USA > Tennessee > The military annals of Tennessee. Confederate. First series: embracing a review of military operations, with regimental histories and memorial rolls, V.1 > Part 55
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Kedgeoth, Wm., k. at Knoxville.
COMPANY B. Captain, John A. Matheny.
Dowell, Madison M. d. Jan. 2, 1562.
Knight, Samuel H., d. March 6, 1862.
Benjamin, Shipley J., d. Feb. 6, 1962. Mee, James K. P., d. Jan. 20, 1:62.
Ballard, Martin P., d. March 6, 1862. Scarlett, Moses, d. 1862.
Gentry, Jesse, d. Jan. 28. 1862.
Whitefeld, Levi L., d. April 4, 1862.
Grimsley, John M., d. Jan. 20, 1862.
COMPANY C.
Captain, George W. Russell.
Reeves, Lieut. David P., k. at Shiloh.
Lawson. J. P., d. Nov. 5. 1862.
Judd. William, k. at Shiloh. Taylor, J. R., d. Dec. 5, 1992. Ambers, Martin, d. March. 1563.
Stanford, Richard, k. at Murfreesboro.
Goggins. W. H., k. in a raid.
Cooper, Wm. J., d. Jan. 22, 1:62.
MeCall, W. M., d. March. 1-53. Yates. T. J., d. March. 1s03. Robinson. John, d. Feb .. 1863. Allen, G. W., d. Feb. 10. 1:03.
Cooper, Samuel T .. d. Jan., 1862.
Little, Edward P., d. Jan. 22, 1862.
Keen, Samuel T., d. Jan. 22, 1862. Hays, W. L., d. April 2, 1863. Rankhorn. J. M., d. May 30. 1-03. | Glenn, S. C., d. June 18. 1863.
COMPANY D.
Captain, Claiborne W. West.
Parchast, David, d. Feb. 1, 1972. -- Green, Wm., d. Feb., 1862. Parker, James C .. d. Feb. 6. 1862. Parchust, Wm., d. Jan. 20, 1862. Knight, Garland H., d. Feb., 1862. Billingsley, Wm. S., d. July 18, 1865. COMPANY E. Captain, Uriah Y. Brown.
Draper, Thomas J., K. at Fi-hing Creek.
Wheeler, John. d. 1862.
Billingsley, W. H., d. Feb. 6, 1862. Brimington, R. M, d. July 15, 1862. -
Porter, L. J., d. Feb., 1992. Lane, Wm. M. W .. d. Aux 12. 1s62 Lillard. James. d. March 1, 1863.
Anderson, John C., d. Jan. 19, 1862.
Croak, Thomas K., k. at Shiloh.
Walton. Samuel, d. March 25. 1863. Shaw, J. M., d. March 5, 1803.
Fox, John A .. d. Feb. 10, 1862. Ray, Wm. H. d. Ist2.
COMPANY F. Captain, Jonathan Eatherly.
Bagarly, Andrew A., k. at Shiloh. Shorter, Wm. B., k. at Fishing Creek. Labimas, George W., d. Dee. 7, 1961.
Biter, Peter F., died.
Moss, J. N .. d. May 17. 1862. Hooker, W. A. d. Feb. 18, 1962
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Payton, James, d. Ang. 9. 1862. Johnson, W. M., d. Dec. 3, 1962.
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REGIMENTAL HISTORIES AND MEMORIAL ROLLS.
Wilson, J. H., d. May 7, 1863. Johnson, W. H., d. April 20, 1862. Watson, P. H., d. Jan. 7, 1502
Russell, Monroe, d. April 1, 1863. Scott, E., d. March 24, 1862.
COMPANY G. Captain, William C. Trousdale,
Lindar, Arelius D., d. March 2, 1862.
I Gentry, Jesse C., d. Feb. 20, 1862.
Apple, James D., d. Feb 9, 1862.
Brown, Robert G., d. Nov. 22, 1861.
Beasley, Asa, d. Dec. 31, 1861.
Bateman, James, d. April 24, 1862.
Dickens, John, d. Feb. 24, 1562.
'T haxton, Anthony W., 1. in battle.
Durham, Wm. S., k. at Shiloh.
Elrod, James P., k. at Shiloh.
