Showing posts with label 1983: Doomsday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1983: Doomsday. Show all posts

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Sideways in Time Paper Update 2/5/15

So I haven't posted many of these recently for the very important reason that I have been too busy writing the damn paper. In fact I completely lost track of all the new research I have been doing so there is not much to report accept for these three points below:
  • I forgot about this article in The Independent that discussed Wikia as the future of fandom. They actually mentioned the AltHistory Wiki and referenced the timelines "1983: Doomsday" and "Hail Might Joan".
  • Thanks to Evelyn Leeper for finding me a copy of Matthew Schneider-Mayerson's "What Almost Was: The Politics of the Contemporary Alternate History Novel" along with some interesting commentary from Steven H Silver. Funny enough Matthew actually emailed me shortly thereafter with another copy so it seemed like I was destined to read this article. Although far from the subject of his paper, Matthew had a lot of intriguing things to say on the online community that I plan to reference in my work.
  • Found this great article on the Sidewise Awards at the Science Fiction Awards Database. Really helped with the chronology of the Awards and the judges who participated during its run.
Now that I got that business out of the way, I am happy to report that my paper (Warping History: An Overview of Fans and Creators of Alternate History in the Internet Age) was accepted by the Sideways in Time organizers. I am going to Liverpool at the end of March and will even get a chance to spend a couple days seeing the sights in London. My wonderful father was kind enough to help me finance the trip and will be joining me to offer moral support. Dad, you have always been supportive of my dreams and I can't think of anyone better I want at my side during this journey.

Well guys not sure when the next paper update will be posted. I think I will be putting all my energy into finishing it before the conference. Expect a retrospective of the conference and maybe even an excerpt of the paper later in April. In the meantime, wish me luck!

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

DD Date 1984.02.14

February 14, 1984

Back in October we were worried about "nuclear winter" freezing us to death, but the mild winter so far has caused problems we did not foresee! The cold of the winter here in the upstate of South Carolina usually keeps down pests -- like insects and mice. But with practically NO cold weather the pests are over-running our house! It does not help having a wooded area with standing water just a stone's throw from the back porch.

Long story short, the bugs carry "bugs" -- we all got sick! I'd say if we did not have connections with the hospital we may not have survived. Debbie's job provided the support we needed to get clean water and food. I guess I could say we just got careless. Even with running water, we didn't always wash properly. The food get from the distribution center has to be eaten as soon as the cans and boxes are opened because we have no refrigeration.

Little Rebecca got sick first, and since I was with her more those first days (it was in the middle of the week when Debbie was working her twelve-hour shifts), I had to clean up after her puke and diarrhea! It spread to the boys, and even to Debbie. About that time, to make matters worse, I lost my job as I feared might happen. Debbie tried to pick up a few more hours but then she was out sick as well. Finally, on February 2nd, we moved as a family into adjoining rooms at the hospital!

The support we had from the church and from Debbie's work was great. But there were times when I had fevers so high that I was seeing things. Drugs have already become scarce so the most they could do for us was keep us comfortable and have us drink plenty of water to replace what we were losing.

Friends from church moved our stuff to the new house, but I had someone drive me over to see Nanny after we were released from the hospital. Thankfully, Nanny was healthy. She shared with us some herbal remedies a friend of hers recommended. Even the doctors at the hospital are beginning to use natural medicines whenever they can. Most of them are realistic about the current situation and know that out of state suppliers are out of the question for quite some time.

Oh yeah, I just noticed that today is Valentine's Day. Funny, but I don't think many folk were celebrating today. Those that were gave hand-made cards and flowers from the back yard -- yeah, in February? Mostly weeds! Candy was homemade as well -- mostly cookies made from cornmeal and honey since the sugar supplies are gone. I guess the Christmas treats used up most of the sugar on hand.

Well, I'm still weak, and some of those herbs I'm taking are making me drowsy! Well, it's getting dark anyway. I'm going to bed early.

Previous Entry: DD Date 1984.01.25

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

DD Date 1984.01.11

January 11, 1984

Well, I survived another year. My birthday turned out rather nicely yesterday as Debbie and some friends put together a surprise party for me down at Freedom Baptist Church. Some BJ grads had worked with Debbie's brother Chuck to work things out. They called it a Bible Study and I couldn't resist checking it out since they had said there would be baby sitting for the kids.

There was even a cake -- 31 candles actually is quite a few to blow out at one time, but I did it! The ladies at the church had done their best to fix the dinner of green beans, pork chops and mashed potatoes using the facilities in the church kitchen. The families had called in some favors and collected some books and things from the campus bookstore at Bob Jones. They were cheering me on in my search for a church even though I'm a Presbyterian and they're all Baptist! But these last few months I've learned that the BJ community here in the Berea area is quite strong.

One of the men from the school works in the shop and he helped me set up the bicycle I got for Christmas to turn the car alternator and recharge the battery. It takes quite a bit of work, but it's like those exercise bikes -- peddling as fast as you can and getting nowhere! But I keep in shape while in the house while the kids are napping. Of course, I have work I could be doing, but I can do some of that at night to use up some of the battery!

Oh yeah, one of the birthday presents was a ream of notebook paper, a binder and a pack of pencils! I'm set to keep a record of this surreal adventure for months to come. Perhaps one day these pages will be read by civilized folk with electricity and automobiles of their own. I hope those people aren't Russians, though. That's the one thing that bothers me about this whole adventure -- the probability that the enemy is coming any day to clean up the mess they have made. The fact that we have not received any word from the federal OR state government is highly disturbing. Of course, we may have got them before they could completely destroy us - that "MAD" thing, "Mutually Assured Destruction!" I guess we'll know some day what really happened.

Previous entry: DD Date 1984.01.04
Next entry: DD Date 1984.01.21

Friday, January 6, 2012

DD Date 1984.01.04

January 4, 1984

It seems a little strange, it being the long "predicted" 1984. George Orwell's classic tale of a land ruled by a socialistic leader who took Machiavelli to the extreme has served as a warning to Western democracies of what the world would be like if the ways of the Soviet Union prevailed. Orwell was writing in post-war England in 1948 as London was rebuilding from German attacks not so many years earlier. He knew that Russia was an ally in that war, but he also realized the danger of the socialism that nation represented.

Well, I guess he was right, in a way, Russia seems to have been much more evil that even president Reagan imagined. For all of his talk, I shouldn't be surprised that Russia's leader Yuri Andropov attacked us. The man was KGB, and from what I have read those guys are not nice! Well, we survived his attacks, for now anyway. The winter is about to set in, though, and without electricity we'd better hope that the wood holds out.

As scheduled, I was working Sunday night when the year began. The silence was broken in the minutes before midnight by fireworks in the neighborhood. I don't know if the firecrackers were left over from the Fourth or whether people actually spent money on them instead of more important things. There's no explaining some folks. At least the patients I take care of didn't particularly care. Many of them only have days to live anyway, since we now are a kind of clearing house for the morgue. I think it's called 'hospice' and we are trying to keep the people comfortable without much more than out of date narcotics. I still visit some of the elderly folks that we sent home to live with family as part of my job, though. They at least have the comfort of knowing their family is near.

The good news is that we now have running water! Mayor Workman's office has worked with the utility companies to bypass electric pumps with a low pressure system bringing water downhill from the lakes and reservoirs. Flushing toilets is forbidden, though, since the sewage treatment system cannot handle the waste. Our outhouse is going to have to last a bit longer, I guess. As it is, runoff from the drainage systems is going directly to the rivers downstream. I suppose this is not good news for folks living downstream!

Well, Debbie will be home soon (it's been dark for some time and the kids are in bed). So I think I'm going to put down the pencil and paper and pick up a book to use up a little more of this light. I finally got plans on how to hook the car's old alternator up to a bicycle to charge the battery. Now if I can only get it working before the battery goes dead!

