Fallout Wiki
Register
Advertisement
Fallout Wiki

Burdette Manor is a location in the Forest region of Appalachia. It is located east of Summersville Dam.

Background[]

A derelict Italianate mansion overlooking the drained Summersville reservoir, Burdette Manor is distinct in that it has not been completely gutted and rendered inaccessible by the passage of time.[Non-game 1]

When the Great War hit, Old Nate found himself "left here to die" outside the mansion. Stubborn and not wanting any sympathy, he decided to go out on his own terms and recorded himself as he overdosed on painkillers and insulted anyone who found his corpse.[1]

In 2103,[2] the mansion was occupied by the Blood Eagles and is now known as the Kill Box.

Layout[]

This ruined manor contains a grand piano on the bottom floor. On the second floor, a number of empty alcohol bottles can be found, and on the third floor, a few brain and glowing fungi can be found. A feral ghoul can be found outside of the manor near a bicycle with its front wheel fallen off.

Notable loot[]

  • Old Nate's farewell - Holotape, on the ground next to a skeleton in a wheelchair out in the front yard.
  • The Domestics note 2 - Note, can be found on a small rowboat halfway to Summersville Docks, along with two mannequins and some food.
  • Two potential Vault-Tec bobbleheads:
    • Sitting on the broken door in front of the western entrance.
    • On the rock cliff between the edge of the property and the dry lake, on a narrow ledge halfway down, below a cluster of soot flowers.
  • Two potential magazines:
    • In the north corner of the kitchen, beneath the Nuka-Cola wooden crate.
    • In the attic of the mansion, in the eastern corner behind the cardboard box, on the low shelf of the small table. Near a moving dolly and across from the red trunk.
  • Potential recipe - Sitting on the kitchen counter, on the right side of the sink.
  • 50 Nuka-Cola bottles - Found surrounding a skeleton on the roof. May contain a Nuka-Cola Quantum and a Nuka Cola.

Behind the scenes[]

The mansion is described as being in the Italianate architectural style, which was popular in the United States from the late 1840s to 1890 and drew inspiration from Italian Renaissance architecture.

Appearances[]

Burdette Manor appears only in Fallout 76.

Gallery[]

References[]

Non-game

  1. Fallout 76 Vault Dweller's Survival Guide p.349: "89. BURDETTE MANOR
    This imposing yellow-bricked mansion has elements of the Italianate style, with a fire pit and the remains of some steps down to where the water's edge once was. One corner of the mansion has crumbled away, close to an exterior door; both allow access into much of the ground floor. You can go up a spiral staircase to a bar area, a bedroom, and an attic area. Both upper floor chambers have sections of wall missing, allowing access to an upper balcony. They connect to each other."
    (Fallout 76 Vault Dweller's Survival Guide Atlas of Appalachia)
Advertisement