USA > Virginia > Virginia and Virginians; eminent Virginians, executives of the colony of Virginia, Vol. II > Part 37
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He was engaged in farming again until 1877; he was a member of the Virginia legislature, session of 1873-74. In 1877 hewent into a mercan- tile business in Charlotte county ; four years later returned to farming : was one year clerk for the State Railroad commissioners; sergeant-at- arms of the House of Delegates from that time until elected to his present position. He has also been supervisor of Charlotte county for the past twenty years.
Col. Robert F. Gaines, father of Major Gaines, born in Charlotte county, Virginia, died in November, 1873, aged seventy-four years, was a son of Major 'Win. Gaines of Charlotte county, whose father was Richard Gaines of Virginia. The mother of Major Wm. R. Gaines was Susan W., daughter of Henry Edmunds, Esq., of Halifax county, Vir- ginia. She died in 1875, aged sixty-five years.
EDWARD C. GARRISON,
High Constable in and for the City of Richmond, is now serving his third term of two years each in this office. For one term he was elected to the office without opposition, a record without parallel in the history of the office. He was born in Norfolk, Virginia, November 21, 1845. the son of Edward C. Garrison, who was born in Accomack county. Vir- ginia, and Camilla (Powell) Garrison, born in Isle of Wight county. Virginia. His paternal ancestors were among the first settlers in Ac- comack, coming from England.
Mr. Garrison has been twice married, his first wife Margelia R., eldest daughter of Capt. Thomas S. Alvis of Briarfield, Bibb county, Alabama. This marriage was solemmized at the home of the bride in Briarfield, July 19, 1870, and she lived only a short time after. Secondly Mr. Garrison married, at Richmond, April 30, 1874, Eudora C., daughter of Richard Walden, of King and Queen county, Virginia. Shewas born in that county, where her ancestors settled in the early part of the
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present century. Mr. and Mrs. Garrison have six children, born in the order named: Margelia E., Merritt W., Edward J., Nellie S., Richard R., Eudor C.
Not twenty years of age when the civil war was ended, Mr. Garrison was in service during that war, a member of A company, Naval Bat- talion. He is a member of the Masonic fraternity; of the Red Men; Junior Order of Mechanics; Knights of Honor; Royal Goodfellows; and is a machinist by trade. Himself and wife are members of the Leigh Street Baptist Church.
CHARLES W. GODDIN.
The name of Goddin appears among those of the earliest settlers of Richmond city, the grandfather of Mr. Goddin being a resident here as early as 1805 or 1810. This was John Goddin, who was for many years high Constable of the City of Richmond. His son, father of Charles W., was Wellington Goddin, who married Eliza P., daughter of Frederick Winston of Hanover county, Virginia. Wellington Goddin served as deputy under his father some years, and in 1848 or 1850 went into the real estate business. He was born in Richmond, and died December 9, 1887, aged seventy-three years.
Charles W. was born in Richmond, October 29, 1853, and attended private schools in the city until fitted for college. At the age of sixteen years he left Richmond College, and served as deputy clerk of the county court of Alexander county, Illinois, at Cairo, for two years. He was then, and until 1873, cashier of the St. Louis and Iron Mountain R. R., at Belmont, Missouri, then returned to Richmond. He was for a time deputy clerk of the chancery court of the city of Richmond, resigning: was two or three years deputy collector of city taxes, resigning; then three or four years assistant commissioner of revenue for the city of Richmond until April 19, 1888, when he was elected clerk of the chancery court of the city, on the duties of which office he entered July 1, 1888. Mr. Goddin is a member of St. Johns Lodge, No. 36, A. F. & A. M .; of Napoleon Couneil, Legion of Honor; of Munford Lodge, Order of Tonti; and a member of Moore Memorial Episcopal Church of Rich- mond, as is his wife. He married in Richmond, July 11, 1876, Susie T. Crutchfield, born in this city. Their children are Claudia B., Aylett W., Eliza W., George T., N. Stuart, JJennie C. Mrs. Goddin is a daughter of George K. Crutchfield, who served several years as a member of the Common Council, of Richmond, and two years, 1878-80, as a member of the Virginia legislature. Her mother was Susan Terrill Trueheart, who married a Mr. Waller, and surviving him married secondly Geo. K. Crutchfield, about the year 1850. She is a daughter of Colonel True- heart, of " Liberty Hall," Hanover county, Virginia.