Previous entry: DD Date 1983.12.30
Next entry: DD Date 1984.01.11

Friday, December 30, 2011

DD Date 1983.12.30

December 30, 2011

Well, this ends three months of weekly diary entries to try to make some sense out of life after the "unthinkable" has happened. It is a wonder that civilization here in the USA has not collapsed. Of course, it may have outside of our immediate area. As far as I know there have been no expeditions beyond short ones across the state lines to Georgia and North Carolina, and no one has received any messages from further away.

So, while I still have some notebook paper, I guess I will write what I remember of the "last year of the United States of America." I don't follow world events too much, so this will be somewhat short.

Back in January, President Reagan surprised many when he nominated a woman from North Carolina, Elizabeth Dole, to oversee the Department of Transportation. She is the second wife of Senator Bob Dole of Kansas. We got a preview of "hard times" to come when the Independent Truckers Association went on strike in response to the federal tax on fuel going up. Some stuff got scarce for about two weeks. The trucks stopped running three months ago and we are learning that the shelves don't restock themselves!

February saw the first of a bunch of Democrats after Reagan's job in 1984. In all I think seven -- including Fritz Hollings! -- had declared their intent by the end of September. Personally, I think American hero, now Senator, John Glenn is the best among them all. We can assume president Reagan was waiting to announce his intentions sometime this winter. I don't think there is any question that he will be the candidate -- if there is an election next year and he is even alive. It's hard not knowing what's happening around the world! Bringing a 'light note' to a bad situation (the Korean War), the television show M*A*S*H ended a series that lasted three times as long as the war it portrayed. -- I missed that show but caught it on the summer reruns!

Spring time saw more conservatives in high places -- Germany elected Kohl and in England Margaret Thatcher got re-elected. It was looking good for us conservatives. Reagan has been talking tough against the remaining Communists out there and I think we may have been winning that ideological battle before what I guess is World War III -- still no draft or anything -- began. I think the "new enemy" we were facing was a religious one in Israel and surrounding countries. The Muslim fighters don't hesitate to kill others by killing themselves. They showed the world that the US was their enemy by blowing up the US Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon!

In America, though, the Supreme Court made what could be a "liberal" decision concerning what would seem to be a freedom of assembly issue -- against Bob Jones University! Back when I was there I let it be known that I thought some of their policies didn't go along with my interpretation of the Bible. One of the things I disagreed with was their stand on 'inter-racial' dating. Heck, I had a great 'preacher boy' in a group that I ministered with that was from the Caribbean that was of 'mixed race' heritage. Anyway, the school would not change this on threat of 'losing' its tax exempt status. Well, its seems that the IRS can trump the constitution! The school lost its exemption. From now on, any contributions to the school cannot be counted as deductions.

The Summer saw more terrorism - hijackings and bombings - around the world. From the Mideast, to South Africa, to the Pacific, things started going bad. I don't understand how people can be so deranged as to kill themselves to make a political point. Assassinations at least make sense - going back to ancient Rome and beyond - but suicide bombs are insane! There was a major assassination, in fact, in the Phillipines -- Aquino, I think, sometimes this past summer. Anyway, the summer ended with the mess between the US and Russia - first the downing of that Korean jet with Americans on it -- a congressman from Georgia being one of them -- on September first. I'm sure that probably had something to do with the beginning of the war that perhaps has destroyed this country. And then, three weeks later we get the world as we NOW know it!

The fall months were a time of getting used to the weirdness of life without the pleasantries of the twentieth century - at home anyway. I am sure that the emergency generators in use won't last much longer either. According to the authorities - as posted on bulletin boards and spoken in town meetings - the nuclear power plant is a long way from being fixed. Other power alternatives - such as the coal powered facility in Pelzer, are closer to being on line, but the EMPs that wiped out electronics all over the place mean that re-wiring and re-engineering will take quite some time.

And so, there it is, what I remember about this year. I'm sure it won't be part of any history archives anyway, but it helps me put things in perspective as I look forward to a new year coming up this weekend. I will be working, of course, and probably won't actually 'celebrate' 1984 -- the year of "Big Brother"! getting here. Ironically, I suppose, the computers that were predicted to usher in that socialist era have been largely silenced. Wow. I wonder if that means we win after all.

Previous entry: DD Date 1983.12.21
Next entry: DD Date 1984.01.04

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

DD Date 1983.12.21

December 21, 1983

Wow, it's beginning to look a lot like Christmas. Really. I would have thought with all the doom and gloom about the end of the world as we know it we would be "canceling Christmas" this year. I guess being a preacher-in-training I should have known that the meaning of the season isn't wrapped up in fancy paper under an artificial tree in the living room. Anyway, with Debbie and I both working full time - and that in health care (I can't think of a more secure field right now!) - our employers have been able to pay us well in credits good at K-Mart, Bi-Lo, and even Wal-Mart. I read about Wal-Mart a few years back when the first stores came to Greenville. Some guy in Arkansas of all places started out in the dime store business thirty years ago. He took the first part of his name - "Walton" - to come up with a competitor to K-Mart. The article said he likes to deal in American goods when he can. Well, I guess that will be the "new way" around here, huh? A guy named "Walton" from the Ozarks, kind of like "John-boy" and the rest on family on Walton's mountain.

Funny, but that show began at Christmas time back when I was in high school! And then lasted up through last year's three TV movies. Sort of like us today, but with a mountain, I guess. They were in the Great Depression, a time when a lot of people didn't have running water and electricity -- but they made it through some how! Sad, in a way, also, because that was all about a family all living close together -- not separated by hundreds of miles like we are now. And there's not going to be a family reunion like there has always been in the past either. Yeah, Chuck will be coming over from BJ for the weekend -- Christmas on Sunday -- happens about every five or six years, but still seems a bit strange.

Well, I'm wrapping some simple stuff tonight after the children are in bed. I set up the car headlight in the kitchen so we could use the table after dark -- going to be a long night tonight, this being the first day of winter. Strangely, though, it's not too cold. We don't open the doors to the front of the house very often, and that includes the kitchen. Keeps the heat in the bedrooms. However, we're thinking of getting a wood-burning stove to put on the back porch (where it would be safer). I don't think the rental agency would like us putting it in the kitchen -- we'd have put in special tile and figure a way to get a chimney (maybe out the window?). It would be nice to have some kind of oven -- the only bread we have is made in a frying pan!

Speaking of cooking -- the rations this week included hot cocoa mix! No milk needed. I'm betting that stuff is rare enough these days! We even have the kind with tiny dried marshmallows in it. No eggnog, though. But hot apple cider, with a little cinnamon while it lasts, will be available (the local apples had a good season this year). If things are as bad as they say they are this may be the last Christmas that has these luxuries. I'm going to enjoy the memories of Christmases past and not worry too much about Christmas to come. And I am going make this a Christmas to remember - in spite of everything!

Previous entry: DD Date 1983.12.14
Next entry: DD Date 1983.12.30

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

DD Date 1983.12.14

December 14, 1983

We were greatly surprised today when the mid-week edition of the Greenville News carried reports from outside of Greenville County. It seems that the News has been sending volunteers as far as Athens and Asheville to find out what is going on. Asheville seems to have fared okay, but the story from Athens is like one from the twilight zone! The reporters apparently did not get into town, but the reports from those they met along I-85 was horrible. With what the eye-witnesses said, the University of Georgia had become the center of a new government of sorts, but things went bad fast. Apparently riots had begun over food and supplies and no one was safe. The reporters also heard that refugees were heading up to the mountain town of Taccoa, but they returned to Greenville knowing that they probably would not be chancing any more fact-finding trips.

Meanwhile, at home things seem peaceful. The police and highway patrol maintain a vigilant presence along the roads, preventing most vandalism and keeping unrest to a minimum. Occasionally we hear rumors of police overstepping their boundaries, but the mayor's office assures us that things are professionally managed. As for me and my family, we haven't experienced or seen any violence ourselves. I hope things stay that way, because I remember Athens as a nice town overall, though that was a decade ago. If my fellow Georgians turn on each other that way, I'm pretty sure South Carolinians could as well.

