USA > Massachusetts > Franklin County > Northfield > Puritan outpost, a history of the town and people of Northfield, Massachusetts > Part 49
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BENJAMIN F. FIELD, JR. One of the branch of the Field family which was transplanted to Boston but kept close association with the town of its ancestry, Benjamin F. Field, Junior, came in his late years
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BIOGRAPHICAL
to the town, made it his home and contributed valuably to its affairs. He was a grandson of Silas Field, who in turn was grandson of Captain Zechariah and the Sarah Mattoon who was one of the Deerfield cap- tives of 1704 carried to Canada as a girl of 17 and in time returned to become the mother of ten children, the oldest of whom, Seth, was North- field's outstanding citizen of the century. Silas, one of the brothers who removed to Boston, married there Ruth Bryant Faxon. The oldest son was Benjamin Faxon Field, who was in the East India trade, the father of a family of marked quality and talent, particularly musical, including Benjamin, Junior, familiarly "Benjy," Fanny and William DeYongh, all of whom supported their aunt, "Miss Maria," in her many musical enterprises in Northfield. "Benjy" was born in Genoa, Italy, October 8, 1841. He served in the Civil War as second lieutenant, Co. I, 44th Mass. Regiment, and was later captain in the Ist Brigade, Massachu- setts militia. During the Franco-Prussian war of the early seventies, he happened to be in Paris on his way home from Bombay, India, while he was agent for the Tudor Company of Boston, and escaped from the besieged capital in a balloon. He was long a Mason and filled many chairs in the fraternity. All his life identified with Northfield, he retired here and gave his business talents to local affairs. He married, May 8, 1901, Laura, daughter of Colonel Charles Pomeroy. He served the town in many practical ways. He died here, June 23, 1920.
HENRY CYRUS HOLTON. How a town makes its own men had a marked example in Henry C. Holton. Born on land that was granted under King George I to the Holtons and which had never passed from Holton ownership, schooled only in such schools as the town afforded, including the privately supported substitute for a high school in the one room of "The Beehive," he had the culture and the intelligence which is more absorbed than bestowed in such a town, and in a life of unceasing industry as a farmer made due return to his town in equally constant service to its interests. The one that continued throughout his life was as superintendent of the First Parish (Unitarian) Sunday school, covering over forty years. He was a selectman for several years. It was during his chairmanship that President Roosevelt visited the town and he did the honors. On the drive from Mt. Hermon to Main street and the Hotel Northfield, the President, upon learning that Mr. Holton lived on granted land always owned by Holtons in direct line, said "I hope you have sons to keep up the family name." Selectman Holton had to answer "No." The next day, as the President was leaving the town, he was informed by Mr. Holton that there was a new-born son.
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Later there came a photograph, inscribed "To Theodore Roosevelt Holton from Theodore Roosevelt." Henry C. Holton was born Septem- ber 2, 1857, son of Cyrus and Amanda (Brown) Holton, his father being a brother of the mother of D. L. Moody. He died February 4, 1927. He married, October 9, 1901, Mary Everett Alexander, one of the daughters of William D. Alexander. Their two children were Theo- dore Roosevelt, born September 2, 1902; Henry Cyrus, Jr., October 6, 1903.