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ALEXANDER BARCLAY GUIGON.
Mr. Guigon, subject of this sketch, was born at the Richmond House. in the city of Richmond, on August 13th, 1858. After the usual pre- liminary school attendance he entered the University of Virginia, where he was a student during two sminmers and the session of 1879-80. He was then admitted to the Bar in Richmond, and has been in the prae- tice of the law in that city ever since. At St. James Church, Richmond. February 10, 1887, he married Kate Empie Sheppard, of that city, and they have one son, bearing the father's name, Alexander B.
Mr. Guigon's father, Alexander Barclay Guigon, 1st, now deceased. late Judge of the Hustings Court, city of Richmond, was a son of August Guigon, of Richmond, born in France. The mother of the sub- ject of this sketch was Sarah Bates Guigon, nee Allen, now deceased, a daughter of the late James Allen, of Richmond, formerly of Massachu- setts. Mr. Guigon's wife is a daughter of the late James Sheppard, who was a son of Dr. Joseph Sheppard, of Henrico county. Her mother is Kate, daughter of Dr. Adam Empie, formerly pastor of St. James' church, Richmond.
In addition to his general practice, Mr. Guigon has for several years been prominently identified with the State Debt litigation as assistant counsel for the Bondholders, and as such has been actively engaged in resisting, in the courts, the State's effort to repudiate or re-adjust her obligations.
JOHN CAMPBELL HAGAN,
Born in the City of Richmond, December 25, 1857, was educated in the Richmond schools and at Georgetown College, D. C. After leaving col- lege he studied law forsixteen months with his uncle, P. H. Hagan, Esq .. of Scott county, Virginia, then returned to Richmond and entered the office of the Richmond & Petersburg Railroad. He remained there eighteen months. then accepted a position with the Chesapeake & Ohio road at Charlottsville, Virginia, for about the same period, then began business as manufacturers agent for a firm of shoe manufacturers of Boston, Massachusetts, and since that time has represented various manufacturers of that locality throughout the South.
John Hagan. jr., father of John Campbell, was born in County Ty- rone, Ireland, February 2, 1826, a son of JJohn Hagan and Ellen Camp- bell, his wife, of the same place. He settled in Virginia October 17. 1849, served through the war between the States in the Confederate States army, and died on October 17, 1874. The mother of John Campbell Hagan, born in Richmond, Virginia, AApril 6, 1828, is Mary Catharine, daughter of Florence Downey and Mary C. Lynel, his wife.
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In Richmond, September 14, 1887, Mr. Hagan married Alice May Nipe, who was born in Baltimore, Maryland. She is a daughter of James Wm. Nipe, who was born in Berkeley county, (now) West Vir- ginia, March 10, 1829, a son of George Nipe and Mary Culp, his wife, and died in Baltimore, March 11. 1871. Her mother, born in Lynch- burg, Virginia, August 4, 1841, is Emma J., daughter of Win. Addison Bennett of Hanover county, Virginia, and Eliza J. Morton, his wife, of Lynchburg.
ASHER W. HARMAN: JR.
On September 6, 1850, at Staunton, Virginia, the subject of this sketch was born, a son of Col. M. G. Harman, and a grandson of Lewis Harman, of Angusta county, Virginia. His mother's family were also honored residents of that county, she being Caroline V., daughter of L. L. Stevenson, Esq., of Staunton. Colonel Harman died in December, 1874, aged fifty-eight years ; his widow survives him, living in Angusta county. At Lexington, Virginia, December 11, 1872, Asher W. Har- man, jr., married Eugenia M. Cameron. The bride was born in Rock- bridge county, July 19, 1851, the daughter of Col. Andrew W. Cameron, of Rockbridge county, born in Bath county, and now deceased. Her mother was Ellen Hyde of Rockbridge county. The children of Mr. and Mrs. Harman are: Nellie H., Michael G., George C., Carrie, Eugenia, Alex. H., Warwick C., Mattie and A. W.