I can't imagine what things might be like in Albany - well known for racial strife! I hope dad and mom are okay. I mean, they go to church in Albany - dad works there - working with blacks every day in fact. Could they be like what they say Athens is like less than three months after Atlanta is bombed? Wow -- not a pretty thought as we head into Christmas season.

Debbie did some Christmas shopping at the K-Mart near the hospital. The hospital has worked out a credit system with both K-Mart and Bi-Lo allowing employees to write personal checks against their Hospital account. It's like the old "company store" -- hopefully we won't 'owe our soul to the comp'ny store' as Tennessee Ernie Ford used to sing! She has also begun picking up the rations at that store (though it took a lot of paperwork and several weeks to approve it).

We had put the tree up -- an artificial Debbie inherited from a college roommate before we were married -- on Monday, my Dad's birthday. We'll probably take it down on my birthday in January like we usually do. The one difference this year is that there is no way we'll be with the rest of the family this year -- neither there no here. That makes us all sad. All we can do is pray that everyone is okay.

We made it to Second Pres this week! Prayer meeting went well and there was a great "Christmas feast" prepared for the community. The cooks had called in some favors around town and had "all the fixings" for dinner for over 200 folks (over half visitors from the community). They did say that the supply of natural gas was about to run out and they may have to start using charcoal grills if they can find any. Otherwise, I suppose they'll have to quit serving food. That will be a shame.

This is getting depressing. Perhaps that is because I waited to do this by the headlight lamp -- the car battery is holding out! I suppose I'd better get to bed.

Previous entry: DD Date 1983.12.07
Next entry: DD Date 1983.12.21

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

DD Date 1983.12.07

December 7, 2011

It was a bit strange, but the local veterans of World War II honored the event that brought the United States into the last World War on this, the 42nd anniversary of what until this year had been the worst one-day man-made disaster ever. We had several veterans, most now successful business men and grandparents, that spoke at the community center at noon. Though they had someone in our church as a special speaker tonight, we opted to visit over at nearby Freedom Baptist Church instead. They had set up outside in their parking lot and had a full-fledged rally going on! Some of the local recruiters were even talking about trying to contact Washington - or whatever US military there might be still operating - to join the fight against Russia in what they suspect is an ongoing "World War III." They didn't get much of a reaction from the crowd, though.

The mail service has been cut back to one day per week, with the carriers doing their routes on bicycles, or in some cases motor scooters. Our mail comes on Wednesdays and is mostly notices from the consolidated government offices in Greenville. No mail has come in from outside of South Carolina - not even western North Carolina - in over two months. Some of the smaller retail stores - independent small businesses - have produced mimeographed ads to let everybody know that they still have stuff for those interested in Christmas shopping! Until the loss of electricity the only use of that old technology anyone ever saw was limited production for Sunday School and other church programs.

We found out over the weekend that the house we were going to be moved to won't be ready until spring! I was so hoping to be warming by a fireplace on Christmas Day. We have found out, though, that the wood burns a lot better in our converted heater than the oil did, so I guess we come out okay on that level. And who knows, we might be able to harvest our onions and garlic before we leave.

Facing Christmas not knowing the fate of our families elsewhere is really hard. Travel outside of even the county limits is almost unheard of. My family had a Marine Base nearby Albany that may have been hit, and you can bet Ft. Benning would have been a target. You know it must have been really bad since there has been no word from any government representatives since the attacks. Robbins might be a target as well. I doubt if the roads near there are drivable even if we had the fuel to get to Leesburg. Debbie's parents lived in Rhode Island and may have been traveling home from church in Connecticut when the bombs fell. I wonder if there are targets worthy of nukes in in that area. This is getting depressing. I think its time for a family prayer meeting.

Previous entry: DD Date 1983.12.02
Next entry: DD Date 1983.12.14

Friday, December 2, 2011

DD Date 1983.12.02

December 2, 1983

Another month and we're still alive. It is a bit surprising based on what the scientists from Clemson University are saying on their speaking tours. It seems they have some pretty good scientists over there. Anyway, they have taken to using up valuable fuel traveling around giving talks at community meetings that are being held in auditoriums all over town - and the upstate of South Carolina for that matter.

They tell us that they have been studying the atmosphere on the horizons and have analyzed the chemistry by light refraction and even spectrography to find out just how bad the nuclear attacks were. The biggest fear, scientists agree, was that there would be a nuclear winter that would kill us all within weeks or months due to dust in high atmosphere. But that seems to be only in certain places. They tell us that they see evidence of massive fallout that spread across the center of the country reaching across what is the area a couple of hundred miles north of Greenville - Kentucky and Virginia, for instance. The main culprit, they suppose, is the attempt at stopping the launch of our missiles from silos in Missouri.

The way they see it, the best way to destroy whole cities is with a bomb going off in the air, with very little dust to make radio-active. The smoke caused by the fireballs like those over Columbia, for instance, carried very little actual radiated material. And so, those refugees we've been treating at the hospitals suffer from traumatic injuries and burns, but not much actual radiation sickness. It makes sense, I guess. But its still early.

What this means to us is that we may not freeze to death after all. Besides, this old house has bad insulation and we'll be moving soon. I'm going to miss Nanny though. She has become a grandmother to the children. I hope there will be some kind neighbors in Dunean. Debbie was shown the house they've picked out for us. It's within walking distance from the hospital and they have contracted with the city to have a school bus to transport employees if they need transportation (like in bad weather or late at night). She brought a Polaroid snapshot of the house home the other day! It's got a fireplace! It looks like it has a good flat lot for a garden as well. A lot better than the slope out back of the house now.

It's hard to believe, but we got advertisements in the mail on Tuesday. We stopped getting "US Mail" soon after the attacks. The postal workers, having nothing else to do, have pretty much stayed on the job but they don't work but about two days a week. Nothing has been coming from outside of the county anyway - except for a few notices from Clemson and Wofford. Those schools are acting much like Bob Jones and Furman in Greenville -- as local support centers. They are helping spread news by sometimes literally running packets between Clemson, Greenville and Spartanburg. I think some of the athletes are getting training that way! Well, anyway, K-Mart and Sears had mailers already printed back in the Summer, I think, because they got them out in plenty of time for Christmas shopping.

I really doubt if there is going to be a lot of that. The banks have not reopened, though the mayor's office says that a system of accounting using printouts from September is allowing for local businesses to transfer funds by paper transactions. Personal checks have become 'legal tender' now that the money supply has dwindled. They call it 'marginal' banking -- meaning the banks only have a small amount of actual cash on hand. It is assumed that the Federal Reserve banks in Atlanta and Charlotte were destroyed, and I'd suspect that the mint in DC are dust now. It's sad -- the attacks came so fast I doubt if either president Reagan (he was in New York about to make a speech at the UN, or George Bush survived. I wonder which cabinet member survived -- if any.

My goodness, I need to start getting more sleep on Fridays. I'm already tired and the patrol car just pulled up outside to bring me to work. Well, I've started rambling as I write anyway. Maybe the weekend will be slow.

Previous entry: DD Date 1983.11.24
Next entry: DD Date 1983.12.07

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

DD Date 1983.11.24


Thanksgiving Day
November 24, 1983

Well, I had been wondering whether we would be celebrating Thanksgiving this year since things went so bad for the nation two months ago. But Mayor Workman proclaimed the regular national holiday should go ahead 'on schedule.' And there have been community events planned at local schools as old fashioned grills and barbecue pits have been prepared since November 1st. The bulletin boards at Bi-Lo and K-Mart have had the notations up for two weeks, inviting everyone that can to bring dishes for a feast to be remembered even as we head into what may be our last winter on earth!

Well, that was my thoughts as I was getting in the church van to go to Second Church last evening anyway. Debbie actually had the day off at the hospital -- which means she'll be working Christmas! -- so we all were all together at the annual thanksgiving prayer service at the church. Since an elder at the church is in the printing business, church literature has given him business that otherwise is slim. Of course, with no new supplies available, local sources are going to have to be stretched. I'm clipping the program to this journal because the backside has the "first thanksgiving proclamation" in the Plymouth Colony (1623). My wife's ancestors, John Alden and William Brewster were there to here it proclaimed.