Ford, Zachary, d. Jan. 17, 1862.
Parchust, David, d. April 11, 1862.
Parker, James C .. d. Feb., 1862.
Franklin, J., k. at Murfreesboro.
Green, William, d. Feb., 1862.
Chatfin, Wm., k. at Murfreesboro.
Flatt, Jonas, k. at Murfreesboro.
Dinwiddie. H. Cosby, d. March 11, 1862.
Oliver, Hutson P., d. April 10, 1862.
McDowell, Zebulon, d. June 5. 1862. Parchust, Wm., d. Jan. 20, 1862.
COMPANY I.
Captain, Samuel G. Slaughter.
Sloan, Andrew P., k. at Shiloh.
Jones, Edward, d. Jan. 23, 1863.
Talburt, James R., k. at Shiloh.
Pack, Bartimeus, d. March 5, 1863.
Burke, John R., d. April 6, 1862.
Bryant, Marion F., d. Jan., 1862.
Farcum, George A., d. Jan. 7, 1853.
COMPANY K.
Captain, E. Parker Simms.
Cope, W. S., d. Jan. 31, 1862.
Black, William, d. May 20, 1862.
Gilliland, Evan M., d. Feb. 18, 1862.
Kelley, F. G., d. April 23, 1862. Pollard, E. M. R., d. May 20, 1862.
Likens, John, d. April 23, 1862. Richardson, James, d. April 6, 1862.
Swindle, Jeremiah, d. Sept., 1361.
Quillen, Jackson, d. Oct. 1v, 1862. Pippen, Capt. A. C., k. in battle.
Shutters, John, d. Dec. 17, 1861.
Hallimon. Luther B., d. Dec. 27, 1861. Hellmanttell, John, d. Feb. 1. 1:01.
Wade, Hampton, d. Jan. 22, 1802. Haymond, Hickmond, d. Nov. 14. 1861.
Thomas, F. A., k. at Murfreesboro. Wilson, Samnel, d. July 27. 1853. Gentry, W. N., d. July 23, 1863.
COMPANY H. Captain, R. R. West.
Kirby, W. W., k. at Murfreesboro. Kirby, Pleasant, k. at Murfreesboro.
Hallimon, Samuel H., d. April 1, 1862. Walker, David C., d. April 3, 1862.
Knight, Young M., d. May 6, 1862. Kemp. Haywood, d. May 10, 1502. Owens. John A .. d. Ang. 10, 1:02.
Tuson, John, d. May 12, 1863. Hendrickson, J. M., d. Aug, 3, 1863.
TWENTY-NINTH TENNESSEE INFANTRY. BY W. P. BISHOP, FRANKFORT, TEXAS.
THE Twenty-ninth Tennessee Infantry, Confederate States Army, was organized in the summer of 1861, at Henderson's Mills, Greene county, East Tennessee, hy the election of Sam Powell, of Hawkins county, Colonel; Reuben Arnold, of Greene county, Lieutenant-colonel; and Horace Rice, of Hawkins county, Major. It was composed entirely of East Tennesseans: Co. A, from Bradley county, Captain McClelland; Co. B, from Polk county, Captain Hancock; Co. C, from Claiborne county, Captain Patterson; Co. D, from Hancock county, Captain Rose: Co. E. from Hawkins county, Captain Blevins; Co. F, from Greene county, Captain Arnold; Co. G, from Washington county, Captain Coulter; Co. H, from Greene 28
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MILITARY ANNALS OF TENNESSEE.
county, Captain Fry; Co. I, from Washington county, Captain Faw; Co. K, from Hawkins county, Captain Powell. In almost every case the companies named were the first from their respective counties, and as a general thing the very best mia- terial in these counties joined these companies; and taken all together the men were exceptionally intelligent, hearty, and fine-looking-mostly young, full of spirit, and well worthy the honors won by the regiment on many a well-fought field.
