USA > New Jersey > Salem County > Salem > History and genealogy of Fenwick's colony > Part 47
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APPENDIX.
1
BOWEN FAMILY.
It is proper that I should refer to the ancient family of the Bowens. They evidently belonged to an ancient family of Wales. Judge Elmer thinks that the name has been corrupted from Bowmen to Bowen, that is warriors armed with bows. I think he is correct in his assertion, for Jonathan Davis, the Baptist clergyman that settled at Trenton, when he left Long Island, married Elizabeth Bowen, of Bowmantown. I presume the family in Wales were numerous. About the year 1662, (some antiquarians think it was in 1664), quite a number of Bowens and Davises left Swansea in Glamorganshire, Wales. The Bowens settled in Massachusetts, and called the place Swansea, after their native town. They were Baptists, and consequently were obnoxious to the rigid Puritans. The Davis family soon left and located on Long Island. Part of the Bowen family, agreeably to their history, left Massachusetts and formed a set- tlement in East Jersey, and called the place Bowmantown. I think their stay was of short duration, for as early as 1687 a number of the family purchased of the original proprietors, lands within Fenwick's Colony, known at that time as North Cohansey precinct, some two miles southwest of the present city of Bridgeton, and at that place they made a settlement and called it Bowentown, which name it has at the present time. Why it should receive the name of town I am unable to under- stand, although it is probable several of them built themselves small log dwellings contiguous to each other, similar to the first New England settlers on the south side of the Cohanscy, which went under the name of New England town. The Bowens and others located and became large owners of as fertile lands as there are in West Jersey. This fertile land commences on the north side of Cohansey river, includes what is known as Dutch Neck, (formerly Cohansey Neck), the general course is north- east, embracing all of Hopewell, part of Stoe Creek, and the whole of Deerfield township, the castern part of Upper Allo- ways Creek, and all of Upper Pittsgrove, in Salem county. In this fertile vein of land there are not less than one hundred and
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BOWEN FAMILY.
fifty thousand acres. Judging from the timber still standing upon this tract, it must once have been covered with extensive forests of the best quality timber, such as white and black oak, walnut, hickory, chestnut and other kinds of trees adapted to the soil and climate. I have no doubt when the early settlers first cleared the land, and put the soil in order for cultivation, the land yielded abundantly, for several generations. The inhabitants lived a long distance from the meadows that lie along Delaware Bay, likewise meadows on the creeks. After about one century, their once fertile lands became much reduced, so that hundreds of acres were thrown out in commons. Many sold their lands for whatever they could get for it, and emigrated to the far West. They knew not what inexhaustible mines of wealth in the form of marl lay in the bowels of the earth near the surface, with very little labor to obtain. The said marl is found on the head branches of Stoc creek, which is near the centre of the large and fertile lands I described. What a change the free use of marl has made on lands that fifty or sixty years ago were not worth over ten or twenty dollars per acre, now selling at one hundred, and one hundred and fifty dollars per acre; some de- sirable locations for a much higher price. Besides the marl which is so extensively used with such good effect, the great English grass, known as red clover, has been introduced within the last sixty or seventy years. Its usefulness is not confined to the large amount of hay it produces, but by its strong tap-root it prepares the soil for the two staple crops of cereals, wheat and Indian corn. There is a general thrift among the farmers in this fertile region, their lands producing as well as when in their virgin state. Large and convenient dwellings and out- buildings everywhere abound, and their churches and school houses are kept in good repair, and a high state of morals per- vade the community generally.
If we include the lineage of the female line of the Bowens, they are one of the largest families that ever inhabited Cumber- land county. The grandmother of Elnathan Davis was Eliza- beth Bowen ; her descendants are numerous. The Bowens and the ancient and large family of Swinneys intermarried. Ethan Swinney's, (who is at present one of the ruling elders of the Sev- enth-Day Baptist Church at Shiloh) great-grandmother was a Bowen. Those by that name that first came to West Jersey were David, Richard, Jonathan, Noah, Dan and Elijah. It is probable most, or all of them belonged to the Seventh-Day Bap- tist Church. Timothy Brooks was their pastor. The next gen- eration of Bowens attached themselves mostly to the Cohansey
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BOWEN FAMILY.