The service went well even in candlelight. The church had its usual community meal, so many non-members stayed for our service. There were many stories of surviving without the niceties of electricity and running water, as well as stories of kindnesses offered to and from neighbors unknown just two months ago. Local business men offered services to members and others to provide everything from firewood to digging wells to get us through until some level of services can be restored. City and county council members were making the rounds at churches coordinating plans to get the people they represent through the coming winter - which some say will be severe.

This morning I dug the pit a little deeper and cooked up extra green-beans to share at the dinner being held on the Berea Elementary School campus right between Bi-Lo and K-Mart. It turned out to be quite an event. It turns out that the mayor pro temp had chose "our" event to attend. Mayor Workman had attended the much larger event on the campus of Bob Jones University. I had considered catching a bus over to BJ with the family, but I have really started to connect locally so we went to our local event. Open pit barbecue was the 'main course' though both rotisserie and deep-fried turkey were available in smaller amounts. Bi-Lo had made sure there was a supply of cranberry sauce, but the managers rationed it out - opening cans periodically instead of all at once. It turned out that many people are fine without the traditional sauce. There may even be enough to get through Christmas this way.

After the feast, there were games and such reminiscent of the nineteenth century. I am writing this even as it is beginning to get dark outside. We had our oil heater converted to a wood-burner and have a supply of wood that may last about a month if we don't heat more than the two bedrooms on either side of it - and only when it gets below 50 degrees or so. Sweaters and coats will have to do before that. It has turned out to be a good holiday. Only 31 days until Christmas!

Previous entry: DD Date 1983.11.16
Next entry: DD Date 1983.12.02

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

New Editors Guide to 1983: Doomsday

1983: Doomsday is an online collaborative alternate history timeline located at the Alternate History Wiki. Originally posted by an anonymous user in 2006, the timeline was later adopted by Sven Kunz (who went by the user name Xi'Reney) and shortly thereafter made into an open timeline, where anyone could contribute. The timeline is the largest and most active timeline on the wiki and is known across the online alternate history community.


1983: Doomsday world map.


I was once an active contributor to 1983: Doomsday shared world timeline. It was a big part of my life, especially during law school when I would actually take time off from studying to write articles on the AH Wiki.  You can see a list of some of the articles most important to me here.  In fact even though Alternate History Weekly Update is about alternate history and its fans in general, there is little doubt that I am a still a huge fan.

So I highly encourage you to think about contributing to the timeline. Be warned: if you are looking for a place where your imagination and creativity can have free reign, than 1983: Doomsday is NOT the place for you.

You need to remember that the Alternate History Wiki is not Wikipedia, a place where anyone can edit. This timeline has seen the creative contributions of dozens of editors and safeguards have been put in place to protect their work. Meanwhile, long-standing collaboration among editors has created a sub-culture on the wiki. This sub-culture includes some of the most active editors on the wiki and many of them are administrators with the power to delete articles and block users. So it is generally not a good idea to annoy them, especially Lordganon, scourge of noobs.

So what can a new editor do if they wish to contribute to this timeline without annoying the established community of editors? Well if you follow these guidelines you should easily become a respected member of the community.

Read the timeline

Alright this seems obvious, but you would be surprised how often it appears that new editors failed to take into account how massive the 1983: Doomsday world really is. There are hundreds of articles with more being created every day. Check out the main category if you do not believe me and do not forget to keep your eye on the WCRB Newshour page which will inform of new content updates to articles.

Do not feel that you are ready to dive in and start creating new articles just after reading a few of the major ones. Spend some time perusing over the articles. Not only will it be entertaining, but you will soon realize how much relevant information you will need to consider in your future articles.

The problem is that there is so much content that it really is unlikely that you can read it all.  The best thing you can do is read the primary articles to the timeline along with those articles focusing on the people, subjects or geographical location you hope to focus on.

Read and understand the rules

The timeline is governed by two sets of rules: the Editorial Guidelines and QSS and QAA (a policy borrowed from Ill Bethisad community). In summary, they outline what is done to prevent new information that contradicts canon or else is just implausible. Despite terms such as “guidelines” and “concepts”, both are strictly enforced as the laws of the timelines. You need to read and understand them because ignoring them will just make things more difficult for you as you try to become accepted by the community.

You should also read and understand the rules of the AH wiki as a whole, since they obviously are important too.  Not following those makes it really difficult to contribute to the 1983: Doomsday universe.

Introduce yourself

By now you should have a good grasp of the story and the rules of editing. But before you edit, you should introduce yourself to the community on the main talk page.  There is some debate about whether this is necessary, but I still recommend that you do so.

Why? How would you feel if some stranger walked into your home and without permission began rearranging your furniture? Now consider how it would feel if the articles you spent days building were suddenly remade by some stranger who just discovered the timeline that very day? You would likely be pissed, so think about how another editor will feel..

To prevent enraging a veteran editor, go to the main talk page and introduce yourself. Tell the community why you like this timeline and why you think you would be a good contributor. You would be surprise at how welcoming the community could be when someone acts as how they would in real life when meeting new people.  Also now that they know you, it makes my next guideline that much easier to do.

Ask before you edit

The greatest difference between Wikipedia and 1983: Doomsday is that the timeline does not ask you to be bold. So if you see an article that you wish to contribute to, do NOT immediately start editing it. Find out who the caretaker of the article is and ask permission to edit.

Usually the caretaker is either the creator of the article or else whoever is currently updating and revising it. You can find out who they are by checking the history section of the article in question.  If you wish to help, leave a message on their talk page or else leave a message on the article talk page. Share your ideas or questions and always offer to collaborate with them. Be polite and respectful, regardless of whatever your qualification may be, even veteran editors do this.  If they say no, respect their decision, leave the offer open to help and then move on.  If they yes...

Research before you create

I cannot stress this enough. Poor research means poor alternate history in general. So when the time comes to contribute to an existing article or writing your own article, make sure you do your research. There is no excuse to not do this. The Internet is a treasure trove of easily accessible information. It is also not difficult to search through the articles of 1983: Doomsday to make sure your new article does not contradict canon.  Do not forget about the other editors as well.  If you ask them if your idea contradicts canon, they will let you know.

Trust me, a poorly researched article will be very obvious to the veteran editors and they will be less likely to work with someone who is not putting any real effort into his/her contributions.

Conclusion

If you follow my advice, your time as a “noob” will be gratefully short. Nevertheless, if you learned anything from this guide it should be this: 1983: Doomsday is a team project. You have to be willing to work as a team player, or else you are going to get kicked off the team. No one is about to trust the rookie until they can see what they can do. Remember that before you start editing.

* * *

Mitro is founder, editor and contributor of Alternate History Weekly Update. When he is not busy writing about his passion for alternate history, he spends his time working as a licensed attorney in the state of Illinois and dreams of being a published author himself one day.

DD Date 1983.11.16

November 16, 1983

I won the "lottery" at work. The prize was a the stack of newspapers that have collected since the war began. It turned out that the News and the Piedmont cut back production to a few days a week using back up generators and what supplies they have on hand. The paper is a lot smaller and doesn't cover much more than local stuff. I guess there is no way of knowing what is happening anywhere else. The last news from outside of South Carolina is the Sunday paper of September 25th - which is thicker than the rest of the papers put together - didn't mention any reason why Russia might attack us. It was a total surprise. There had been that mess with the Korean Airliner, but the coverage of President Reagan's handling of that, including released synopses of his speech that he was going to make on the 26th, had seemed to be put things in perspective.

Most of the news since then has been about how the cities and the counties of the upstate have come together to work through the crisis. No one seems to have power apart from places with diesel generators and their is very little diesel in tanks. The pipeline that runs from Texas right through the county has stopped running. Trucks have delivered gasoline and diesel from Anderson County storage tanks but have yet to go back for more - if there is more. Getting fuel out of the pipeline is the next problem, but authorities are working on solutions.