During the formation of Co. D an incident worthy of mention occurred, as showing the popular mind and the difficulties that had to be overcome by those desiring to enter the Southern army even at this early stage of the war. The members of this company, to the number of about twenty, assembled late one even- ing in Sneedville, the county town of Hancock county. Soon after, a difficulty took place between one of the company named Cantwell and a man named Bar- ton, a Northern man by birth and education, and a known abolitionist. Barton got the worst of it, and left the town swearing vengeance on all "rebels and rebel sympathizers." No more was thought of the matter until midnight, when Capt. Rose, afterward Colonel of the Sixty-first Tennessee, was notified that the town was surrounded by armed men. He immediately marched his men to the court- house, a substantial brick building, and collected such means of defense as were at hand, his men being unarmed. Parton sent a summons to the little force to surrender unconditionally, or he would take and shoot the last man. The demand was refused, although it was known that Barton had at least five hundred men, and was constantly receiving reinforcements that had been summoned by the fir- ing of guns, the lighting of signal-fires, and other preconcerted signals. Upon consultation the little Confederate force determined to select men to evade the be- siegers and carry the news to their friends outside. This was bravely accomplished, and at noon. next day a force of one thousand men was assembled at Malberry Gap, under command of Lient. Bishop, afterward Colonel of the Twenty-ninth Regiment; and Gen. Peter C. Johnston had one thousand men more at the Vir- ginia line, four miles away, but said he would respect States rights unless blood had actually been shed. During the night Col. Walker arrived with his regiment of cavalry from Cumberland Gap. Barton, learning these facts, quietly withdrew, and his men dispersed to their homes. It is doubtful whether any event of the war created such a profound sensation in that hitherto quiet and peaceable com- munity. The eloquence and logic of Andrew Johnson, the strong stand taken for the Union by Thomas A. R. Nelson, and the influence of Brownlow made the mountain counties of East Tennessee almost a unit for the old Government; hence the difficulties that had to be met and overcome by those who endeavored to ac- complish any thing for the Southern Confederacy. And the men who had the nerve to stem the popular current and enter the army in the face of all opposition were unquestionably actuated by genuine patriotism and a strong sense of duty that needed only the opportunity to develop them into first-class soldiers. To hail from East Tennessee was a reproach in the South. A Georgia lady once asked a member of the Twenty-ninth Regiment if he was not ashamed to own that he was an East Tennessean. "No, madam," was the emphatic reply; "I am proud that I belong to that much-abused country, and I think if one Confederate soldier is entitled to more credit than another, the greater praise is due those who came into the Southern army under difficulties such as we had to contend with."
Soon after its organization, to the Twenty-ninth Regiment was assigned the duty
435
REGIMENTAL HISTORIES AND MEMORIAL ROLLS.
of guarding the bridges along the line of the East Tennessee and Virginia and the East Tennessee and Georgia railroads, where it remained until the attempt to invade Kentucky by way of Big Creek Gap, in which it took part, having rendez- voused at Knoxville for that purpose. Upon the failure and return of the ex- pedition, it was again assigned to the bridges for a short time, but in December was ordered to Mill Springs to join Gen. Zollicoffer.
On the 19th of the following January it took part in the disastrous battle of Fishing Creek, where Col. Powell was severely wounded and permanently disabled. Thereafter the command devolved on Maj. Rice, Col. Arnold's health not permit- ting him to engage in the active campaigns which followed.
In the retreat down the Cumberland River the suffering of the men was ex- treme. Many were totally unaccustomed to hardships and privations such as had to be endured during the long midwinter march, and some succumbed to disease brought on by exposure; and when Murfreesboro was reached, and subsequently Iuka, Miss., the regiment was considerably reduced in numbers.
During the battle of April 6th and 7th at Shiloh, the Twenty-ninth and Thirty- seventh Tennessee regiments were posted at Iuka, on the extreme right of the Confederates, and did not actively participate in that struggle. But when Gen. Beauregard withdrew his army to Corinth, these regiments were joined to the main army and assigned to the brigade of Gen. John S. Marmaduke. Under his command it participated in two or three skirmishes in front of Corinth. In the meantime some changes had been made in its commanders: Maj. Rice was Colonel; John B. Johnson, of Nashville, was Lieutenant-colonel; and Kyle Blevins, Major. There had also been some changes in company officers, Capts. Rose, Fry, Arnold, and perhaps others, choosing different fields of service. But Capt. Hamilton, that good provider and prince of good fellows, of whom mention has not been made before, remained at the head of the Quartermaster's department.
