Anyway, it took about 4 seconds on an internet search engine to find out that, while there doesn't appear to be a town by the name of Saltmarsh in southern England, there is a town named Seaton in Devon. As Saltmarsh devotees will no doubt recall, Seaton was, along with Burle, one of the neighboring, more prosperous towns in the vicinity of backwater Saltmarsh. Thinking that was pretty nifty, further investigation yielded this tidbit in an article about a grocery store opening in town:
"Sandwiched between the red and white cliffs of the Jurassic Coast and surrounded by acres of unspoilt saltmarsh, the Devon resort of Seaton has prided itself on its status as a serene backwater whose last serious skirmish with an unwanted invader was 700 years ago when it supplied Edward I with ships and sailors to fight off the Sahuagin." [Emphasis, c'est moi] The Independent, 25 March 2008.So the town of Seaton, like U1's Saltmarsh, is a backwater village located on the seaside adjacent to a saltmarsh, and is within spitting distance of cliffs on which to position everyone's favorite haunted house. An image search quickly revealed the cliffs upon which the Haunted House is perched:
These are the cliffs. |
As well as the house itself:
This house is haunted. |
Except a closer look revealed that this cool old joint is actually in a different Seaton altogether--Seaton Delaval way up in Northumberland. Apparently Seaton is a pretty popular name for any village within a stones throw or two from the sea, as Wikipedia lists 11 towns, villages, hamlets, dorfs and/or thorps named Seaton either wholly or in part. The Seaton of County Durham is the most intriguing; here is its Wikipedia entry in its entirety:
"Seaton is a village in County Durham, in England. It is on the A19 road south of Sunderland. The village boasts two pubs." -- Wikipedia entry on Seaton, County Durham, 5/19/15
Anyway, I hope I get to visit both taverns on my upcoming tour of the Seatons.
Seaton Delaval is just next to Seaton Sluice, where a friend of mine used to live. According to Wikipedia, Seaton Sluice boasts no fewer than six pubs.
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seaton_Sluice#Local_interest
Don't ask me what "Martin Dryers and the Dier needs" means. I have no idea. It sounds like the name of a terrible pub-rock band.
It seems an all-Seaton pub crawl is in order. Who's in?
ReplyDeleteWhen I ran U1 The Sinister Secret of Saltmarsh, I set it on the south coast as that is where we were from at the time of running it. I opted for the Isle of Purbeck, back further along the Jurassic Coast. (Of course, more recently I just dropped the scenario into a Legends of the Five Rings campaign).
ReplyDelete