Having Bi-Lo headquartered in Mauldin turned out to be a blessing from God. In fact, the Frank Outlaw family - part of whom are members at Second Pres - has worked from the beginning to assure that no one goes hungry. The other super market chains have followed suit, mostly by joint efforts for now, to distribute what they have on their shelves as evenly as possible. The Farmer's Market has become a major player as well. The motto 'Eat local and Ride a bike' has become a way of life!

Some news has come from around the area by way of refugees that keep coming into Greenville. We know from them that at least Columbia and Augusta, the Savannah Nuclear Plant and Charlotte were hit with nuclear bombs. No refugees from Atlanta have come into South Carolina, but many people say they saw the mushroom cloud over the horizon. The pulse wiped out all communication right before most of the bombs hit, so we don't know much more than eyewitness reports. Travel between even Asheville and Greenville has been slow, but we do know that Asheville survived. Some sort of Black Muslim group has taken over down in Anderson according to people who have escaped from down there. I don't know how much to believe about that, but the paper says that some state troopers have moved to secure the fuel storage tanks in Anderson county.

I'm a little worried about Jimmy. He had been more or less been free of seizures, but we had him on medicine to keep them from occurring. The doctors say he has probably outgrown them, but we don't know exactly what to do now that the medicine is no longer available. We pretty much cannot go to the doctors down in Anderson who had been treating him, so we are beginning to bring him to the Greenville doctors at the hospital where Debbie works. So far their advice is more or less "learn to live with it."

Well, Debbie has left for work and the kids are beginning to wake up, so I guess I'd better get to my parenting duties and get some breakfast together. That will be measured oatmeal with a splash of canned milk (we get two cans of it each week but I don't know how long we can keep getting it). I'll open a jar of peaches - not a can, for those are long gone - these are locally 'canned.' More and more of the rations are already coming from local farmers working with Bi-Lo and the FEMA folk still willing to work for an invisible government they haven't heard from in over a month. My guess is they live off of the stuff they are in charge of distributing. They know that at least they won't starve.

Previous entry: DD Date 1983.11.08
Next entry: DD Date 1983.11.24

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

DD Date 1983.11.08

November 8, 1983

Well, I got the onions and garlic planted just in time to find out that we'll be leaving the crop to the next tenant in this place. I guess I have to be thankful that Debbie works for the county hospital system because they told her last Friday that we'll be moving before Christmas into a house close to the hospital. With fuel at a premium - even the cops are beginning to ride motor scooters - that's right motor scooters, NOT motorcycles. I don't know where they got the things, but they get great gas mileage! Well anyway, as I started to say, I guess with public transportation now running on rations, its harder and harder to get people to the workplace.

We'll be moving to the Dunean area two blocks from the hospital. Although the textile plant still runs a few days a week, their backup generators can't keep up with what they used to produce. And the market is gone anyway. Finished fabric is now being sold locally and then - who knows. We'll have a K Mart AND a Bi-Lo in our back yard! And business is booming in the health industry - I can't believe I used that term in time of war!

Meanwhile, I took time out this afternoon to take a bus over to Bob Jones to visit Chuck Creager, my wife's half-brother. He's studying to be a physicist - a science guy where I'm a math guy. We get along okay, but I worry about him because he is so close to his parents who we have no idea whether they're dead or alive. Debbie's full sister, her step-sister and other half-brother all live up north. Chuck's brother Jimmy is only 10. The sisters live with their husbands. IF they survived, that is. Life at BJ is surprisingly stable six weeks after the attacks. Chuck told me that Doctor Bob and his dad set up a tiny city there on campus. I guess other schools are doing the same thing with dorm students trapped at school with no idea if they'll ever get home. Like mine, the 'yard' at the school has become a farm. The school also has its own power plant! So it has a huge advantage as long as their kerosene holds out anyway.

Speaking of kerosene, I've heard talk that people are starting to figure out ways to make vegetable oil work in place of some of the heavier fuels. I don't know if any of this will help in time for this winter, though. I talked to a guy on Saturday who is converting space heaters like ours into wood burners. That's good news -- we're down to about five gallons in the tank. I hope the house we're moving to has a fireplace! That's the real way to go.

I've found that with Debbie working opposite shifts the only time I can write in this journal is at night before she gets home and after the kids are asleep. And so, after I parked the car, I had a great idea! For as long as the battery lasts I have light in a jury-rigged lamp using the headlight hardwired on the kitchen cabinet. A friend of mine has told me that I might be able to hook the cars alternator up to a bicycle to charge the battery, but I haven't tried that yet. I have taken it out of the car and put it in the bedroom, though, cause I've seen cars stripped for their parts right in people's yards -- a lot of the time while they slept!

Previous entry: DD Date 1983.11.01
Next entry: DD Date 1983.11.16

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

DD Date 1983.11.01

November 1, 2011

I cannot believe it, but the presence of law enforcement on regular patrol, and usually within sight of each other, did not prevent mischief last night after dark. It got dark 'earlier' by clocks that were turned back to standard time on Sunday - for those who have running clocks, that is. So far, our battery operated clocks are doing well, but I doubt if we'll be getting any batteries in our stockings this Christmas.

Speaking of the holidays, I guess last night was the beginning of the 'holiday season' even though we have little to look forward to this year. According to what mayor Workman said on Saturday, Duke Power company was hit hard by both the electromagnetic pulse and actual bombs launched at it. I guess the Russians had some conventional warheads they had to get rid of and figured nuclear plants can do enough damage just by being destroyed without wasting expensive nukes on them. We have received refugees from Oconee county, though, that were checked for radiation exposure since there was some leakage when the plant was hit. Nothing serious, apparently, but no one has gone BACK to that area since the bombs fell.

Before it got dark last night we actually had a few trick-or-treaters stop by. Most of them were from the neighborhoods around us, and Nanny had some candy she had stored away that she was able to give them when we sent them next door. The boys wanted to go out, but I talked them into staying home on account of the baby. They love their baby sister! We had a special program on Sunday evening at church where they were told the true meaning of 'Halloween' and what happened with Martin Luther on that day in 1517. There wasn't much candy there either, but Jimmy had a lot of questions about the 'repper nation' which we were able to answer.

I almost stayed home for work when I saw patrol cars leaving their appointed rounds to respond to calls for help due to Halloween mischief. However, when one of the patrol cars pulled up in front of the house 'on schedule,' I was assured that no real dangerous characters were on the loose. Still, I went to work not having slept a wink last evening. Nanny came over to watch the children after Debbie went to work this morning (she works from 9 to 9) so I could get a few hours sleep. She'll be home in a few minutes and I sure hope the kids all stay asleep because I can hardly keep my eyes open now. I'll be asleep before Debbie can unpack her stuff.

Well, I told myself I wouldn't use up the candles, but I had to have a light on or I would fall asleep! There is a car pulling into the driveway and if it's not Debbie we're in trouble. I'd better put this pad down and make sure.

Previous entry: DD Date 1983.10.25
Next entry: DD Date 1983.11.08

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

DD Date 1983.10.25

October 25, 1983

Whew, what a month this has been. One month ago today we lost all power and water at our house. The emergency systems at the hospital and the nursing home have barely kept up with the demand. I've heard that 'nuclear winter' may set in soon and we are low in fuel oil. This is definitely a time to turn to God because we surely can't pull ourselves out of this mess.

Mayor Workman has been going around to community meeting places, like the auditorium at Berea Elementary, telling us that there appears to be no communication so far from any federal agencies. The many of the local federal employees have quit by now, though those that have remained are working tirelessly with his office to provide the manpower to orderly provide essential goods like food and water. He told us as well that available sources of fuel in Anderson County are being utilized to keep relief crews busy throughout the upstate.

