Charleston Herald

The Charleston Herald was a pre-War newspaper published in Charleston, West Virginia.

Background
The Charleston Herald was a newspaper published across Appalachia before the war. Reporting on both the news-breaking and mundane stories across the Appalachian Territories, the Herald was determined to report the truth and only the truth, never betraying their sources, though this goal would be called into question after Quinn Carter's interview. One of its reporters, Quinn Carter, conducted an interview with the controversial politician Sam Blackwell shortly before the Great War, leading to a boycott of the paper. Carter was also approached by an anonymous member of the public with information about Grafton Steel illegally dumping waste into local rivers. The newspaper was also responsible for Allegheny Asylum being shut down after Eleanor Tarquin spent a month inside in an attempt to expose the facility's corrupt and near-barbaric practices, though the published article was different than the draft, due to Watogan shaming. After the Great War, Quinn Carter continued to seek out the facts of various matters concerning local matters.

Known staff

 * Overbey - editor.
 * William Breyer - reporter.
 * Quinn Carter - reporter.
 * Luke Hogan - reporter.
 * Norman Pennywise - reporter.
 * Eleanor Tarquin - reporter, exposed unethical practices at Allegheny Asylum in an article called "A Month of Madness."

Known articles

 * AMS: Corporate Bully
 * Assassin strikes again
 * Five Slain in Mob Shootout at the Ultra-Luxe
 * Shanghai Sally's Reign of Terror Ends
 * Giant Teapot advertisement
 * Grafton Dam editorial
 * Herald editorial on Allegheny Asylum
 * The Herald supports Quinn Carter
 * Man vs. Machine
 * Hornwright wins!
 * Sam Blackwell: "No" on Measure 6
 * The Sam Blackwell interview
 * Secret door sale!
 * Tolling the Tale of the Bells!

Appearances
The Charleston Herald is mentioned in Fallout 76 and its add-on Wastelanders.

Behind the scenes
The Charleston Herald is based on the real-life Charleston Gazette-Mail. The "Herald" part of name may have been taken from The Register-Herald, another morning daily newspaper but based in real-life Beckley, West Virginia.