Mr. Harman was educated at the Virginia Military Institute, Lexing- ton, which he entered September 6, 1868, graduating JJuly 4, 1872. From July, 1872 until December, 1885, he was engaged in farming, mail contracting and railroad contracting. On January 1, 1885, he was elected to the office he is now ably filling, Treasurer of the State of Virginia.
MEADE HASKINS: ESQ.
Born in Chesterfield county, Virginia, May 20, 1852, was graduated from Hampden-Sidney college, Virginia, in June, 1871, with degree of Bachelor of Arts, and from the University of Virginia, with degree of Bachelor of Law, in July, 1873. He came to Richmond in September, 1873, and began practice, in which he has continued ever since. He is a member of the Masonic fraternity, and of the order of X. O.
The father of Mr. Haskins is Dr. Richard E. Haskins, who was born at what was then known as " The Grove." Brunswick county, Virginia, a son of Dr. Creed Haskins, who represented Brunswick county ine the Virginia legislature many years. The founder of the family in Vir- ginia was Edward Haskins, who came from England, and settled on the James River, near Richmond, about 1689. Dr. Creed Haskins mar-
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ried Anne Field Meade, who was born at "The Grove," Brunswick county, and was a sister of Hon. Richard Kidder Meade, who repre- sented the Petersburg district in the U. S. Congress, and afterwards was U. S. minister at Brazil, South America.
The mother of Meade Haskins, born at "Mantua," Chesterfield county, is Louise Edith, daughter of Hon. Richard Noble Thweatt, a lawyer of Prince George county, Virginia, and Mary Thweatt, nee Eppes, her mother born at " Eppington," Chesterfield county, a niece of Thomas Jefferson, of " Monticello," and a descendant of Franc s Eppes of England. Mr. Haskins had two brothers in the Confederate States army, Thomas (. and Carter Haskins, the latter now a physician.
PHILIP HAXALL,
President of the Grain and Cotton Exchange of Richmond, Virginia, since July 1, 1881, and President of the Haxall-Crenshaw Company of Richmond since July 1, 1880, was born in the city of Richmond, on Jan- uary 1, 1840. He married in Richmond, April 14, 1874, Mary Jenifer Triplett, of that city. He is a son of Richard Barton Haxall, born in Petersburg, Virginia, and Octavia Robinson, his wife, born in Richmond. Richard Barton Haxall, born in 1805, died in 1881, was a son of Philip Haxall, who was born in England (youngest son of William and Catha- rine Newton Haxall), came to Virginia, in 1786, settled at Petersburg, married Clara Walker, of Dinwiddie county, in 1801, moved to Rich- mond in 1808, founded the " Haxall Mills" in 1809, and died in 1831.
The wife of Mr. Haxall is a daughter of Win. S. Triplett, born at Rich- mond, president of the "Old Dominion Nail Works." Her mother is Nannie, daughter of Hon. Daniel Jenifer, of Maryland, minister to Aus- tria, administration of James K. Polk.
Mr. Haxall was in service through the late war, C. S. A., first as pri- vate in 4th Virginia Cavalry; then as volunteer aide to Gen. JJ. R. Anderson; then as cavalry drill master: then adjutant of Robertson's brigade; then adjutant " Fitz Lee's" division. He is a member of the college fraternity of Beta Theta Pi.
CAPT. CHARLES D. HILL,
Born in Leaksville, North Carolina, October 20, 1837, has been a resi- dent of Virginia since 1866. He is a son of William R. Hill, a retired banker now eighty-four years old, living near Maxton. North Carolina, born in Raleigh county, that State, the son of Green Hill, whose father was Rev. Wm. Hill, born in England, and a chaplain in the Revo- lutionary war. The mother of Captain Hill is Sarah A. Hill, nee Sim- mons, of Petersburg, Virginia. His wife is Harriet R., daughter of
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Charles B. and Ann (Hackley) Williams, born near Richmond, her parents Virginians. Captain Hill was married in Richmond, May 2, 1861, and has one daughter, Fannie W.