CHARLES H. WEBSTER. The youngest of the three sons of Lewis T. Webster, Charles Henry, in the slightly less than 50 years of his life, demonstrated the possibilities of self-development within the bounds of a New England country town. He was born October 27, 1866, attended the town schools and Powers Institute, the academy at Bernardston, and on this basis educated himself in two professions, pharmacy and law, gaining full professional standing in each. Leaving school at 14, he was a clerk in his father's store, of which he succeeded to ownership. He passed the examination of the state board of registration in pharmacy in 1891. In 1896, he built the block of stores at the corner of Parker street, in one of which he established his pharmacy, and in 1903 built and conducted a second drug store, uptown. Meanwhile he had been for II years postmaster (1900-II), was commissioned justice of the peace and notary public, carried on an insurance business, made a great collection of minerals and studied law, with the result that he was admitted to the bar in 1908, thenceforth practicing as an attorney and counsellor. Joining the Roosevelt departure of 1912, he was elected as a Progressive to the legislature of 1913, re-elected as a Republican for that of 1914 and served on the judiciary committee and a recess com- mittee on improvement of legislative procedure. A leader in town affairs, he was president of the Water Company and of the Board of Trade; and in fraternal ones, master of Harmony Lodge of Masons, patron of the Eastern Star, member of the Orange Royal Arch Chapter and Com- mandery of Knights Templars. He was active, as well, in the affairs of the First Parish (Unitarian) church. Not disconcerted by a recurrent heart trouble, he kept up the steady drive of his many interests but sought some release by winters in Florida, where he died suddenly, February 6, 1915. He was buried from the home church, in the old cemetery with full Masonic honors. He had married, September 27, 1888, Josephine M., daughter of William D. Alexander. They had two daughters, Marion Elizabeth and Bernice Mary, one talented as a musi-
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cian, the other as a painter. The valuable mineral collection was be- queathed to the Northfield Seminary.
WILLIAM REVELL MOODY. The three children of Dwight L. and Emma (Revell) Moody were a daughter Emma, who married Arthur Percy Fitt; William Revell and Paul Dwight. William R. Moody was born in Chicago, March 25, 1869. Northfield became the home of the family in 1875 and from that time throughout his life the home of this elder son. He was one of the early students at Mt. Hermon and a member of its first graduating class, that of 1887. Immediately enter- ing Yale, he was graduated in the class of '91. He was married, August 29, 1894, to Mary Whittle, daughter of Major D. W. Whittle, an associate of D. L. Moody in evangelistic work, at the Northfield home of the Whittle family, the Obadiah Dickinson, later the Dr. Blake and most recently the William H. Phelps house. The young couple went immediately to Mt. Hermon to occupy the newly built house, which later came to the name of Dwight's Home, after the death in infancy of their only son, Dwight. In 1898, they came to live at the Homestead, the Moody home, he having taken on general responsibilities in his father's work. Upon the death of D. L. Moody in December, 1899, the leadership fell upon his shoulders and henceforth his life was devoted to the advance of the school and religious work, both of which greatly expanded under his able and devoted promotion. In 1912, he became the head of the combined boards of the two schools as well as the direc- tor of the summer conferences, over which he presided. Failing in health in 1926, he spent a few months abroad but returned apparently restored but with his relations to the work somewhat changed and, as it proved, somewhat strained by the election of a president, his position as chair- man of the board being continued. He resigned in 1928, but continued to conduct the General Conference. He died 1934. The opening session of the General Conference, August 1, was devoted to a service in his memory. Surviving him were his wife, four daughters, his sister, Mrs. Fitt, and brother, Paul Dwight.
PAUL DWIGHT MOODY. The second son and last son of Dwight L. and Revell Moody was born in Baltimore, April 11, 1879, three years after the return of his father from the famous two-year tour of the British Isles and settlement as the future home, in Northfield. He attended Mt. Hermon and was graduated from Yale in 1901. Later
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he studied in New College and Glasgow Free Church College in Glasgow, Scotland, and at the Hartford Theological Seminary. For ten years after his father's death he had a considerable share in the management of the Northfield Schools but resigned from the board of trustees in 1910. He was thirty-three when ordained (1912) into the Congrega- tional ministry. For five years he was the minister of South Church, St. Johnsbury, Vermont, and left there for service overseas throughout the World War. He had already been chaplain of the Ist Vermont Infantry. As chaplain of the 103d U. S. Infantry, he was with the regiment in 1917 and '18, when he was called to General Headquarters, first as assistant to Bishop Brent and then as his successor as senior chaplain of the American Expeditionary Forces. Upon his return he became associate pastor of the Madison Avenue, New York, Presbyterian Church, serving there for two years, when he was elected in 1926 presi- dent of Middlebury (Vermont) College. The honorary degree of doc- tor of divinity was conferred upon him by Yale in 1924. For his war service he was made a chevalier of the Legion of Honor (French) and commander in the Order of Isabella the Catholic (Spanish). Mr. Moody married, April 11, 1904, Charlotte May Hull of Southpost, Connecticut and there are two 'daughters, Charlotte and Margaret Emma. Following the death of his brother, he shared with John R. Mott the direction of the General Conference at Northfield in 1934.
