a hand-out of little tidbits.  The roaster needed more firewood than our branch gathering could supply.  A tiny chopper was set up not far from the stockpile.  Work on the wall continued and it already made a difference helping the Pilgrims feel safer and more secure.  The stockade walls also stopped the snow from drifting quite so bad inside the town itself.  More logs would be needed to complete the walls.  But logs was not their only concern.  Most of the hides and furs given to them by the Natives were being used to make warm coats and to keep them warm at home on cold winter nights.  They had only 2 years until the ship returned to collect the furs they agreed to pay for their passage.  They were not hunters, would they be able to gather enough furs to satisfy the merchant.

  Again help came just when it was needed.  Two families with 3 adult child and 2 newborns came to town.  They saw the town from the high ground where they came through the pass from the north.  They were hunters.  Game was not as plentiful as it once was because more merchants from the old countries wanted furs.  We told them of our need of furs to pay for our passage here.  They agreed to stay and help pay our debt if we agreed to provide food, clothes, and tools.  We agreed.

  The newcomers built 3 houses and a small shed near the stream northwest of town.  They built a hunting cabin and went to work hunting deer and beavers that had a dam in the stream.  The Pilgrims cleared a field and planted corn, there would be plenty of food for all.  Work on the stockade continued and a mini warehouse was built along the back wall by the storage barn.  The Pilgrims put in as many furs as they could spare from what the Natives had given them.  The hunters said the merchants may be expecting as many as 50 furs per year, an average yearly hunt.  That was a lot of furs.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 07, 2021, 05:02:31 AM
Chapter 7

  The newcomers told the Pilgrims they should consider building a collection dock.  The merchant may then consider making an agreement to return to trade for more furs in the future.  The Pilgrims began clearing trees by the river but were very cautious because there were often bears gathered closeby at the river bend.  The hunters built a hunting blind there in case the dock building project didn't keep the bears away.  A few more furs could be added to the tally. Only one bear returned and he was left to go on his way unharmed.

  The trees that were cut were enough to build the dock and to complete the stockade.  Our ancestors only had 1 year left to stock the collection dock with enough furs.  With the town completely enclosed they no longer had to worry about wild animals getting into town, the chickens and roosters were safe.  They would soon have warm corn bread to eat with the chicken eggs. 

  By early spring of their 5th year the corn left from the last harvest had dried in storage and could now be ground into flour.  A workplace grinder was set up by the back stockade wall near the tailor.  A baker oven was built next to it.  The tailor had no furs now to make warm coats, the supply of coats was dropping.  One of the hunter's wives said that the flax growing wild was good for more than just making aprons and bonnets;  it could be used with the goose down to make warm coats.  The hunters got quite a few geese last autumn so there was probably enough down and flax to make coats with until the furs could again be use.  Hopefully there would be enough furs to pay the debt owed the ship merchant.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 08, 2021, 05:52:16 AM
Chapter 8


  The chances of paying that debt greatly increased in spring when more hunters and a trapper arrived.  There were 2 families with their 5 adult children.  The hunter had a donkey and cart, he built a trapper hut and small shack back by the other hunters northwest of town.  The 2 couples built shacks back there too, one wife set up a gatherer's workplace.  Their 2 oldest sons each set up a tent by the hunter's blind northeast of town.  They had spotted 2 herds of wild boar in that area as they made their way to town from that north pass, the same path that brought the first group of hunters to Plimoth.

  The 2 groups did not know each other but had a lot to talk about.  They agreed hunting and trapping was not what it once was.  There were too many people and too much building going on now.  More people were arriving in East Port by ship all the time.  There was a lot of talk of open land out west, and buffalo.  Seems there was trouble with Natives out that way though.  Our Pilgrim ancestors hoped that more hunters and trappers arriving in Plimoth would not upset their good friendship with the Natives that helped them.  The Plimoth hunters stayed on this side of the stream and respected the Native's hunting grounds. Some of their young braves had moved on but the Native elders still came every autumn for the Pilgrim's Thanksgiving feast.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 09, 2021, 06:35:57 AM
Chapter 9


  The rest of that year revolved around the fur count.  When the hunters and trapper arrived the town had 170 furs in stock at the collection dock, by late summer 189, and by early winter 212.  I really don't know why my ancestors were so concerned.  What would the merchant do, weary traveler, if the Pilgrims would not have had enough furs?  Take them back to the Old Country?  No, he would probably have taken tools or food or something to make up the difference.  But according to family stories the ancestors were pretty stressed.  By winter there were only 224 furs but there was no merchant ship yet.