Personal vehicles, though, began to be abandoned two weeks ago. Praise God we always fill up on Fridays or our car would not have lasted as long as it has. I parked it for good on Sunday as the guage was below "E" after traveling over 300 miles back and forth to work. The major said that buses and taxis are taking priority for fuel, and that they are running regular routes during the day. For night and evening shifts, though, arrangements have to be made with law enforcement to get to work. A taxi picked me up for work on Sunday, but I walked the almost four miles home the next morning. The driver of the cab did not charge me - I guess the county or my boss is paying him - but he gladly accepted the dollar bill I gave him as a tip. I won't be doing that much more though because our cash is almost gone.

Already services at Second Pres are being cut back to just Sunday morning and early evening on Wednesday. The gymnasium, where we normally eat a meal before prayer meeting, is being changed into a kind of 'refugee center' for members and neighborhood folk alike. The kitchen at the church has so far been supplied with natural gas enough that it is able to cook a meal a day for the refugees that are staying in the gym. We talked to Casey Johnson Sunday and found out that their family had already started taking the church van. He said they would make sure it came by to pick us up tomorrow for prayer meeting. Though the children and I have been attending prayer meetings at John Calvin and Freedom churches, I like the idea of praying with my church family - especially now. Besides, even if it is just gravy and biscuits and hot Pepsi, the meal prepared on Wednesdays is one meal we don't have to cook on the pit in the back yard.

With a mention of our back yard, I guess it is good to point out that on my days off last week I got most of it dug up and prepped. I took the ashes of the grass I was able to burn as fuel in the pit and poured them back on top of the soil. I hope this helps it grow the crops I put in the spring. In the meantime, I am planting onions and garlic to harvest after the snow disappears! These things are not our favorite, but the planting season for everything else is past! Hopefully, though, Nanny's garden will be producing well in the next few weeks. Well, I had better go see if I can help with lunch - make that "dinner" since it will be our main meal today.

Previous entry: DD Date 1983.10.19
Next entry: DD Date 1983.11.01

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

DD Date 1983.10.19

Wednesday, Oct. 20, 1983

Jimmy asked me on Monday when he could start back to school - for him kindergarten at Berea First Baptist Church. Since that church is out of the way, I promised him that I would check the public bulletin board down at Bi-Lo to see if the church had a bus picking up children. It has become obvious in the last 25 days that no gasoline or diesel is readily available to those cars like ours that don't have electronics that help them run. After I had started the fire in the pit in the back yard, Jimmy and I walked down to Bi-Lo to see what notes had been posted there.

I had not been surprised that the church had suspended kindergarten for a while, but I saw many new notices had been posted since last week. One of particular notice was that a man with an old pickup and some cleaned-out 55-gallon drum was offering water from the Saluda River as long as he had a way to transport it. I assume that he has had little luck in getting any more gas than the rest of us with running vehicles. Anyway, I put a note that I would be interested in a barrel.

Pastor Settle told us Sunday evening that the mayor's office had formed what they were calling a "provisional government" for at least Greenville and Laurens Counties. Towns on the borders with Greenville county had begun to work with the major's office as well. County Council, which oversees where we live, had essentially merged with City Council though none of the politicians seem to have given up their offices. Word is that the plans are in the works to take over the Bell Tower Shopping Center across from the health department. It's nice to see that the law enforcement of the city and county have been very visible since that day the bombs fell.

Well, I started digging up the back yard with a hoe on Monday after we got back from the visit to the bulletin board. I talked over it over with our neighbor Nannie Ferguson who has had her garden of tomatoes and green beans behind her house every year since we moved here. I hope to hear from a guy who makes mulch from yard waste about how I can build my soil using clippings from mowing the yard last month. I have read in a book in the library downtown about how to change that gasoline motor into a generator - makes sense, if I can get all the stuff from Radio Shack to make it work. I think I may be able to at least keep the car battery charged that way. It would be nice to have some electricity in the house. I think only the hospitals and police stations have reliable power these days.

Speaking of the hospital, we started acting as a clearing house for refugees over at Beth Eden. We cleared at least half the beds of those not needing special care - you know, old enough but not quite 'sick enough.' I have been asked to check on a few that happen to live in the Berea area with families now having to take them back to live with them. I think its mostly those who had been expecting those social security checks on the 3rd. Local administrators of social security have told us that they cannot 'write checks' themselves, but hope to 'hear from Washington' soon. Somehow, I think we're on our own for a long time to come.

Previous entry: DD Date 1983.10.15
Next entry: DD Date 1983.10.25

Saturday, October 15, 2011

DD Date 1983.10.15

Saturday, Oct. 15, 1983

Things have really been hard around here, much harder than I could have imagined. We have survived, but it is starting to get cold and I am afraid that the much feared "nuclear winter" is setting in early. Though our heater is gravity fed, it has been giving us problems. It is hard to get in contact with service people in a world without telephones.

Since I last wrote we have changed our work schedules to keep from traveling two ways every day. I still have to work nights, but it has moved to Friday through Monday, while Debbie's schedule is now Tuesday through Friday day-shift on new 12-hour shifts. Our schedules were adjusted by co-operation from the administrators of both the hospital and the nursing home by the beginning of this past week. It became a problem as we knew we did not have enough gasoline to make double trips. In fact I may have to talk to my church about my projected ministry plans if I cannot travel for pulpit supply and no churches open anyway. Pastor Settle says that he has talked with mayor Workman about the transportation problems as well. Word is personal cars may be a thing of the past before long. So far we have made it to Sunday morning worship but the children and I have visited over at nearby John Calvin Presbyterian (not PCA) and Freedom Baptist Churches the past two Wednesday evenings.

The food we got on the 26th held out until this past Wednesday, Oct. 12, when I talked to the pastor at Freedom Baptist about his church's situation. He said that they have pooled their resources and are taking care of each other pretty well right now. Since tomorrow may be the last chance I get before we run out of gasoline, I am going to see what we're doing about the church's needs. Thursday morning I stood in line at Bi-Lo to get rations for the next two weeks. They also had seed that they were giving to families who could begin gardens. I plan to start in the digging up our back yard on Monday. Planting will have to wait till spring - if it comes - and I survive the winter.

Well, it will be dark in a couple of hours, so I am going to try to get the heater to fire up. It is good when it works, and if we have to we can crowd into our bedroom and heat only it and the bathroom. The water in the tub is gone now and I am not sure if the plastic jugs I got in rations will last till next time. We don't use the bathroom for anything except storage right now, but I have talked to neighbors about rain collection systems and we should have something set up soon.

I wonder when anyone from outside South Carolina is going to show up to help us. I mean, Reagan talked about government 'being the problem' but if it weren't for what Carter started with the Federal Emergency Management we might be ruled by gangs by now. It is not that we had actual employees of FEMA in town, but the federal and state employees operating offices in Greenville seem to have at least had contingency plans in place. If the gardens don't work, I don't know how long 'government help' is going to last.

Well, now Debbie is calling me to come help with the boys. Maybe I can write something on Tuesday after Debbie goes to work.

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Previous entry: DD Date 1983.10.01
Next entry: DD Date 1983.10.19

Monday, October 10, 2011

Personal Log, DD date 1983.10.01

Preface: A personal point of view is probably quite rare in this genre, but I am going to give it a try. For as long as the readers can bear it, I will present what might have been. Personally biased to allow my own survival - and that of my immediate family, I will nevertheless attempt to present a picture compatible with what I have written in the article entitled "Piedmont Republic (1983: Doomsday)." Join me now as I revisit that alternate life in the post-apocalyptic world known as "1983: Doomsday."

Saturday, Oct. 1, 1983

Wow! What a week this has been! I am sitting here on the porch with a pad and a pencil after being cooped up in the house for most of the week. The light is better, since we have not had electricity in our house ever since last Sunday evening when - excuse the expression - "all hell let loose."

The fact that we are all alive now means that previous doomsayers were only partially right. There seem to be pockets of civilization even after an 'all-out' nuclear war which seems to have begun last weekend between the United States and Russia. It had looked like President Reagan had cooled down, for he had addressed the Soviets in an address earlier in September and was scheduled to address the UN last Monday (9/26). Something obviously went wrong, though, and the Soviets sent what the panicked newscasters were saying 'all' their nukes at the United States.