Church ; a few of them, however, still adhered to their original faith. Richard Bowen married, had one son-Joseph Bowen, who subsequently married, and had two or more sons. Richard was the eldest, born in 1734; he had a brother who enlisted in the army of the Revolution, and served under Col. Hand and Holme, and was killed in the skirmish at Quinton's Bridge. When Captain Smith made an attack on the British troops that lay about half a mile off in Judge John Smith's house, Smith crossed the bridge, contrary to the orders of his superior officers, they being at that time at Thompson's Bridge. Richard Bowen, his brother, married, and had children ; one of them, Joseph Bowen, married Mary Gill.
Joseph Bowen and his wife, Mary Bowen, had four children, all of whom grew to mature age. Their names were Hannah, Joseph, Elizabeth and Robert Bowen. Hannah, the eldest, married Andrew Bell; they had twelve children. Their names were Samuel, Benjamin, Mary, Robert, Joseph, Sarah, Hannah, Ann, Lydia, Andrew, and Harriet Bell; all of them are living. Joseph, the son of Joseph and Mary Bowen, was born in 1802; he subsequently married Lydia Carll, daughter of Jesse Carll, Jr. ; they have no children. Elizabeth, daughter of Joseph and Mary Bowen, married David Madcliff ; they had two chil- dren, both of them deceased. Robert, son of Joseph and Mary Bowen, died unmarried. Mary, the wife of Joseph Bowen, Sr., died in 1847, aged more than three score years and ten. Jo- seph, her husband, died in :1859, aged about 87 years. His father, Richard Bowen, died in 1822, aged 88 years. I shall not attempt to give the descendants of David Bowen; sufficient for me to say, many of them were conspicuous members of both civil and religious societies, and most of them strictly adhered to the religious seet of their forefathers.
It is generally believed that Elijah Bowen was the first phy- sician in that part of Salem county, and was one of the found- ers of Shiloh Church. This Elijah Bowen was the son of Jona- than Bowen, one of the first emigrants to Bowentown. His wife was a Bowen also, a distant relative; their eldest son was Jonathan Bowen, 2d. Jonathan Bowen, 2d, inherited the home- stead of his father at |Bowentown ; he had several children. One son, named David Bowen, was appointed Sheriff of the county by William Franklin, at that time the Royal Governor, that being in 1775, but was superseded by Joel Fithian, elected under the provision of the new'constitution by the people. He built the house occupied by John S. Holmes, and owned the farm. He married Ruth, daughter of Samuel Fithian. He
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BOWEN FAMILY.
died in 1808, leaving one son, Jonathan Bowen, 3d. David Bowen, son of Dr. Elijah Bowen, was born 6th of 9th month. 1762. He married Jane, the daughter of Matthew Potter; she was born 28th of 1st month, 1772. They had two children- Daniel and Harriet Bowen. The daughter married Ephraim Holmes ; she left descendants. David Bowen died in 1797, aged about 34 years ; his wife, Jane Potter Bowen, died in 1837, aged about 65 years. Jonathan Bowen, 3d, appears to have been a man of great energy of character. He became a member in early life of the Cohansey Baptist Church ; was a member of the Convention that adopted the new consti- tution of the State in 1776. About the commencement of the revolution he removed from the home of his ancestors to Bridgeton. He soon became one of the most enterprising citi- zens of the place ; was elected eight years in succession to the State Legislature. He left one son-Smith Bowen. Smith Bowen, son of Jonathan, born May 26, 1763, was married three times. His first wife was a young woman of Cape May, by the name of Hand; by her he had two children-Mary, who mar- ried William Bacon, of Greenwich, and a son, Daniel Bowen. He was a physician and married Elizabeth, daughter of Jona- than and Hannah Shourds Smith, of Woodstown. Daniel and his wife had three children-Smith Bowen, born in 1818; Mary Elizabeth, born in 1820; and Hannah S. Bowen, born in 1822. The two youngest are deceased. Smith Bowen is a merchant in the city of Philadelphia. He married Anna Bispham ; they have eight children-Maria Elizabeth, Augustus Bispham, Anna S., Alice, Samuel, Susan Donghton, Laura, and John Bispham Bowen. Smith's third wife was the widow of David Bowen, and daughter of Matthew Potter. He had by her three children-Jane P., who married John Buck; Dr. William S. Bowen, born in 1802; died 1872. He was a practicing physi- cian in Bridgeton for 49 years. Dr. William S. Bowen's first wife was Ellen, daughter of Thomas Lee, of Port Elizabeth ; they had two children-William S. Bowen, Jr., and Jane P. Bowen, who married Dr. Joseph C. Kirby. Dr. William S. Bowen's second wife was Martha, daughter of John Buck by his first wife. They had three children-Dr. John B. Bowen, who married Hannah, daughter of Jonathan Elmer, and grand- daughter of Robert McLean. They have two children-Syd- ney E. and William Cortland Bowen. The names of the other two children of Dr. William S. Bowen are Charles M. and Mary B .; both are deceased.