  In early spring of the following year, a few days short of 5 years since they arrived, the Pilgrims spotted those billowing white sails coming down the river.  They did not expect the ship to be bringing more Pilgrims from their homeland.  There were 9 adults and 2 young children, the Pilgrims welcomed them to Plimoth.  They too had made a deal with the merchant for passage.  The merchant was surprised at the number of furs the Pilgrims had for him, more than enough to satisfy the debt. There were exactly 250 furs. The merchant captain was a good and honest man; he accepted the tally of furs and prepared a receipt marked Paid in Full for not only the Pilgrims passage but for the passage of the families he just brought.  He would not have to return for their payment. 

  The Pilgrims gratefully prepared baskets of food, including turkey, vegetables, and pumpkin tarts, as a thank you gift for the captain and his crew before the ship set sail again.

Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 10, 2021, 07:12:29 AM
Chapter 10


  The Pilgrim town elders immediately began planning where to build 3 more homes in town.  They demolished the old mini warehouse that was no longer needed for furs and decided to remove the large stockpile.  A smaller stockpile in town and two outside the gates would replace it.  The town roads would be paved with some of the stone rather than moving it. 

  The newly arrived Pilgrims said they would have no problem having houses built northeast of town, there was so much land there.  It seemed the hunters had the wildlife under control and the newcomers were not sure they would even need a stockade.  They would like a view of the river.  So 3 houses were build for the 3 families and a small storage barn and stockpile nearby.  The families were settled by autumn and all available laborers went to the area to gather wild foods for their barn and firewood branches for their stockpile.  It was decided their travel time would be shortened considerably if a tunnel was built through the small mountain from there to the hunter and trappers side of town.

  The hunter and fisherman in the tents by the hunting blind both said they wouldn't mind a nice house there with the other new ones.  Two houses were built but a young single from one of the tents moved into one of them, his parents into the other one.  Another house was being built where that tent had been.  The fisherman and his family were still in their tent and Helm had just said he would like their tent left there so he could use it in summer to get up early to go fishing without disturbing the whole family.  Everyone was heartbroken that that wish would not come true, Helm fell from the fishing tree in late winter and drowned.  The tent would remain.

Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 11, 2021, 06:06:16 AM
Chapter 11


  The population of Plimoth at the start of the new year was 71, 40 adults, 13 students, and 18 young children. Little did they know it but those children were in for a real old-fashioned treat.  When cutting trees to built the road and tunnel, the workers found flowering elder bushes.  The elder flowers meant there would be elderberries and elderberries meant elderberry jam.  More of the bushes were found back by the gatherer, the berries hadn't been picked because the gatherer didn't know if they were safe to eat. The Natives were familiar the berries but said they had not found the bushes growing in this area for many moons.  The Pilgrims knew these berries from back in the Old Country and they were thrilled to find them here.  More elder bushes were found in the new section of town where a new farmyard of corn, potatoes, and cabbage was planted.

  Another animal shed was built in that part of town by the tunnel.  The original shed in town was a bit crowded because another calf had been born. More milk was needed because a dairy workplace was set up by the animal shed in town to make butter.  The baker had trouble getting enough herbs for the bread and switched recipes.  Butter bread and elderberry jam would be so good for breakfast with the eggs.  There were more than enough chickens for the 2 sheds and there would be more eggs for everyone.   

  The elder bushes when blooming attract a lot of bees.  A hive was set up by the bushes closest to town hoping to keep the bees out of the tunnel.  The empty space where the stockpile used to be was the perfect place to build a jam maker.  By autumn the berries and honey were harvested and the first jars of elderberry jam were cooling on the table out front.