After attending school in boyhood in Milton, North Carolina, he clerked in a store in that State six years. Coming to Richmond in April, 1857, he was book-keeper for Williams & Carrington, tobacco commission merchants, for two years. Returning then to Milton, he went into business as a partner in the firm of Smith & Hill, general merchandise. He entered the Confederate States army in April, 1861, private in Company C, 13th North Carolina Infantry. Hewas appointed regimental quartermaster, and so served until in 1864 he was made paymaster of Wilcox's division, Hill's Army Corps, with which he served till the close of the war. He then went to New York, and was in the employ of Henry M. Morris, southern general produce merchant, until the spring of 1866, when he made his home in Richmond.
He went into business here a member of the firm of Hill & Poteet, tobacco commission merchants. Mr. Poteet dying. Mr. Bentley became his partner, and later Charles R. Skinker of New York was taken into the firm, the firm style remaining, for six years, Hill, Bentley & Skinker. Mr. Bentley then retired and the firm of Hill & Skinker continued the business three years. Then Charles Watkins of Milton, North Caro- lina, was admitted, the firm becoming Hill. Skinker & Watkins. In May, 1882, this firm dissolved, and since then Mr. Hill has conducted the business alone, under the name of Charles D. Hill & Co., tobacco, grain, general commission merchants. All the business with which he has been connected since 1866, has been conducted in the warehouse on Fourteenth street, between Main and Cary, and at the central ware- house, Nos. 1412-1416 Cary street.
MAJOR JAMES C. HILL.
The family of which Major Hill is a worthy representative is of English descent, early seated in Virginia. Turner Hill, of Charles City county, was his paternal grandfather. His father, John T. Hill, born in Charles City county, died in 1858, aged fifty-seven years, married Tabitha, daughter of Captain Joseph Christian, of Revolutionary fame. Of this union was born the subject of this sketch, in Charles City county, May 29, 1833. He was educated in the schools of New Kent county, Virginia, and at the age of eighteen years came to Richmond, where he clerked for eight years. Removing then to Albemarle county, Virginia, he was engaged in merchandising until the beginning of the war.
In May, 1861, he was enrolled a private in Company E, 45th Virginia Infantry, C. S. A. In March, 1864, was promoted major in the same
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regiment. He was wounded in the right arm before Petersburg, losing the arm, JJune 17, 1864. After the war he resumed business in Albe- marle county, and most of the timesince has been engaged in the trans- portation business. From 1869 to 1873, he was a member of the Vir- ginia House of Delegates, and he was eight years sergeant-at-arms of the House. In April, 1887, he was appointed railroad commissioner for the State of Virginia, and is still so serving. Major Hill is a Master Mason.
He has been twice married, Harriet N. Ragland, who died on April 27. 1863, his first wife, and their children three, Allan C., Nannie M., James C., jr. In Charles City county, Virginia. on May 3, 1866, he mar- ried Mary E. Lamb, of that county. They have four children: Susan L., Ann E., Frank Terry and Emory.
WM. HENRY JONES,
Proprietor of Jones' Leaf Tobacco Warehouse, Richmond, Virginia, was born in Pittsylvania county, Virginia, August 23, 1842. He was educated in private schools in his native county, and began business in 1865 as a dry goods merchant. A year later he went into the grocery business, afterwards farming. One year of the latter occupation having proven sufficient, he then took an interest in the Roanoke Tobacco Works, at Danville, Virginia, established in 1865, by Marshal Geo. P. Kane of Baltimore. After a time he bought the establishment, and conducted it for some years, then sold it and embarked in the leaf to- bacco business at Danville. He moved to Richmond on January 1, 1877, and established his present business.