CARLL FAMILY.
In writing the history of Jesse Carll, Sr., and his descendants, at that time I mentioned that there was a family of Carlls located in Cumberland county. One of that family has written a sketch of the Carll family in said county, and forwarded it to me. John Carll, it appears, emigrated with his elder brother Jesse Carll, from Germany, in the fore part of last century. Jesse is well known; located in Monmouth precinet, while his brother John Carll settled in the north Cohansey precinct. There was another brother who came in company with the two bofore mentioned. There is a tradition in the family that his name was Ephraim Carll. I think it probable, for the reason that the name of Ephraim is common in the Carll family. Ephraim Carll, the emigrant, located in the State of Delaware, married and left a large family of children. John Carll pur- chased a traet of land in the Cohansey precinet, four and a half miles northeast of the present city of Bridgeton, on the Parvin's Mill road. Part of the ancient domicile of John Carll is still standing. His wife's first name before marriage, is known to have been Phebe, but her maiden name is not now remembered. They had five children ; their names were Jeremialı, John, Lot, Josiah, Catharine and Theney Carll. It appears that John Carll, Sr., survived his wife four years, and died in 1810, at the ad- vanced age of four-score years.
Jeremiah, the eldest son of John and Phebe Carll, married Ruth Woodruff, daughter of John Woodruff, Sr., who lived in the same neighborhood. Jeremiah and his wife Ruth had ten children ; their names were Ephraim, David, William, Eli, Jere- miah, Lot, Ruth, Phebe, John and Theny Carll. Jeremiah Carll, Sr., died on the 13th of 6th month, 1811, aged forty-four years. John Carll, Jr., son of John Carll, Sr., and his wife Phebe Carll, married Nancy Woodruff, sister of Abraham Wood- ruff, Sr., of Bridgeton. John and Naney W. Carll had six children, whose names were Mary, Nancy, Lydia, Samuel, Han- nah and Rachel Carll. John Carll, Jr., the father of those chil- dren, died on the 28th of the 7th month, 1811, Lot Carll, son
66
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CARLL FAMILY.
of Jeremiah Carll, Sr., married Mary Gifford, and emigrated to Pennsylvania, and his family never heard of him until seven years ago, when his son was seen in Philadelphia. Josiah, son of John Carll, Sr., always remained single, and made his home with his brother-in-law, John Moore, Sr., who married his sister Theny Carll. Catharine Carll married Samuel Nichols on the 26th of 4th month, 1806; they had eight children-Isaac, Thomas, John, Judah, Samuel, Phebe, Abigail and Theny Nichols. Theny, the daughter of John Carll, Sr., married John Moore; they had five children-Hannah, Phebe, Keziah, Pa- tience and John Moore. Theny, the wife of John Moore, died 12th of 7th month, 1838, in her 73d year.