RICHARD MASON SMITH, M.D. Although born in Stamford, Con- necticut (March 18, 1881), Richard M. Smith, Boston's leading pediatri- cian, is distinctly of Northfield origin and his boyhood was spent there. His father, Leonard R. Smith, born in Winchester, New Hampshire, from the time of his marriage has been a leading Northfield citizen, long a member of the school committee and for several years postmaster at East Northfield. Dr. Smith's mother is the granddaughter of the town's noted minister, Rev. Thomas Mason, and of its leading citizen, Colonel Medad Alexander, thus at this point of common ancestry with D. L. Moody. He attended Mt. Hermon from 1895 to '99, was graduated from Williams in 1903 and from Harvard Medical School in 1907. After two years on the staff of the Massachusetts General Hospital, he went to the Children's Hospital of Boston in 1909, became its superin- tendent and in that relation and as a practitioner won high standing nationally as a pediatrician, gaining further recognition on the faculty of the Harvard Medical School and the Harvard School of Public Health as assistant professor of pediatrics and child hygiene. He won membership in Phi Beta Kappa at Williams and that college conferred
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HERBERT COLLINS PARSONS (Drawn from Life by Ethel Machanic)
F
ELIJAH M. DICKINSON Donor of Northfield's Library
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upon him, in 1928, the honorary degree of Sc.D. He continues his staff services as visiting physician of the Infants Hospital and associate physi- cian of the Children's Hospital, both of Boston. He has long been a trustee of the Northfield Schools.
GEORGE RUSSELL CALLENDER. A son of Northfield to attain high distinction in the medical profession and in medico-military service, George R. Callender was born May 13, 1884, in Everett, Massachusetts, the temporary residence of his parents, who were before and later of the town, to which they returned in 1891. The parents were Thomas Russell Callender and, before marriage, Martha Ellen Bemis, and thereby Dr. Callender was liberally endowed with old Northfield ances- try. In the Callender line, his grandfather, Joseph B., was long the clerk of the First Parish and tenor in the choir of its church, and four generations back there was Benjamin, the first of the local Callender family. Through both parents there was Field ancestry, converging in Captain Zechariah of the first years of the final settlement and his wife, Sarah Mattoon, a Deerfield captive in the massacre of 1704. Along the father's line was the wife of Walter Field, who bore the captivating name of Piana Pettee. The Petty (later Pettee) ancestry through four generations had distinction in frontier warfare and captivity. Dr. Cal- lender's education was in the town's public schools, Mt. Hermon ('03), Tufts College Medical School ('08, cum laude), Boston City Hospital and New York hospitals and, after three years of instructorship at Tufts, the Army Medical School, from which he was an honor graduate in 1913. All along, there was military attachment, beginning with the hos- pital corps of the Massachusetts National Guard from 1907 to 1912 and advancing in rank from lieutenant in the regular army medical corps in 1913, to captain in 1916, major in 1917 and lieutenant colonel in 1933. His professional service in the army ranges from Fort Bayard, N. M., through many positions, in various stations, at Manila, where he was president of the Army Medical Research Board and of the Philippine Leprosy Research Board, in the Japan Relief Expedition of 1923, curator, Army Medical Museum, 1919-22 and 1924-28, and from 1923 as president of the Army Medical Research Board in the Canal Zone. In professional societies he has held a succession of high offices, up to the chairmanship of the executive committee of the American Congress of Physicians and Surgeons from 1931. He is a member of the Society of Cincinnati, in right of Captain-Lieutenant John Callender, and of the Mt. Lebanon (Boston) Masonic Lodge. A long list of pro- fessional writings of the most technical sort marks his standing as an
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authority and as a pioneering pathologist. He married, August 28, 1913, a Northfield girl, Gladys Foster Moore, daughter of William Miles and Abbie Lovilla (Foster) Moore, and their children are Janet (1919), Gladys Catherine and George Russell junior (twins, 1922).
