Mill Hollow

Quote

“There wasn’t a family in the Hollow that didn’t owe its supper to the seam. The mountain gave, and the mountain took, and mostly we were grateful for the giving.”

  • recovered church bulletin, undated

Mill Hollow is the principal settlement of the valley, strung along the Tuckseed River beneath the walls of Carraway Gorge. A coal company town founded in 1912, it grew around the Number Four Portal mine works and the labor that fed them, reaching some three thousand souls at its height before the long decline emptied it.

At the start of the survival period the Hollow stands abandoned: homes left mid-life, the company store shuttered, the church doors swinging. It is the largest loot and shelter hub on the map and the social heart of the region’s history.

Overview

The town was, on every surface a visitor could read, an ordinary Appalachian mining community: hard, proud, and poor. Work came from the mine; power and a measure of prosperity came later from Carraway Dam; faith, gossip, and the volunteer fire brigade held the place together between paydays.

The Appalachian Energy & Mine Commission was the town’s employer, landlord, and benefactor in roughly equal measure. It built the schoolhouse, paved the one good road, and was thanked for it on the Carraway Dedication Stone. Few in the Hollow ever had cause to think the Commission was anything other than what it appeared.

Layout & landmarks

DistrictDescriptionNotes
Main StreetCompany store, post office, diner, bankDensest loot; central spawn-risk
The RowsIdentical company houses on the hillsideResidential looting
Sacred HeartChurch and graveyardTied to local folklore
The TippleCoal processing & rail loadingAdjoins Number Four Portal
Substation lotMill Hollow SubstationPowers the lower valley when restored

Decline

The Hollow died the way coal towns die: the easy seams played out, Number Four cut its shifts, the young left first and the old stayed too long. The Commission’s withdrawal finished what economics started. By the time the outbreak reached the valley there were few enough people left to lose, a detail the surviving record treats as simple tragedy, and which the declassified account treats as something colder.

Gameplay role


See also: Mill Hollow (Declassified) for the classified record. Spoilers.