  The adults were in for a treat too because the elderberries did not just make good jam, they made good wine too.  Soon a wine maker was built just outside the stockade wall where there was room.  A small spice garden was planted inside the wall in the corner behind the turkey roost.  That Thanksgiving there was elderberry wine served at the Thanksgiving feast.  And when the temperature dropped even more and the first snowflakes began to fall, there were kettles of spiced mulled elderberry wine warming on the hearths.

Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 12, 2021, 05:26:28 AM
Chapter 12


  In spring more migrants came through the north pass and were thankful to settle in Plimoth. The Maybelle left them at a port farther north up the coast, the port the Pilgrims should have landing at.   The new arrival came south thinking it would be warmer. The group of 14 adults and 2 children came from a bigger town in the Old County and the new part of Plimoth soon had 3 more houses and a school as well as a house with a cobbler shop and another with a barber shop in their front rooms.  By winter Plimoth had a General Store.  The town was doing good and storage units were near capacity.

  The next group came down the river on foot.  The ship that brought them from the Old Country got caught in a storm that blew it off course but the ship didn't make it to the inlet like ours did, instead it crashed into the rocks and shore.  The captain and crew headed north to the port they should have anchored at and the shipwreck passengers head inland down the river.  Pilmoth's population grew by 18, 12 adults and 6 children.  The town grew by 3 more houses and one with a sundries shop on its ground floor.  You could find homemade items there like aprons, bonnets, towels and linens.  All the new buildings left the town not only short of logs but short of firewood as well.  A Firewood store was built in the new part of town and everyone collected downed branches to save as many logs as possible from being cut for firewood.  Other than logs and firewood the supplies were plentiful. Plimoth indeed was prospering.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 13, 2021, 06:20:38 AM
Chapter 13


  The hunters and trapper didn't think the town was prospering.  They had no market for their furs and hides and they had more furs than were needed by the town.  No riverboat trade merchant would come down this river.  The trapper and one hunter loaded the donkey and cart with surplus furs from time to time and headed back north to the port town they came from to trade with merchant ships there.

The town's people certainly did not think they would see the Maybelle return to their shores.  But return it did and it brought a well-to-do baron and his people.  There were 19 others besides the Baron and his family of 4, a total of 23, 17 adults and 6 children.  The Baron planned to build a railroad  and make a fortune trading here like he did back in the Old Country.  He had no plans for the town, he and his people would settle back by the pass that lead to the port.  Well, weary traveler, settle was a bit of an understatement.  The Baron had a large manor house built that was more like a castle than anyone here had ever seen.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 14, 2021, 06:01:49 AM
Chapter 14


Of course the Baron wanted his manor house furnished with the best so his people built a furniture store and a home goods shop at the edge of town.  Workers would live in the shops and in the 2 stacked workplace houses next to them.

  Back by the manor a very nice workplace house was built for the house servants with a storage shed.  A private school was built there for the baron's daughter who would soon be old enough to begin her education.  The baron's son helped with the building.  A house was also built there for the baron's grounds keeper.  He would keep the estate well tidied and groomed and care for the baron's private vineyard that had already been planted.  The Pilgrims gave the housemaid seeds and chicken's for a small kitchen garden.  The grounds keeper was also chopping a little firewood for their own use at the corner of the kitchen garden by the stockpile. The Baron was upset and complained several times about the lack of logs.  He wanted the stockade around his estate finished to protect his grapes from the bears and other wildlife.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 15, 2021, 05:54:08 AM
Chapter 15


  Well of course it was the baron who was using the most logs and firewood and the Pilgrims doing most of the work.  Plimoth had things that needed to be built too.  Several young people now wanted homes of there own.  The hunters and trapper did not want trees cut from their side of town, some of the wildlife had already left the area.  The Native elders expressed their concern also when they came for the Thanksgiving feast; more of their braves had left their village in search of game.   