Ephraim Carll, the eldest son of Jeremiah Carll, was born on the 11th day of 12th month, 1790 ; married Damaris Garrison, widow of Thomas Garrison, on the 21st of 9th month, 1811. Ephraim was a wheelwright; he lived at Carll's Corner. The ancient name of the place was Facemire's Corner; but the name was changed to CarlIsburg, after Ephraim Carll purchased the property, in about 1812, and was thus inserted in the maps, and went by that name until after the construction of the West Jer- sey Railroad, when the Company transiently made a station there and called the station Carll's Corner. It is two and a half miles north of Bridgeton, on the West Jersey Railroad. Ephraim carried on farming, wheelwrighting and blacksmithing; also, about fifteen years he kept what was called the Carllsburg hotel. He had the misfortune, in about eight years, of losing his wife. He subsequently married Esthier Preston Davis, daughter of Benjamin Davis, of Deerfield. That was in 1820. Ephraim had by his first wife Damaris Garrison, two children, both sons- Jeremiah and Ephraim Carll; he had by his second wife, four children ; their names were Hiram Davis, Richard Davis, Ed- ward and Robert Bruce Carll. Ephraim Carll, Sr., the father of those children, accumulated a large real estate; he owned 150 acres at Carllsburg, being his tavern property, besides a consid- crable tract of land in Salem and Gloucester counties, and houses and lots in the city of Bridgeton. He died 17th of 6th month, 1840, in the fiftieth year of his age. David Carll, son of Jere- miah Carll, Sr., was born 27th of 7th month, 1792; he married Catharine Sonder, daughter of George Souder, Esq .; by whom he had six children-George, Maria, Jane, Emily, Sarah and Mary Carll. George and Emily emigrated to the West ; Emily recently died in Wells county, Indiana, aged about fifty years ; her brother George Carll is still living in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mary, the daughter of David Carll, died in infancy ; the rest of
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CARLL FAMILY.
the family are still living, and have families. David, their father, died of pleurisy, in 1833, aged forty-one years.
William, son of Jeremiah and Ruth W. Carll, was born 19th of the 2d month, 1794; he married Lydia Nichols, (sister to Ephraim Carll's first wife, Damaris Garrison,) on the 7th of the 10th month, 1815; they had eleven children; their names were Abigail, Francis, Damaris, Phebe, Maria, Charles, Jona. than, Lydia N., William, Elias and Enoch Carll. Their fathers William and Ephraim Carll were in the war of 1812, and were musicians when the army lay at Billingsport. William, after his marriage, lived and owned a small farm of fifty aeres about one and a half miles north of Bridgeton, where he lived until death. He came to an untimely end, by the falling of a bueket, striking him on the head, breaking his scull, while engaged in digging a well in Bridgeton. This occurred when he was in the sixtieth year of his age, being in 1853. His wife, Lydia, died in 1868, aged seventy-three years. Eli Carll, son of Jeremiah, Sr., was born the 31st of 10th month, 1795; married Margaret 'Ott, the 26th of 4th month, 1816 ; they had six children-Eliza, Ruth, Henry, George, David and Lydia Carll. Eli, their father, died in 1845, aged about fifty years. Jeremiah, son of Jere- miah Carll, Sr., was born the 26th of 1st month, 1798; married Louvisa Burt, daughter of Moses Burt, of Fairfield township, Cumberland county, by whom he had two daughters. They emigrated to Cineinnati, and are all deceased at the present time. Lot, son of Jeremiah Carll, Sr., was born the 7th of the 8th month, 1800; he resided in the city of Bridgeton ; he was thrice married ; his first wife was Miriam Doughty; they had three children-Mary, Francis and James Carll; his second wife was Henrietta Knappey; they had five children-Charles, Samnel, Hiram, Josiah and Eli Carll. The last three died in infancy. Lot's third wife was Sarah Russell, widow of Jere- miah Russell ; they had no issue. Lot Carll died in 1872, aged seventy-two years. Ruth, daughter of Jeremiah and Ruth Woodruff Carll, was born 22d of 10th month, 1802; married Alphens Loper, in 1821; they had eight children; their names were Elizabeth Vance, Ruth, Rhoda, Ann Elizabeth, Ephraim, Charles, Jacob Frank and Howard Loper. Ruth Carll Loper died in 1872, aged seventy years. Phebe, daughter of Jere- miah and Ruth W. Carll, was born the 11th of 6th month, 1805; she married David Brooks; they had nine children ; their names were Jonathan, Phebe Ann, Enoch, Jane, Reuben, Maria, Jo- seph, Elizabeth, Mary Frances, and David Brooks. Phebe is still living, the only surviving child of Jeremiah and Ruth Wood- ruff Carll.