MERRILL MILES MOORE. A native of Northfield who has attained recognition as an Episcopalian clergyman, Merrill Miles Moore was born on October 11, 1898, the son of Merrill Taft and Jane Stiles Moore. His Taft ancestry leads back to Millbury where the family has long been estab- lished and from which came its most distinguished product, President William Howard Taft. Merrill M. Moore attended the local schools, graduated from the high school and from Mt. Hermon in the class of 1917 and received his B. S. degree from Colgate University in 1921. After spending three years at the General Theological Seminary in New York City, he became county missionary for Oneida County, leading to his appointment by Bishop Fiske to be the curate of Grace Church in Utica. In 1927 he was called to the rectorship of Trinity Church, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, and from that time has been in charge of the work of its large parish. He married October 4, 1926 Mildred Pease of Hatfield and they have one daughter, Elizabeth Miles Moore.
HERBERT COLLINS PARSONS. This sketch of the author of "A Puri- tan Outpost" is included in its pages by command of the town's commit- tee on the publication of the book. He was born in the town, January 15, 1862, and spent the first twenty-seven years of his life here. His name is a genealogical composite-Parsons standing for Connecticut ancestry and, back of that, Bay Colony early days; Collins, also for Connecticut origin and thence to the Mayflower and Plymouth in descent from Governor William Bradford; Herbert, for Alabama, where his mother was born and had close family ties with the Herberts, repre- sented by her cousin, General Hilary Herbert, secretary of the navy in the Cleveland cabinet. His mother, Susan Ellen Lane, was of Virginian ancestry, running back to the early settlements. Her girlhood was spent in Greenville, Ala., and Charleston, S. C., where she married a native of Northfield, Joseph S. Beach, and seven of her ten children were southern-born, the eighth, Jessie, later Mrs. Charles S. Crane, being born in Northfield, to which town Mr. Beach retired. A widow, with eight, she married Mr. Parsons, a widower with two, and two more were born to them, Mary Lane and Herbert Collins. He worked on the farm, without acquiring any fondness for it, attended the town's schools, chiefly the one supported by subscription in the
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absence of a high school, in the "Bee Hive," had an ambition for a college education, for which he was supposed to be prepared when, at 14, he began work in the general store his father had set up with the probable intent to keep the youngest of the tribe at home; and later he was part owner. In the following dozen years he was fully absorbed in the town life and that of its principal church, that of the First Parish, Unitarian. At 21 he was chosen to the school committee, was a dele- gate to the Republican state convention of that year, was frequently moderator of the town-meeting, sang in the choir, taught in the Sunday School, joined the Grange, became an "amateur journalist" in a fra- ternity that enlisted nationally some hundreds of boys and girls, and, at last, a professional one, when in 1889 he took an associate editorship on the Gazette and Courier, the old county paper published at Greenfield. In that town, he married, in 1891, Charlotte Converse Severance, served in town offices, was elected to the legislature of 1896, re-elected to those of 1897 and 1898 and to the state senate of 1899. An independence of party control, which he had shown throughout his legislative years, came to a climax in his refusal as a senator to vote for the re-election to the United States Senate of Henry Cabot Lodge, thus calling down upon his head the senator's personal wrath and the full force of the Republican state machine's opposition. Denied the party's re-nomina- tion, he ran independently and after a stirring campaign barely missed re-election, carrying the town of his residence, Greenfield, and of his birth, Northfield, and the larger towns of the district generally. The next year he took the editorship of the newspaper, which he had a share in founding, The Greenfield Recorder, and presently became its pub- lisher as well. In 1912 he was offered an editorial position on the daily Christian Science Monitor, placed the management of The Re- corder in the hands of John W. Hagis, to whom he later sold his inter- est, and removed to Boston. Meanwhile, he had been chairman of the Greenfield school committee, president of the board of trade, leader in the taking of lands for parks, member of the Republican state committee and active in the Deerfield historical society, the Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association. Appointed by Governor Guild, in 1906, to the board to establish a new school for the feeble-minded, he entered upon 25 years' connection with the Wrentham State School. Chosen by Chief Justice Aiken, in 1911, a member of the state commission on pro- bation, he became its executive officer late in 1914, a position which was raised to the rank of state commissionership of proba- tion. For 17 years this was his main interest and he came into asso- ciation with correctional, judicial and social service progressives in
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the country. He has been for 15 years an instructor in social legisla- tion in the Simmons College School of Social Work. For four years he was president of the national organization of Unitarian laymen, the Laymen's League. He resigned from the state probation commissioner- ship in 1931, avoiding retirement under the state law. Immediately he undertook the reorganization of the Massachusetts Child Labor Com- mittee into a broad child welfare agency and brought about the forma- tion of the Massachusetts Child Council, of which he is now the director. He is president of or on the board of a number of social agencies. In 1931, he was given the honorary degree of Master of Arts by Harvard University, in recognition of his public service. He has been since 1889 a member of Republican Lodge of Masons in Greenfield. The first born of his children, a son, died in infancy. The second, Harriet Louise, formerly an instructor in psychiatric social work at Simmons, is now director of the Newton Welfare Bureau. They share a home in Brook- line. Mrs. Parsons died after a long invalidism in 1926 at their home in Chestnut Hill.