The Twenty-ninth Regiment accompanied the army of Gen. Bragg from Corinth to Tupelo; from Tupelo to Chattanooga; thence into Kentucky, where it, in com- mon with the rest of the Army of Tennessee-of which it ever afterward formed a part until its final surrender by Gen. Johnston at Greensboro, North Carolina- confronted the enemy at Munfordsville and Perryville; thence to Knoxville through Cumberland Gap, and on to Murfreesboro, where it was brigaded with the Eleventh, Twelfth, Thirteenth, and One Hundred and Fifty-fourth Tennessee reg- iments, Gen. Preston Smith being assigned to the command, and the brigade attached to the division of Gen. Cheatham. The fact of its being an East Ten- nessee regiment caused more than one term of reproach to be applied to it; but Gen. Smith, brave soldier and true-hearted gentleman that he was, rode along its front expressing himself as happy to form the acquaintance of the Twenty-ninth on the battle-field, and hoped that it would do its whole duty. The . men responded with a hearty yell, and at the close of that memorable 31st of December any man in Cheatham's division was willing to take a Twenty-ninth man by the hand and call him comirade. In the great swinging operations of Hardee at the battle of Murfreesboro its loss was terrific, amounting in killed and wounded to one hundred and seventy-two, thirty-six of whom were dead on the field, and this from not more than five hundred present for duty. Both men and officers promptly responded to every call to advance, and doubtless needlessly exposed themselves. During a momentary pause that was made for the pur-
436
MILITARY ANNALS OF TENNESSEE.
pose of adjusting the line, private Clarkson Brewer mounted a large rock within fifty yard, of the Federal line, and cursed them for cowards. He fell literally riddled with balls. At another time the Twenty-ninth, having routed the enemy in its front, gained a lane near the pike, when the senior Captain commanding moved it rapidly in the rear of a large body of Federal infantry. The result was quite a number of prisoners, a badly demoralized Federal force, and a gallant regiment badly run over by the enemy, who had not time nor inclination to take prisoners, nor an idea of being taken.
At Chickamauga this regiment acted no conspicuous part. During the 19th it was only brought into action once, though under fire at one point or another dur- ing most of the day, and its list of killed and wounded amounted to thirty-two. The night advance is memorable to the Twenty-ninth more by reason of the death of its brigade commander, Gen. Preston Smith, which occurred within a few rods of its point. The General rode up to the head of the regiment, and requested the men to make way for him to pass to the front. Col. Rice remonstrated, and he merely replied that he would not go far; but unfortunately he went far enough to draw the fire of the Federal line and end his career, and that of most of his staff. His death was deeply deplored by the regiment, for he had always been not only brave but generous and kind.
At the battle of Missionary Ridge the Twenty-ninth was posted on the extreme left of Cheatham's division and next to the brigade which was the first to break. Its front was immediately changed, and though under fire the movement was sei- dom better executed on the parade-ground. Alone it charged the advancing ene- ny, but was driven back with great loss. Here the brave and amiable Capt. James W. Fulkerson fell mortally wounded; and here too fell Sergeant Baker, the un- pretentious Christian soldier, who had so long been at the head of the regiment as Orderly Sergeant of the senior company. Capt. John B. Hodges was desper- ately wounded, but subsequently recovered and resumed his connection with the regiment. Both Gens. Cheatham and Hardee complimented the regiment on the field, Gen. Cheatham saying that it was the largest body of his men that he could find together.
The history of the Twenty-ninth Regiment from Rocky Face to Jonesboro, Ga., is the history of every other regiment in the gallant Army of Tennessee. Its cas- ualties were many and its gallantry conspicuous on more than one occasion. The Twelfth and Twenty-ninth were ordered on double-quick from Rocky Face to Dalton, whence they were taken as fast as steam could carry them to meet, charge, and drive before them the Federals in the streets of Resaca, in the first of the series of great flank movements resorted to by the Federal commander, Gen. Sher- man.