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CARLL FAMILY.
John, son of Jeremiah and Ruth W. Carll, was born 8th of 7th month, 1807; married Martha Harris ; they had six chil- dren-Josiah, Lot, Triphene, Jacob, Jason, Phebe and Hiram Carll. John Carll emigrated to Indiana over forty years ago; in 1861 was elected Auditor in Huntington county, Indiana, for four years. He died in 1869, of paralysis, aged sixty-two years. Theny Carll died in infancy.
Ephraim, son of Ephraim Carll, Sr., was born on the 18th of 2d month, 1815; he emigrated to Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1837; married Jane Campbell, of Covington, Kentucky; owned and kept the hotel called the Temperance House, located on the cor- ner of 7th and Western Row, Cincinnati, for fourteen years; he and his wife had two sons-Ephraim and Thomas Carll. Ephraim died young; Thomas is still living. Ephraim, their father, accumulated large real estate, consisting of several large buildings in Cincinnati. He died of consumption, on the 2d of 3d month, 1853, aged thirty-eight years. His widow subse- quently married Dr. James B. Campbell, of Cincinnati ; she is still living.
The name of Carll is very numerous in this section of the State. I have been informed it is a very common name in Ger- many; so much so it is frequently used as the first name in that country; for example, Carl Shurz, the eminent German states- man of the United States, his adopted country. There is a tra- dition in the family that. Carll was originally spelled with one }, and that its signification is Charles.
CLARK AND HILLMAN FAMILIES.
George Clark's ancestors probably first located in the county of Gloucester. However that may be he became a large land- holder in the neighborhood of the village of Auburn, formerly known as Sculltown. Thomas, son of George Clark, was born 27th of 11th month, 1742. He subsequently married Deborah, daughter of Thomas Denny. She was born 17th of 4th month, 1747. Thomas and Deborah Clark had eleven children; their names were : Elizabeth, who was born 13th of 8th month, 1768; John, born 6th of 11th month, 1769; Henry, born 30th of 9th month, 1773; Samuel, born 4th of 9th month, 1775 ; George, born 18th of 6th month, 1777 ; Rebecca, born 9th of 2d month, 1780; Sarah, born 17th of 12th month, 1781; Thomas, born 18th of 2d month, 1784; William, born 13th of 4th month, 1787; and Robert Clark, born 12th of 9th month, 1789. Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas and Deborah Clark, married Eleazer Fenton. They settled on Caoney's Point, in Upper Penn's Neck. They had issue, two sons; one of them died young ; the other son lived to mature age, married, and settled in the city of Philadelphia. George, son of Thomas and Debo- rah Clark, married Jane Chattin ; they settled on his father's property, located between Sculltown and Sharpstown. Their children were Deborah, who was born 7th of 9th month, 1800; Mary, their second daughter, born 17th of 11th month, 1802; Elizabeth, born 2d of 9th month, 1804, she died young ; George, born 8th of 11th month, 1806, died the following year ; Jane Ann Clark, born 6th of 6th month, 1810. Deborah, daughter of George and Jane Chattin Clark, married Thomas McCalis- ton, of Pilesgrove, in 1810. They had several children ; all of them grew to maturity, married, and settled in different parts of Salem county. Mary, daughter of George and Jane C. Clark, married Elijah B. Holmes ; they had five children. Jane Ann, daughter of George and Jane C. Clark, married John C. Turner ; they settled in Gloucester county ; they had nine children-Ann W. Turner, their eldest child, was born 14th of 9th month, 1830; George Clark Turner, born 17th of
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CLARK AND HILLMAN FAMILIES.
7th month, 1832; Sarah Jane, born 30th of Sth month, 1834; Mary E., born 2d of 8th month, 1831; Charlotte, born 25th of 11th month, 1839, she died in Sth month, 1859; Isaac H., born 14th of 12th month, 1841; Clark C. Turner, born 28th of 8th month, 1845; Isabella H. Turner, born 25th of 6th month, 1848; Maria T. Turner, born 28th of 8th month, 1851.