Since no one has heard anything from outside of the upstate, I can only assume that the US government as we know it is greatly hindered at this time. I expect any day now, though, that calls will be made to call up able-bodied men to fight the Soviet invasion. So, before that happens, I am going to write down what has happened here in Greenville so far. Maybe someday this tablet will be worth something.

The boys - 'Jimmy' and 'Tim' - were already in their pajamas last Sunday (Sept. 25) and playing in the den (which had become their bedroom earlier in the year) and I was rocking Rebecca while watching '60 Minutes' for my weekly fix of important news of the world. And then, the unthinkable was announced. It was around 7:45 pm and the announcers were saying a MAJOR nuclear attack was being made on the United States. There was no real way of knowing what the extent of the attack was going to be, but all major cities and military bases were suspected targets. Reports were that President Reagan (in New York) and VP Bush (in Washington) were being evacuated and that a counter attack had been launched.

Emergency instructions included unplugging everything and filling the bathtub with water. They recommended turning on portable radios, though, for further instructions. By all means, they said, stay indoors unless authorities call for evacuation. I immediately did as they said in anticipation of what they called an "Electromagnetic Pulse" - what nukes can do if exploded in space. I like science fiction, so I had some idea of what this might be like. As the water was running in the tub, I got a telephone call - it was around eight o'clock and Debbie was calling from work to see if I had heard what was happening. Since she said the phones were 'jammed' we reluctantly said goodbye and I hoped to see her around midnight.

As they had said on tv, the lights did go out around 8:15 and soon after that rumblings like earthquakes were felt all over the area. The closest blasts were in Oconee county, but I don't think it was a nuke. To the south, though, there had been several rising clouds just over the horizon. I assume it was Columbia and Augusta - and maybe the Savanah Nuclear facilities. I guess those reactors were more of a threat than Oconee. Up I-85 to the northeast, it looked like Charlotte has also been a target. I wonder how many targets were hit.

When Jimmy, just 5 years old, asked me what was happening, I told him that bad guys had attacked our country and made the lights go out. Timothy, now 3, as usual resistant to bedtime, began to cry because there was no night light. I let all three of the children in bed with me. I had tried to call my parents in Albany, Ga., but had found out that the phones had died when the lights went out. When midnight came and went, I became worried about Debbie, but assumed she would be home eventually (sometimes people don't show up to work even in good times). I was right, she worked a double that night.


As I had feared, I found out that the water supply to the house had been disrupted. I had let the toilet fill up over night and when I flushed it, no water came in to the tank. I decided that until we could go outside we would 'flush' the toilet with a single bucket of water from the tub only when absolutely necessary. Earlier today, we finally ventured outside to set up a makeshift 'bathroom' in the woods behind the house. Most of the water in the tub has been reserved for drinking and sponge baths until we can get utilities restored.

Debbie got home on Monday after being given the night off. It turned out that emergency response protocol put a high priority on the availability of medical personnel, so police escorts were being provided after a satisfactory schedule had been worked out. Debbie returned to work on Tuesday evening. The officer that escorted her had told me that I would be escorted to the nursing home for my shift Monday night. He waited on the curb as Debbie entered the house, and then escorted me as I drove our car down to Bi-Lo to get what I was told was our 'rations.' According to the policeman, fallout coming up from Atlanta was already being detected by noon on Monday, so only one of us went to stand in line at the grocery store.

Our car is an old one, so it did not suffer from the fate of the new electronic systems. The radio, with its transistors, is useless, but then, the local radio stations suffered a lot from the 'EMP' that sent most of us 'back into the dark ages'. Local representatives from the federal government seem to have had a plan in place to secure the stores with some sort of police action. However, all the stores did not fare as well as we found out as we got in line at Bi-Lo. I saw evidence of vandalism, though, which undoubtedly was the reason of some of the sirens I heard the night before. While I was at the store, though, there was a commotion as some ruffians pushed past the guards at the door and rushed in to 'help themselves' to the goods inside. It was a shame to see people risk imprisonment when people were there to help us get our share.

Loaded with food and toiletries I drove back to the house to unpack. With the cupboards filled, I went by myself to K-Mart to by some hardware and stuff with a little cash we had on hand. Unlike at Bi-Lo, which had actually refused my check, the folks at K-Mart wanted money, which was fine with me, because we are on a budget and can not afford bouncing any checks. Of course, by Thursday all the banks had closed anyway. The line had been so long at the banks on Monday that I decided to wait 'til the next day. I figured I could go by on the way home from work. American Federal Bank prides itself in customer service so I figured 'no problem.' Anyway, it was almost dark outside when I got away from K-Mart. The shelves in that big store were almost empty any way. To its credit, though, there was no 'price gouging' as the clerks worked with paper and pencil to write up receipts.

At the house, we opened cans of 'Beanie Weanies' and drank some tepid Pepsi from the rations. We would not be able to heat anything until it was safe to go outside. Earlier today, five days later, I made the first fire in a pit I made in the back yard. The ground in the woods was still covered with dead wood in the underbrush, so our first hot meal on the 'camp stove' went well! The boys thought it was neat, though Vienna sausages make really awful hotdogs!

I don't know how long we will be able to continue working so far from the house. Though we have served as a car pool for some of the neighbors who work near the hospital, the gas won't last long. Authorities at the hospital assure us that as medical personnel we do have access to some gasoline reserves, but that won't hold out for long. Apparently the pumping stations between Greenville and Texas are all inoperative. The tanks in Anderson are being secured, but I hear they are having trouble with some local people claiming that resource as their own. I wonder how long the gasoline will hold out.

On the way home Tuesday morning, I had been able to get only $40 from the bank even though we had over $400 in it. They told me they wouldn't be able to give out much more cash until getting more from Charlotte or Atlanta -- both feared destroyed. Debbie says refugees are starting to come in from Columbia and Charlotte, and Atlanta most certainly was hit bad. It looks like what cash we have now will have to last. I wonder how long we'll be able to write checks?

With the threat of fallout over our heads, the rest of the week was spent indoors except to go and come from work. Talk is that Beth Eden Nursing Home will be starting to take in refugees soon, but there are no beds free. I don't know how that is going to work, but it doesn't sound good to me. Well, I'm going to go in and get cleaned up so we can drive to church tomorrow. I hope we can keep going there, but it is four miles -- Down Hill -- so a car is almost a must to get home! Oh well, God knows our hearts.

* * *

Monday, September 26, 2011

Interview of Rev. Col. J. Henry Martin

As promised here is the winner of the Oral History of Doomsday Contest.  The below interview is set in the fictional 1983: Doomsday universe.  Today we celebrate the actions of Stanislav Petrov, whose refusal to follow his orders prevented a computer glitch from starting World War III.  Now without further ado, it is time to hear from Rev. Col. J. Henry Martin...

*  *  *

The following is based on what I personally may have experienced in the wake of Doomsday. The interviewer is Bob Jones IV, who in OTL actually was a journalist for World Magazine in the 1990's. I have not been able to locate him since 2008, though.

The interviewer:
Robert "Bob" R. Jones, IV, is a publisher and radio commentator presently living in Traveler's Rest, Republic of Piedmont. He is the son of Bob Jones III, the chancellor of Bob Jones University where his younger brother, Stephen is the president. However, Jones is better known as a legislature and one-term governor of the Republic. Leaving office in 2010, Jones returned to publishing as Managing Editor of ''World Magazine,'' a monthly News source serving the states of the Appalachian Alliance. He also speaks daily from the studios of WFBC, a radio station heard throughout the state and as far away as Asheville.

Today's guest:
The Rev. Col. J. Henry Martin, retired chaplain of the Piedmont Armed Forces. Rev. Martin now serves as Pastor of Calvary Presbyterian Church, located in Greenville County near Traveler's Rest. Martin is a graduate of Bob Jones University, having received his Masters of Divinity there in 1980. Martin's undergraduate degree is from the now destroyed University of Georgia at Athens, with family believed to be living in the state of Neonotia.