At Kennesaw Mountain the Twenty-ninth and One Hundred and Fifty-fourth regiments occupied an advance work which was persistently charged by the Fed- erals. Their dead and wounded were literally piled up in our front, insomuch that the commander asked leave to remove the wounded and bury the dead. Dur- ing the truce granted for this purpose there was some indulgence in grim humor, notwithstanding the terrible surroundings. Our jolly, whole-souled Gen. Cheat- ham was never better pleased than when passing himself off as one of the boys. Col. Rice was always grave, dignified, and courteous. On the occasion referred to Gen. Cheatham wore his slouched hat, gray blouse, and smoked his short pipe. Col.
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REGIMENTAL HISTORIES AND MEMORIAL ROLLS.
Rice, gay in full regimentals, was treated with the deference dne his position by the I'ederals. The men met the General as an equal, and he was soon the center of a large crowd, talking, laughing, and occasionally taking a drink from the inevitable canteen. One son of the Emerald Isle was about getting on very intimate terms with him, even going so far as to try to put his arms aronad the General's neck, when Col. Rice, walking up, touched the man on the arm, and in- quired if he knew to whom he was speaking. "One of your boys, I suppose," was the reply. "That," said Col. Rice, at the same time raising his voice, "i: Maj .- gen. Cheatham." A forty-pound shot thrown into their midst would not have produced a greater sen-ation than did this announcement. Instantly all eyes were fixed upon the old hero, for they knew and respected him. Thenceforth he was given ample room for moving around.
In this campaign the young and popular Maj. Kyle Blevins fell a martyr to the cause he loved. Connected with one of the best families of East Tennessee, health, wealth, and youth as his portion, it seemed hard that he should be struck down; but such are the fortunes of war, and this is about the only consolation the soldier has. About this time the regiment lost Lieut .- col. John B. Johnson, of Nashville, who had risen in rank from Drill-master to the Lieutenant-colonelcy of his regiment. So one after another was stricken either by the leaden messen- ger or the hand of disease. In the assault inade by the rash but daring Gen. Hood on the 22d of July our loss was especially severe, some of the best and bravest officers and men of the regiment being slain in that fearful charge.
After the final battle of this long campaign was fought at Jonesboro, there re- mained but a handful of the old regiment. Its losses in killed, wounded, and missing during the great retreat aggregated more than the entire number present for duty at its commencement. It was during this campaign that the Twenty- ninth Regiment received from the ladies of Savannah. Ga., a magnificent silk banner, with its name and the names of the battles in which it had taken part handsomely embroidered thereon. Every man was proud of it, and it became his especial care to preserve it from that time until the surrender, and then be sure it was placed in a safer deposit.
After the battle at Jonesboro, when retreat was changed to advance, and the men once more realized that they were advancing toward their native, loved Ten- nessee, their spirits rose visibly; and by the time Hood crossed the Tennessee River they could put on something of their former spirit, and appear as eager to meet their enemies as at any time during the war. And meet them they did right gallantly at Franklin on the 30th of November, 1864. It is entirely super- fluous to say that better fighting never was done by men than by the Tennesseans in that battle; and we can safely say that the Twenty-ninth did her part most nobly, and point to her list of killed and wounded for the proof. Gen. Gordon, who had so long and ably commanded the brigade, was here wounded and capt- ured; as was also Col. Rice, who had passed unscathed through so many bloody battles. Capt. Jos. W. Burchett was killed on the field, and many more brave officers and men.
After the defeat of Hood at Nashville on the 15th of December, what with marching and fighting during that bitter winter weather is necessary to relate con- cerning the suffering of this particular regiment ? As we have before remarked, the history of one is the history of all.
43S
MILITARY ANNALS OF TENNESSEE.