  As the Baron described it that railroad would need a lot of wood to build, and iron.  It was time to built a forester.  There were still many trees in the forest east of town and a lot of wildlife.  There were deer, wild boar, and the bears that the Baron was concerned about.  The Pilgrims understood the concern of having the bears so close, that's why they built a stockade.  Now they  built a forester stand and a hunter workplace to reduce the size of those animal packs.  There was a lot of wood still needed for the Baron's stockade.  He sent several young workers west to scout the railroad's route and to find a good source of more logs.  A few Plimoth's young single males went with them.  The Baron send word to the port town via our hunter and trapper that he was looking for more workers. 

  Despite the lack of logs for the stockade the Baron had a good grape harvest.  The Pilgrims questioned his priorities when instead of using logs for the stockade he built a wine maker for his own use.  Old Town Plimoth did manage to have enough logs to build a house on the west side of town and one on the east.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 16, 2021, 04:06:08 AM
Chapter 16


  The Baron's stockade did eventually get built, some older trees were being cut, and the newly planted trees were doing good.  Building projects continued.  Workers arrived from the port town to the north, 14 adults and 1 child.  Some of the workers were Dwarves who had been looking for work. Stacked houses for these workers were built next to the General Store and a single story house across from them.  A Food Store and a Bank were built there on the main road. Yes, a bank!
Over on the other side of the town on the tunnel road more stacked houses were built for the workers.  The Pilgrims learned that the railroad would be built there between Old Plimoth and the hunter's forest.  The tracks would go from Old Plimoth across the stream and to the mountain beyond.  The Dwarves would be digging the tunnel through that mountain.  The scouts still had not returned.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 17, 2021, 06:09:45 AM
Chapter 17


  While waiting for logs and for the scouts to return work on the roads began.  A road led from Main Street to the north pass.  Main Street was extended west past the mountain and continued around the mountain to join up with tunnel road.  The road from Main Street to the north pass was then widened.

  On Main street a large Town Hall with a clock was built, it was quite impressive.  A Post Office was built next to the Bank.  The Baron was doing business with the port town and there were communications between the two.  The hunter and trapper were delivering these messages.   It had been several years since the scouts left but finally word came from the port.  The Baron called a meeting at the Town Hall to inform the town's people of what had happened. 

  The scouts went much farther west than necessary or practical.  They set up a logging camp, cut a large number of trees, and attempted to float them downriver.  The logs jammed up the big lake and most of the men died trying to get the logs moving again.  Others died from hunger because they had killed off all the deer in the area. Three years ago the camp was resettled by a group of young survivors of a town downriver from there that was destroyed by a rock and mud slide.  The camp is now the town of Smallville and it was now year 3 SVT, Smallville Time.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 18, 2021, 06:59:42 AM
Chapter 18


  Well, time moved on and Plimoth was not without problems.  The town was always short of firewood and logs. Those old Plimoth houses burned a lot of wood.  There was a need for more warm coats, the town's people spent a lot of time outside gathering branches for firewood.  A furrier was built just off of Tunnel Road on the hunter's side of town.  The tailor in town switched back to making warm coats from leather and down.

There were several new houses built here and there as new couples were formed.  There were more mouths to feed and more small farmyards being planted around town too.  Even the Baron had his grounds keeper plant several rows of corn along the stockade behind the vineyard.  His people also collected branches just like everyone else.  The Baron made a deal with someone near the port town who agreed to deliver several loads of logs and branches to Plimoth.  A large wagon pulled by 2 horses came down the north pass road.  A tiny chopper was now at work at the stockpile near Main Street and the estate so the Baron had the wagon deliver the logs to Tunnel Road outside of Old Plimoth.  The log and firewood supply improved as did the surplus of warm coats and food.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 19, 2021, 07:03:42 AM
Chapter 19


  The Dwarves and other workers who arrived were busy too.  They cleared trees and stone from the path the railroad would take.  They build a trestle bridge across the stream laying the first pieces of railroad track.  The Dwarves dug the tunnel entrance while workers laid tracks to it.  It would take several years to dig that tunnel.  There was not much room on this side of that mountain but a turnaround needed to be build, at least a track that would allow the train to pull into it and then back up to the station coming to a stop facing the direction from which it came.  Land was cleared for the turnaround on the tunnel side of the stream.