1
Francis Hillman was born 7th of 5th month, 1760. His parents were members of the Society of Friends. Every man has some trait of character which distinguishes him through life. Francis Hillman in early life turned his attention towards the domestic animal, the horse. This trait increased as he advanced in years, and many years before his death he had the name of being the greatest horseman in the county of Salem. There is an anecdote related of him: At one time when he was return . ing from the town of Salem to his home near Sharpstown, he overtook a woman on foot who was traveling the same way ; he invited her to get in and ride as far as she went, which she accordingly did. She soon noticed his horse being uncommonly fat and spirited, and remarked, " Your horses put me in mind "of what people say of Frank Hillman,-That he makes his " wife and children live on Indian bread, whilst he gives his " wheat, to his horses." Hillman remarked to her, in a good humored manner, he thought Frank Hillman must be a very singular man, to think more of his horses than he did of his wife. He frequently afterwards told the circumstance to his associates with much pleasure and merriment. His wife was Phebe Padgett. She was also a member of the same religious society to which her husband belonged. She was born 6th of 9th month, 1762. They were married 16th of 9th month, 1782. They had seven children : Letitia Hillman was born 21st of 10th month, 1783; Charlotte Hillman, born 30th of 11th month, 1784 -; he married a young man by the name of Riley, they re- moved to the State of Illinois; Aaron Hillman, born 1st of 11th month, 1786 ; Elizabeth Hillman, born 30th of 9th month, 1788; Ephraim Hillman, born 25th of 12th month, 1790; Samuel Hillman, born 21st of Sth month, 1793: he married Jane Long, they located in the township of Pilesgrove ; David Hillman, the youngest son of Francis and Phebe Hillman, was born 20th of 31 month, 1795.
Francis Hillman lost his first wife about the year 1795. His second wife was Sarah Philpot ; they were married 26th of 3d month, 1797 ; they had no issue. Samuel, son of Francis and Phebe Hillman, married Jane Long ; they had four children- Alwood, Ann, Charlotte, and Phebe; the latter died young.
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CLARK AND HILLMAN FAMILIES.
Alwood Hillman married Mary Gregory. Ann Hillman, daughter of Samuel and Jane Hillman, married Thomas Stew- ard. Charlotte Hillman, daughter of Samuel and Jane Hill- man, married James, son of Aaron and Ann Pancoast, of Sharpstown; they have children. David, the son of Francis and Phebe Hillman, married Catharine Caoney, 16th of 9th month, 1815. Francis, their eldest son, born 9th of 6th month, 1816, died in 1834; Phebe, born 25th of 2d month, 1818, died in July, 1819; Samuel, born 11th of 1st month, 1820, died 7th month, 1837; Ann Mary Hillman, born 15th of 12th month, 1821, married Samuel M. Harris; David Hillman, son of David and Catharine Caoney, was born 10th of 6th month, 1824 ; John C. Hillman, son of David and Catharine Caoney, was born 17th of 4th month, 1827, he married Annie Derrick- son ; Hannah J. Hillman was born 8th of 4th month, 1830, she married Dewitt C. Bowen ; Harriet Hillman, daughter of David and Catharine Hillman, was born 28th of 9th month, 1833, she married Martin B. Holton ; Martha Caoney Hillman was born 4th of 12th month, 1836, she has been twice married; her first husband was Samuel Sparks, second husband, Rusling Dalbow. David, son of David and Catharine Caoney Hillman, has been twice married ; his first wife was Elizabeth Norton, his second wife is Ann W. Turner, daughter of John C. and Jane Ann Clark Turner. They now reside in Lower Penn's Neck, near Pennsville. They have had six children-George C. T. Hill- man, born 12th of 6th month, 1852; Catharine C., born 27th of 5th month, 1854, died in 1856; Francis, born 10th of 6th month, 1856, died 1870 ; Jane Ann W., born 7th of 9th month, 1859, died in 1862 ; Lanra Belle, born 29th of 5th month, 1862 ; H. Sandford Hillman, born 6th of 2d month, 1874.
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