Back across the Tennessee, hurried on by the victorious and enthusiastic Fed- erals, into Alabama; thence to Augusta, Ga,, and across the Savannah into South Carolina, where a season of rest and preparation was allowed for the final struggle in North Carolina. During this last campaign of the war the command of the brigade devolved on Col. W. P. Bishop, of the Twenty-ninth, as senior officer, and that of the regiment on Maj. S. L. McKamy. Having been detained by the break- ing down of their train near Raleigh, this command did not reach the battle-field near Bentonville until the conflict was well-nigh ended; but for all that, it served a good purpose in preventing the capture of Gen. Johnston's head-quarters. As the remainder of the division was on a distant part of the field, Col. Bishop re- ported his command for duty to Gen. Johnston in person. Having been informed that the men were much fatigued by a long forced march, he ordered them to rest at his head-quarters. Soon most of the men were quietly sleeping. In the meantime the enemy lind penetrated the dense pine-forest unseen until they were close upon head-quarters, and a volley of musketry was poured upon the drowsy ranks. Instantly all was commotion; but Gen. Johnston had scarcely mounted and dashed to the head of the column before the men were formed and ready for the charge. With a yell that drowned the roar of musketry, the little brigade dashed forward, led by Gens. Johnston, Hardee, and Wade Hampton, as well as their own officers. The enemy were put to flight and head-quarters saved from capture. The loss in this affair was half a dozen brave fellows killed and as many more wounded. Long afterward the writer heard Henry Neff, private in the Twenty-ninth, boasting that he had passed through the war without ever being sick or touched by a shot, and that the only battle he ever missed was that of Bentonville, and that because he was sent to the rear with the Colonel's horse, which had become unmanageable. When darkness came the army commenced its retreat, and this brigade was ordered to bring up the rear. The night was a wild one. The pine-forest had taken fire, and at frequent intervals the crash of burning, falling trees mingled with the roar of musketry and the occasional boom of cannon. Slowly the defeated army filed along the road lighted by tens of thou- sands of blazing torches, until daylight came upon it in the neighborhood of Ben- tonville; thence to Raleigh and Greensboro, where on the 26th of April it laid down its arms.
But little more remains to be told. If this sketeli, hastily written, is imperfect -as it is known to be-the writer begs leave to inform his old comrades that he has written without note or report, or even the power to consult with those who are as familiar with the facts narrated as he can be, and more so, because years have passed since he has met any of his old companions-in-arms and con- versed with them upon these topics. Faces and events are clear where names have not been recalled. Injustice has been intentionally done to no one, while praise has been sparingly dealt ont, because where due to one it was more or less due to all. Finally, to have belonged to the Twenty-ninth Tennessee Regiment and taken part in the battles in which it participated, to have shared in the hardships which it endured and the victories which it won, is no mean heritage to transmit to generations yet unborn. Let its true history be written by men competent to the task before its representatives pass from among us and the memory of its achievements grows dim; and especially let the names of its dead heroes be col- lected from any and all sources available and placed upon the roll of honor,
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REGIMENTAL HISTORIES AND MEMORIAL ROLLS.
where they are so well entitled to appear. Relations, friends, comrades, please see that this is done; for it is not only an act of justice, but should be a labor of love.
Official.]
TWENTY-NINTH TENNESSEE INFANTRY.
Colonel, Horace Rice; Lieutenant-colonel, John B. Johnson; Major. A. K. Blevins; Ad. jutant. S. D. Reynolds; Assistant Quartermaster, R. P. Hamilton; Assistant Commissary sub- sistence, T. J. O'Keafe; Surgeon, J. D. Smith; Assistant Surgeon, J. P. Allison.
COMPANY A. Captain, A. K. Blevins.
Beavers, Richard, k. at Murfreesboro. Smart, Archibald, d. during service.
McCarty, Thomas A., k. at Chickamauga.
Miller, Lock, d. during service.
Groves, D. W., k. in battle. Mastaller, Russell, d. during service. Side, William S., d. during service. Garrish, William, d. during service.
Shelton, William, d. during service.
Wyatt, C. W., d. during service.
Buckner, Anthony, d. during service.
George, Isaac, d. during service. Moss, Henry, d. during service.
COMPANY B.
Captain, M. H. Hancock.
Scruggs, J. W., k. at Murfreesboro.
Hilliard, J. P., d. Nov. 2, 1863.
Williamson. S. S., k. at Murfreesboro.
Pearce, John, d. Oct. 2, 1863.
MeMinus, Eli, k. at Missionary Ridge.
Smith, Jacob, d. Feb. 29, 1863.
Sawyers, J. N., k. at Mill Springs.
Shields, Richard, d. May 15, 1862. Kirkland, James, d. Nov. 14, 1861.
Ledford, H. A., d. Nov. 1, 1863.
Barnabus, Arthur, d. Feb. 4, 1863.
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