  The town's people now had 2 more problems.  The work across the stream drove the bears and other wildlife back towards the hunter's side of town and from there into the town itself.  The other problem was a shortage of iron.  The surface iron close by was used for tool making, it was a long way to go for more iron. The Dwarves said they could mine for iron but they were finding very little in the mountain they were tunneling through.  This railroad building would take longer than at first thought.

  It was year 25 SVT that the tunnel through the mountain was completed and tracks were being laid. It was years later, year 35 SVT, that the Pilgrims discovered that in year 27 SVT  an expedition from Smallville settled on the other side of that mountain naming their town Chattachoo.  Those settlers hoped to build a railroad connecting to the tunnel and the Plimoth railroad.  Workers were sent there by the Baron to help.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 20, 2021, 06:02:52 AM
Chapter 20


  Help was needed in Plimoth during those years too.  The Baron tried to get iron from the man who had brought logs from the outskirts of the port town. The man was old by then and doubted his old horses could pull a cart loaded with heavy iron especially when there had been more snow than usual in the last few years.  The old man's son used that old log cart to bring a few groups of migrants as far south as Plimoth, most did not stay.   A rooming house was built on Main Street for the times he and the migrants were stranded by early autumn or late spring snowfalls.  The few migrant families that stayed in Plimoth appreciated having housing available. Bears were sighted there by the rooming house a few times but when work on the rails across the river was completed the bears returned there.

  The winters were especially  hard on the elderly Native people and food was scarce.  The Pilgrims often took baskets of food and other needed items to them.  The Baron did too and sent some of his people to help with the hunting and fishing.  A few of the young Natives stayed when they met and married Pilgrims.  There were 2 new teepees by the hunting grounds and a needlework hut to make hide clothing.  Another farmyard of the Three Sisters corn, squash, and beans, was planted there.

  The Baron also sent his people to check on the elderly in Old Plimoth to be sure they had all they needed.  As the population of Plimoth grew so did the need for more food.  The farmyards got more workers and a few more farmyards were planted.  There were more houses built too but space was limited.  Two patches of apple and walnuts trees were discovered when looking for housing sites.  Laborers were again gathering wild foods and branches, iron gathering was put on hold.  The food surplus greatly improved.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 21, 2021, 06:49:34 AM
Chapter 21


  When the food supply stabilized, iron collection and train building resumed.  The engine was built and then the material car.  Last word from Chattachoo was that they were still building tracks and were short of materials.  Iron, wood, and stone were being loaded onto the material car when work was halted again.  Latest word from the port town was that in year 33 SVT there had been a rock and mudslide upriver from Smallville that blocked that main river causing it and many other rivers to dry up or change coarse.  River travel and trade was extremely difficult and there were migrants stranded in many places.  We built another rooming house before the hauler's son returned with more migrants. 

  The migrants brought yellow fever with them.  The Baron immediately had a hospital built at the edge of the forester's forest and the Natives erected a medicine man's hut and began making herbal medicine bags.  Despite their efforts the cases increased from 1 to 4 to 8 to 13 to 19 and topped at 27.  If not for their efforts there would have no doubt been more than just the 2 deaths.  A chapel and cemetery had been built not far from the hospital.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 22, 2021, 06:19:23 AM
Chapter 22

So, weary traveler, it was not until year 35 SVT that the first east coast train was ready to go.  It was called the Chattachoo Choo Choo.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c-34PuZjWaE


It was not long before the material and freight cars were replaced with passenger cars and a train station was built.  But before then something new came down the road from the north pass.  The hauler's son now had a stagecoach.  Passengers could now travel from the east port town to Plimoth protected from the rain and wind and cold and snow.  A livery stable was built down on the end of Main Street where the coachmen could rest the horses for a day or two before making the return trip.  It wasn't long before there were two coaches and extra horses.  A Stage Office was built next to the Post Office on Main Street.  The stagecoaches did not only bring passengers but they brought news and mail as well.  Other towns got world news via the river boatmen, we got ours from the stage coachmen. 

