Taggerdy's Thunder

Taggerdy's Thunder was a U.S. Army Ranger unit led by Lieutenant Elizabeth Taggerdy which eventually turned into the Appalachian Brotherhood of Steel. It was stationed in Appalachia for war games when the Great War broke out.

Background
Taggerdy's Thunder was a U.S. Army Ranger unit led by Lieutenant Elizabeth Taggerdy. She continued to lead her troops (as a paladin) after they all joined the Brotherhood of Steel. The unit was originally relocated to Appalachia to participate in war games against two opposing Marine detachments, after an extended tour of duty on foreign soil. Taggerdy considered it an opportunity - a favorable performance evaluation could mean choice assignments in the upcoming offensive. In contrast, most of her unit considered it a break from the war, and planned to use the two-week furlough after the maneuvers to rest, relax, and explore the local watering holes, following the lead of De Silva, who grew up in Appalachia.

The war games pitted Taggerdy's unit as US Special Forces deployed behind enemy lines in an unspecified Chinese province. Tasked with sabotaging target armored personnel carriers and gathering Chinese field intelligence, Taggerdy was given free rein as to how to achieve her objectives while facing two detachments of Marines as the opposing force. As usual, Taggerdy planned for a hard and fast attack, hugging the edge of the exercise area and striking where the Marines were least expecting it. She never got the chance to execute that strategy, as the Thunder was surprised by the Great War. After first dismissing the attacks as part of the simulation, the nuclear warheads that struck Appalachia soon revealed that war came home.

With the chain of command in tatters and nothing but static on the radio, they attempted to raise any kind of ranking officer to receive new orders and move forward through the desolation of the nuclear war. What Taggerdy did not expect to find on the radio was Captain Roger Maxson, looking for someone in Appalachia. Although she was hesitant about speaking to a confessed traitor, her friendship made her decide to give Maxson a chance. The fact that the U.S. Army apparently disappeared in nuclear fire overnight played a key role in the decision. Together with her unit, Taggerdy moved to Camp Venture, an old Free States survival training camp, where they spent the dark winter of 2077. Soon after, she ordered the camp reactivated to fill out the ranks of the Thunder. Due to the strict requirements imposed by the drillmaster, only four recruits made it through to the end of training and became members of the Thunder. However, they were far from the only ones and soon recruits started appearing at the camp in numbers, primarily former soldiers looking for a way out.

That way out presented itself when Maxson announced the foundation of the Brotherhood of Steel. Although Taggerdy was hesitant to accept a completely new system of ranks and ideas, believing that the military training and loyalty to commanding officers was enough to carry the day, she did not object, at first treating it as an order like any other. Although Taggerdy was skeptical, Maxson outlined his plan to give her and her men a new identity as members of the Brotherhood, as a way to return meaning to their lives, combat the overwhelming depression that threatened to take what few survivors made it through the nuclear fire, and to immunize them to the authority of any politicians that might emerge from the vaults (or in Appalachia's case, the Whitespring Congressional Bunker) and set fire to the world again. Taggerdy accepted the new orders without believing in them at first, but soon grew into her role.

Although the Thunder technically ceased to exist with their adoption of the new ranks, Taggerdy always preferred her own men and those who made the cut at Camp Venture. By the time the Brotherhood was extinguished, this preference came around to bite them, as the senior staff were all but gone, awaiting the inevitable.

Original

 * Lieutenant Elizabeth Taggerdy: Commanding officer, became Paladin upon joining the Brotherhood. Killed in action with Moreno during Operation Touchdown.
 * Sergeant Ted Wilson: Second-in-command. Senior Knight. One of two soldiers who held out on the fourth floor of Fort Defiance when it fell to the Scorched.
 * Corporal Johnny Moreno: Knight. Killed along with Taggerdy during Operation Touchdown.
 * Corporal Gary Weber: Rifleman. Squire. Went missing during a patrol.
 * Private Esposito: Rifleman. Squire. Killed when her position was assaulted by three scorchbeasts.
 * Private Hannah de Silva: Rifleman. Squire. Killed in action in Huntersville.

Additional

 * Prior to the formation of the Brotherhood of Steel, all successful recruits became members of Taggerdy's Thunder.
 * E. Fisher - Went AWOL before his graduation from Camp Venture.
 * Grant McNamara - Grant was originally a nameless refugee before joining up with Taggerdy's Thunder. He won them over by cracking the security at West Tek research facility and helping the Thunder make sense of the atrocities they discovered there.

Appearances
Taggerdy's Thunder appears only in Fallout 76 and is mentioned in the update Steel Dawn.

Behind the scenes
Taggerdy's Thunder appears to be based on the 75th Ranger Regiment, matching the "75" that appears on the Thunder's Distinctive Unit Insignia, as well as the Thunder's U.S. Army Ranger heritage. Notably, the Thunder's Distinctive Unit Insignia does not share the Chinese flag's sun symbol that appears on the 75th Ranger Regiment's insignia - a symbol meant to represent "the unit's close cooperation with the Chinese forces" in its early history, when it was known as the jungle warfare unit "Merrill's Marauders." Insignia