INDEX
Abbott, Burt C., 472 Abernakis (tribe), 80
Abercromby, James, 166, 168
Academy, the, 267-8, 275, 277, 278, 279, 298, 304, 305, 312, 329, 330, 373, 409, 471, 494, 498, 513, 519 Adams, Family, 317 John, 197, 234, 236 John Quincy, 265, 317 Samuel, 179, 192
Agawam, 22, 24 Agawams (tribe), 17, 22
Aiken, David, 374, 401 John Adams, 374, 519 Aix la Chappelle, peace of, see under Treaties Alabama, 285, 500
Albany, 72, 113, 162, 182, 223, 280, 376 Albion (Iowa), 512
Alexander, Family, 29, 31, 55, 97, 115, 126, 149, 155, 156, 161, 170, 182, 210, 221-2, 228, 240, 246, 247, 254, 258, 265, 274, 297, 322, 326, 328, 334, 336, 337, 350, 351, 352, 365, 412, 431, 448
Aaron, 90 Abigail, 90 Adeline M. D., see Dutton, Adeline M. Amos, 258-9, 302
Amy, 493
Anne, 510
Arad, 299
Azubah, 336, 493
Caleb, 224, 233
Charles, 274, 334, 367, 368, 412 Consider, 247
Ebenezer, 136, 143, 145, 150, 151, 152, 154, 159, 171, 172, 510 Edwin M., 286, 323, 336, 466 Eldad, 222, 231, 247 Elias, 143, 144, 248
Eliphaz, 247 Elisha, 55, 211, 231, 256, 274, 285 Elisha, Jr., 274, 305, 329, 335, 364, 420, 431, 503
Elisha III, 330
Eunice, 222
Foster, 306
George, 23, 25, 26, 28, 37, 66, 83, 351,510 George II, 274, 299, 330
Alexander, Family-(continued)
Henry, 222, 274, 286, 302, 324, 336, 344, 493 Henry, Jr., 336, 493
John, 59, 61, 85
John II, 90, 92, 137, 138, 167, 170
Joseph, 85, 86, 88, 90
Joseph, Jr., 90, 246
Josephine M., 514
Josiah, 274 Lavinia, 191, 247
Lucius, 222 Lydia, 191, 248
Marie Antoinette, 324, 336
Mary, 23, 84
Mary II, 246
Mary E., 514
Medad, 202, 221-2, 228, 229, 232, 238, 261, 274, 304, 323, 336, 350, 493, 494, 516
Medad, Jr., 222
Mighills (Miles), 183
Nathaniel, 66, 68, 85, 86, 88, 90, 117
Nelson Dwight, 466
Phila, 221-2, 229, 336, 351, 493
Philip, 90
Quartus, 231, 247
Rachel, 90
Reuben, 247 Ruth, 90
Sarah, 90
Simeon, 222
Sophia, 285
Sylvia, 191
Thankful, 90
Thomas, 90, 91, 92, 151, 182, 183, 191, 222, 231, 233, 236, 246, 247, 248, 249, 336, 350, 351, 492, 493 William, 172 William D., 334, 514
Alexander's Tavern, 302
Allen, Family, 30, 31, 273. 275, 329, 352, 491 David West, 329
David West (Mrs.), 495 Dwight, 495
Edward, 494
Edwin, 86
Electa, 205 Elisha H., 275, 495 Ethan, 245, 491
521
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INDEX
Allen, Family-(continued) Frederick H., 275, 495 Frederick Zebulon, 467, 495 Joseph (Bernardston), 181 Joseph, 203 Mary, 90 Mercy, 86 Phinehas, 277, 278, 298 Samuel (Deerfield), 146
