Margarine Mansion Apartments, formerly Margarine Mansion and Plantation, is a historic, mighty, four-story apartment complex that holds roughly five hundred tenants. It is truly huge and once belonged to the famous Margrin family, which consisted of generations of dairy tycoons that had expanded their farm and its resident employees into a modern example of manoralism. Their farm's employees were so productive that the thing ran itself, a cash cow, literally, and the actual family simply served an administrative purpose as the employees lived on the land for years and worked practically as slaves.
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| - Margarine Mansion Apartments, formerly Margarine Mansion and Plantation, is a historic, mighty, four-story apartment complex that holds roughly five hundred tenants. It is truly huge and once belonged to the famous Margrin family, which consisted of generations of dairy tycoons that had expanded their farm and its resident employees into a modern example of manoralism. Their farm's employees were so productive that the thing ran itself, a cash cow, literally, and the actual family simply served an administrative purpose as the employees lived on the land for years and worked practically as slaves.
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| - Currently, a restored apartment complex, mill conversion
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Name
| - Margarine Plantation Apartments
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Type
| - Great house/Dairy plantation, was once landed property under a sole aristocratic family.
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Inhabitants
| - Various, Kerb W., Kerbpuff, Hermeshroom Jones, Bureaucrat, Argent Glimmer and Aurus Lux
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| - Margarine Mansion Apartments, formerly Margarine Mansion and Plantation, is a historic, mighty, four-story apartment complex that holds roughly five hundred tenants. It is truly huge and once belonged to the famous Margrin family, which consisted of generations of dairy tycoons that had expanded their farm and its resident employees into a modern example of manoralism. Their farm's employees were so productive that the thing ran itself, a cash cow, literally, and the actual family simply served an administrative purpose as the employees lived on the land for years and worked practically as slaves. The building was seized thanks in part to an intervention of Lichenblossom's Ministry of the Oversight of Monopolies, as well as the Margrin family's traditional dairy-making methods being supplanted by modern technology. The mansion was sold, changing hands several times until it became historic and was converted into an apartment complex. The original mansion building is still one of the largest single-building residential units in the area. Modern historians liken this estate to the infamous town of Isotope, TA, in that the workers were bound to the land for life under an oppressive employer with no way out.
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