About: Auburn, Alabama (1983: Doomsday)   Sponge Permalink

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Auburn was a town in the eastern portion of the former U.S. state of Alabama. It was home to Auburn University pre- and post-Doomsday. Auburn was also the capital of a provisional Alabama state government set up in late 1983 that soon fell apart due in part to the activities of racists who went on to found the city-state of New Montgomery. Survivors from Auburn fled to other parts of the former state, some to survivor communities in southern Alabama and Georgia. In recent years, explorers and military from Hattiesburg examined the ruins of Auburn, including the university.

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  • Auburn, Alabama (1983: Doomsday)
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  • Auburn was a town in the eastern portion of the former U.S. state of Alabama. It was home to Auburn University pre- and post-Doomsday. Auburn was also the capital of a provisional Alabama state government set up in late 1983 that soon fell apart due in part to the activities of racists who went on to found the city-state of New Montgomery. Survivors from Auburn fled to other parts of the former state, some to survivor communities in southern Alabama and Georgia. In recent years, explorers and military from Hattiesburg examined the ruins of Auburn, including the university.
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  • Auburn was a town in the eastern portion of the former U.S. state of Alabama. It was home to Auburn University pre- and post-Doomsday. Auburn was also the capital of a provisional Alabama state government set up in late 1983 that soon fell apart due in part to the activities of racists who went on to found the city-state of New Montgomery. Survivors from Auburn fled to other parts of the former state, some to survivor communities in southern Alabama and Georgia. In recent years, explorers and military from Hattiesburg examined the ruins of Auburn, including the university. What follows is a history detailing events in and around the town, from Doomsday through early 1984, and highlights of activities by survivors through the present day. This account was culled mostly from interviews with survivors who now live in Neonotia; Virginia; north Georgia; North Florida; and New Montgomery, as well as historical records preserved at Tuskegee University and found within the rubble of Auburn itself.
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