The interview was recorded in the church office of Calvery Presbyterian Church on September 13, 2011 for broadcast on the 28th anniversary of the Soviet attacks that nearly destroyed America on Sunday, September 25, 1983.

Jones: Thank you, Pastor, for allowing my crew and myself into your busy schedule.

Martin: The pleasure is all mine, Governor, I was disappointed when you decided to leave politics. And you can call me Henry.

Jones: Please, call me Bob, that chapter of my life is past. I think the Lord would have me just where I am now. But let's get to the interview, going back to that fateful day almost 28 years ago. Hard memories for all of us, but every year fewer are willing to speak of those trying times.

Martin: My story is boring beside yours, Gov.. I mean Bob. But those days are hard to forget. I had been working nights at the old Beth Eden Nursing Home, but I had most weekends off to allow me to preach in search for a call ...

Jones: Remind our listeners of how that works for Presbyterians.

Martin: Yes, as a Presbyterian, the local Presbytery - that's the leadership of all the churches of the PCA in the state or region - and my local Church in particular oversaw my search for a pastorate in the region. I was preaching about once a month all over the state of South Carolina.

Jones: So it is conceivable that you may have been in Columbia that night when the bombs fell.

Martin: Well, yes. The Lord was good, at least to me. I still ache recalling the certain death of some of the people that I had had the pleasure of serving in the low country.

Jones: So, tell us about your family, starting with how it was back in 1983.

Martin: Yes, my wife and I had celebrated our sixth anniversary in August, and her 29th birthday only a week before, just a day after our oldest son, Jimmy, celebrated his fifth birthday on Saturday. Children from Second Presbyterian Church, where we were members, and from kindergarden at First Baptist of Berea, where he had begun just weeks earlier, had a great time. I hope that the childhood memories of that party helped during that dreadful time.

Jones: So, you were 30 years old at the time, right? With three children.

Martin: Yes, two boys and a baby girl - Jim, Tim, and Rebecca. Little Rebecca, named after her grandmothers, was fifteen months old. That night I was putting the children to bed when the lights went out around 8:30.

Jones: And your wife ...?

Martin: She was at work as a nurse working at Greenville Memorial Hospital. She worked evenings and sometimes had to work on the weekends. She had the car and was half-way across town when the world changed forever.

Jones: Was the car operative after the EMP?

Martin: Yes, the Lord was good to us that way. I can't recall just what model, but I'm thinking it was a mid-seventies Ford. It had a simple ignition system, but lost its radio that night. However, we didn't see my wife Debbie until the next night.

Jones: I understand the hospitals were on emergency alert nonstop starting the next day.

Martin: Yes, my wife's problem was that no one showed up to relieve her that night. It took the police to find and persuade willing medical personnel to come to work on the 26th. Then the police had to escort her to our house to assure her safety. The first refugees from the Columbia area began to arrive in town by late Monday.

Jones: So what about your job? You said you worked at a nursing home.

Martin: Yes, and it was really sad what happened with most of those residents.

Jones: Can you tell us about it?

Martin: Well, as the hospitals were filling up, beds were needed for the severely injured. Before too long, we were having to discharge many of the healthier residents to make room for those in need of 24 hour attention. By winter, the terminal cases were also being transferred to homes that were available. There was.. there was..

Jones: I know its hard, even now, a quarter century later. But times were desperate.

Martin: I am sure families that could barely get by would agree with you. I quit my job in February to take care of our children while my wife worked 12 hour shifts at the hospital. We were moved to within two blocks of the hospital by the hospital administration in March of 1984.

Jones: So, you were an ordained minister, but out of work ...

Martin: No, I was "licensed" in lieu of a call. And since travel was almost impossible, churches tended to either keep their present pastors or consolidate with those that had one. Associate Pastors in some of the bigger churches began to fill the pulpits and accept calls to smaller churches.

Jones: Okay, so what did you do? Did your wife continue her career?

Martin: Well, we had hoped I would have a church soon, and then we found out we were expecting our fourth child.

Jones: You hadn't planned this, right?

Martin: No, times were hard, for sure, but then, the common easy 'birth control' available soon disappeared. We were own our honor, trying to time things right ...

Jones: Uh, yes ...

Martin: Sorry, too much information.

Jones: Perfectly alright, I've got several nieces, nephews and such living in town. My brother Stephen and his family, and then there's those out of town.

Martin: That's right, you're a bachelor.

Jones: Yep. No BJ the 5th on the radar.
Anyway, so your wife had to quit work?

Martin: Yes, just short of the first anniversary of Doomsday, actually. She was glad to get out of the high pressure job at the hospital anyway. I began to find odd jobs around town, and then my wife got hired at a doctor's office that serviced Bob Jones University.

Jones: Oh yes, my mother used to take Stephen and I there for check ups. Didn't your wife work the University hospital some when you were in school?

Martin: Right. And after she began at the doctor's office she sometimes helped out there. All four of our children were born there, you know?

Jones: Even the last one?

Martin: Yes, born in October of 1984.

Jones: So, with your wife employed by the University, your children had a chance at going to the school there.

Martin: Yes, Jim and Rebecca graduated from the University. Rebecca finished grad school there.

Jones: So, when did you finally enter the ministry"

Martin: My first call was to the Augusta Street Presbyterian Church to assist the struggling congregation there. Their pastor had become 'part time' and then had to find work nearer where he lived. He was an older man, so he retired from the ministry. That was in 1985. And then, the military made a call for chaplains during the Anderson-Taccoa War.

Jones: That was in 1987, I remember it well.

Martin: I began serving out of Donaldson, but saw some time in the field. Deborah continued to work at the University up through 2007, and I retired in 2008. That's when I took the call to Calvary.

Jones: Can you tell us some of your experiences in the war?

Martin: Well, the war was rather routine stuff. There was the occasional funeral, a few weddings for young soldiers anxious about surviving. But the tragedy of 1-1-1 had to be the biggest challenge.

Jones: Already a veteran of the war, your job had become an administrative one, right?

Martin: Well, I was a Lt. Colonel by then, and I oversaw the small chaplain corps that the Armed Forces maintained during the occupation of Anderson county. The demilitarized zone was working well, and nothing had been heard from Toccoa in over ten years..

Jones: Apart from sporadic terrorist attacks ...

Martin: Well, the military didn't consider those as war related, though the government did. Anyway, things were going well until the strike of Midnight the last day of 2000.

Jones: Uh, yes, I remember oh so well. Who could forget? We all lost someone in that terrorist attack. I was in the thick of the politics of that dreadful time.

Martin: Yes, I remember how that boosted your visibility and raise you out of your father's shadow.

Jones: Pastor, I think I am the interviewer here. Anyway, you had to deal with the trauma of hundreds of soldiers that had to do search and rescue in the ruins, correct.

Martin: That's right. It was a holiday, the first day of a new century according to the calendar 'purists' who carried the opinion of the day. And many of our finest soldiers were actually there when the auditorium crumbled around them. Few survived, and those that did pulled loved ones out with them.

Jones: Well, it looks like the tape is about to wind down. Thank you Col. Martin, for your time. For WFBC and World Magazine, this is Bob Jones.

*  *  *

Want to hear more about Martin's trials and tribulations following Doomsday?  Read his personal log.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Breaking News: The Oral History of Doomsday Contest

Last Thursday, I wrote a showcase on 1983: DoomsdayKorsgaard wisely pointed out that I should have posted it on September 26th, to celebrate the day where one sane man saved us all.  After berating myself for my lack of vision, I came up with a new idea!

I present to you "The Oral History of Doomsday" Contest.  For those who remember my tensure as admin on Alternate History Online, this will be a writing contest open to everyone.  All submissions must be in the form of interviews with someone alive today in the 1983: Doomsday universe who also survived Doomsday itself.

All questions and submissions may be submitted to ahwupdate@gmail.com.  All submissions must be sent to that email email address before September 26, 2011.  Depending on the number of entries, I will either post the one I think was the best on September 26 or I will post the top entries over that week and allow the readers to vote for the best one.

Good luck!