  It was from them that we learned there was a wagon train being built in the Outskirts of Smallville in year 40 SVT going west.  Smallville remained the center and go to place for refugees and those wanting survival training.  We learned from the stagecoach drivers that Riverview Resort was being built as a place for river boatmen to spend time with their families.  We learned a railway was being built out west and that gold had been discovered in the mountains causing a gold rush in the mid 60s.  Closer to us there were deadly tornadoes to the north and a giant frog invasion to the south.  Our railroad was expanding from Chattachoo to Ironwood and further west from there.  Plimoth has become a busy place.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: banishedsanni on November 22, 2021, 03:02:31 PM
I WANT that horse carriage! Where is it from? Is it just deco or does it do anything?
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 22, 2021, 03:07:52 PM
 :)  @banishedsanni Stagecoach is new Kid mod being tested and will be released soon.  It is deco with or without luggage, driver, or horses.  Horses are also deco. There is livery stable and stage office which are houses.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: banishedsanni on November 22, 2021, 03:55:05 PM
Awesome! Always worth checking the town storys for new content and for ideas for playing and building :D
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 23, 2021, 06:31:54 AM
Chapter 23


  Much has changed, weary traveler, since my ancestors came over on the Maybelle.  Much has changed since the Baron came to town to build the railroad.  Main Street bustles with travelers and townspeople alike.  Stagecoaches not only bring folks to and from the east port town but back and forth from the rooming houses and train station as well.  The shops, Post Office, Stage Office, and Livery are busy places. 

  Although much has changed, somethings remain the same.  The Baron's estate still grows most of their own vegetables and the vineyard supplies grapes to their wine maker.  The hunters and trapper's side of town too has changed little, the furrier still makes fur coats and hides and furs are used by the tailor in Old Plimoth town.  The elderberries are still gathered along tunnel road and are transformed into delicious elderberry jam and wine in Old Plimoth Town. 

  All parts of town combined now has a population much the same as it did back in our 33rd year, which was year 23 SVT.  Folks come and go and workers moved on to continue building the railroad.    The population of permanent residents back in year 23 was 266, 153 adults, 52 students, and 61 young children.  There were 70 homes and 87 families.  Not much has changed and much has stayed the same.
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 24, 2021, 06:34:31 AM
Chapter 24


  The old Native Village has stayed the same and so has the Native hunting grounds.  My ancestors would not have survived had it not been for the Natives elders.  And so here we are today, weary traveler, we respected their land and hunting grounds and built a railroad heading west.  There are several Chattachoo Choo Choos making round trips now on the east rail lines, there are many new places to go.  Be sure to stop at the cartographer's Map & Book Store next to the Stage Office to pick up one of the latest World Maps before you go.  You may also want to stop at the Old Plimoth's shops to pick up some elderberry jam and wine to take with you.  And of course you will not want to miss the annual late autumn Thanksgiving feast.  The Native elders will be there as usual.  There'll be roast turkey, mash potatoes, Brussels sprouts, and cranberry sauce for dinner and pumpkin tarts for dessert. 

  Late autumn is not the best time to travel, weary traveler, there could be snow any day, but the Choo Choo should get you to the Crossroads okay.  The stagecoach will take you to the station.  Safe travels, weary traveler, and have a Happy Thanksgiving Day.


The End

Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: kid1293 on November 24, 2021, 12:58:24 PM
Happy Thanksgiving!
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: taniu on November 24, 2021, 01:52:06 PM
@Abandoned ;D ;) :) Beautiful music insert "Chattanooga Choo Choo (instrumental).Fantastic story.Happy Thanksgiving!
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: Abandoned on November 24, 2021, 08:11:12 PM
 :) Thank you both  :)

Info and links to downloads can be found here:

Kid Jam and Wind - http://worldofbanished.com/index.php?topic=4057.0

Kid Stagecoach - http://worldofbanished.com/index.php?topic=4058.0
Title: Re: Abandoned - Plimoth - Story 74
Post by: angainor88 on November 25, 2021, 05:14:18 PM
Happy thanksgiving to those who celebrate, and delicious feasts to everyone!