Samuel Clesson, 203, 204, 205, 219, 225, 228, 242, 268, 269-70, 275, 279, 290, 306, 329, 385, 492, 494- 6, 498 Samuel Clesson, Jr., 203, 270, 275, 301, 329, 494 Zebulon, 203 Zebulon II, 275, 302 Alvord, James C., 271, 272 Allys, William, 30, 32, 33, 53
American ("Know-nothing") 302
Party,
American Legion, 446, 475
Amherst, 192, 194, 279, 303, 311, 446
Amherst College, 304, 494
Amherst, Jeffrey, 166
Andover, 268, 453
Andover Theological School, 264, 265, 316, 358 Andrew, John A., 302, 303, 307, 311, 500 Oliver, 179 Andros, Edmund, 9, 69, 70, 74, 75, 76, 82, 433
Andross, Family, 161 Bildad, 161, 170, 171, 173, 246
Angell, Emma, 383, 424, 435, 452 George T., 478-9 Antietam, Battle of, 307
Anti-slavery Party, 290, 301, 302, 331
Appleton, Captain, 47
Aqueduct, 213, 214, 509
Architecture, 93, 94, 160, 189, 190, 216, 252-3, 284, 285, 299, 300, 322, 326-7, 334, 344, 439
Arizona, 509 Arlington (N. H.), see Winchester
(N. H.), 117, 129 Arminianism, 124, 125, 132, 251, 263, 264
Arminius, 124, 125, 126 Arms, Family, 109, 328 Charlotte, 322 Elizabeth, 109 George A., 325
Army of the Potomac, 310
Arnold, Benedict, 184, 222
Arthur, Chester A., 326, 375, 433 William, 326 Ashburnham, 291
Ashburnham Depot, 292 Ashfield, 281
Ashley, Jonathan, 150 Samuel, 159 Ashtabula, 366, 438
Ashuelot River, 105, 116, 117, 129, 130, 131, 145, 160, 282, 390, 393 Ashuelot (village), 129, 138, 139,
150 Ashuelot Valley, 118, 145, 393
Asogoa, 20, 37, 38
Atherton, Joseph, 67
Athol, 186, 213, 214, 274
Atkins, Gaius Glenn, 397, 413
Attucks, Crispus, 179 Atwood, Fred, 405 Auburn, 221 Avery, John, 246
Baker, Mary, 89, 131 Timothy, 38 Baldwin, Loammi, 291
Ball, Rachel, 60
Ballen, Joseph, 250
Baltimore (Md.), 264, 367, 515
Bancroft, Ebenezer, 221, 267 Patience, 267 Willard, 335 Banks, Nathaniel P., 302, 307
Baptist Church (general), 264
Baptist Church (in Northfield), 266, 304, 363 Barber, Family, 221, 328, 337, 393 Amaziah, 248 David, 220, 242, 248, 279 Isaac B., 242 Jonathan, 336
Bardwell, Mary Mason, 467, 495
Barnard (Vt.), 509
Barnard, Sophia, 225
Barnum, Henry Ware, 482
Bartholomew, Henry, 30
Barr, William A., 461, 471, 499
Barre, 186, 213, 214, 268, 290
Barre (Vt.), 248
Barrett, Charles, 493 Charlotte Collins, 242, 493
John, 204, 213, 214, 216, 219, 224, 227, 228, 230, 231, 236, 242, 253, 256, 269, 327, 383, 401, 437, 491- 493, 496, 512
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