History is everywhere in , but one tragic little detail really hammers it home. Set mostly in 1899, as the Wild West era is beginning to come to an end, tackles the truth and the myth of the American cowboy. It allows players to roam around a well-researched, detailed recreation of the American west, taking in lessons about the period and its influences on the modern day.
There's plenty of historical accuracy in : players can weigh in on women's suffrage, participate in early paleontology, or find and destroy the KKK. But those are all big-picture plot points; there's plenty of historicity to be found in the tiniest of details, too. And one such tiny detail points to a wealth of obscure, uncomfortable historical knowledge long buried.
Located in a quiet field along the railway tracks just north of Saint Denis is a small, hand-carved wooden grave marker memorializing 12 nameless workers, who appear to have passed away between May and July 1878. Based on its positioning and the lack of names provided for the deceased, this minor detail is probably intended to reference the countless Chinese immigrants who died while working on America's railroads. These laborers' names and numbers were rarely documented; some railroad foremen's time sheets list all Chinese workers as if they were a single individual. As a result, most of these laborers' true names and origins remain unknown to this day.
Players can visit the grave by following the waypoint on the map above. It's just south of the railroad tracks north of Saint Denis, west of the Kamassa River, southeast of Fort Brennand, and southwest of the Van Horne mansion.
While many Chinese railroad workers were interred in a mass grave in Los Angeles' Evergreen Cemetery, smaller
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