The father and mother of Mr. Jones are both living, aged seventy- three and seventy-one respectively, having eleven children, six girls and five boys, all living, the youngest now thirty years old. His father, Decatur Jones, born in Henry county, Virginia, January 29, 1816, was a son of Thomas Jones of Henry county, son of Dr. Benjamin Jones who settled in that county from Culpeper county, Virginia, and was a son of Joshua Jones of Wales.
Joshua Jones came from Wales and settled on the present site of the City Baltimore, Maryland, then a wild forest. Jones' Falls took its name from him. Later in life he removed to Culpeper county, Virginia, where Dr. Benjamin Jones was born. The lattersettled in Henry county, where he was a physician and surgeon of umch local renown. He rep- resented his county for several terms in the State Legislature, at one election receiving every man's vote in the county but one. He married Elizabeth Reamy, of a Huguenot family which settled in South Caro- lina, and who lived to the age of one hundred and one years, two
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months and twenty-two days. They had six sons and two daughters: Thomas, Sandfford and Reamey were planters and lived in Henry county. The other three were surgeons, two of whom settled at Lancaster, South Carolina, Churchill and Bartlett .. A daughter of the latter, mar- ried Dr. I. Marion Sims, of New York. Churchill married a daughter of General Davie, at one time minister to France. The father of Governor John Morehead, of North Carolina, was Dr. Benjamin Jones' first cousin. and Gen'l Sam Houston was his great nephew. The other son, Dr. George Jones, settled in Rockingham county, North Carolina, and married a Miss Dunlap, of South Carolina. The eldest son Thomas, grand father of the subject of this sketch, married Elizabeth D. Lyell, of Brunswick county, Virginia, whose mother was Ane Stuart, of Scot- land, and a direct descendant of that great family.
The mother of Win. Henry Jones, born in Pittsylvania county in 1818, is Nancy, daughter of John Keen and Nancy Witcher, her mother sister of Vincent Witcher of Pittsylvania county. Mr. and Mrs. Decatur Jones now reside at " Bachelors Hall," Pittsylvania county.
In Pittsylvania county, December 6, 1863, Wm. Henry Jones married Elizabeth Frances Keen. They have one daughter, May. Mrs. Jones was born in Pittsylvania county, a daughter of Elisha F. Keen, and a granddaughter of John Keen, both of that county. Her father, born June 25, 1825, died in 1868. Her mother, Mary Ann Keen, nee Perkins, died in 1886, aged fifty-five years.
DR. R. A. LEWIS,
Born in Spotsylvania county, Virginia, April 4, 1824, was a son of John Lewis, born in that county, son of Zachary Lewis, jr., of Virginia, who was a captain and colonel in the Continental Army during the Revolution, and who was a son of Zachary Lewis, sr., of Virginia, son of Robert Lewis of England, son of Jean Lewis, a French Huguenot, emigre to England. The mother of Dr. Lewis was Jean W., daughter of Travers and Frances Daniel. His parents are no longer living. Ile was educated at Transylvania University, Lexington, Kentucky, and was graduated there in medicine on March 4, 1847. He practiced in Williamstown and in Franklin county, Kentucky, until 1852, then came to Richmond, Virginia, where he has been continuously in prae- tice ever since, except when interrupted by the war.
He entered the Confederate States Army in July, 1861, as assistant surgeon of the 21st Virginia Infantry, and was made surgeon of the 21st. Virginia regiment, then of the 3d Georgia regiment. Later he took charge of the Winder hospital, at Richmond, then organized and superintended the Stuart hospital, at Richmond, until the close of the
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war. He is a member of the Second Presbyterian church at Richmond ; also a member of the State Board of Medical Examiners.
In Richmond, Virginia, November, 1851, Dr. Lewis married Marga- retta Gillian Mitchell, and their children were three sons: John M., Waller M., Richmond. Mrs. Lewis was born in Stafford county, Vir- ginia, where her father, James Mitchell settled from Scotland, and she died in November, 1879, aged fifty years.
DR. JAMES B. M'CAW.
Dr. McCaw was born in the city of Richmond, on July 12, 1823. He finished his education at the University of New York, graduating in 1844, and immediately began practice of medicine, in choosing which profession he followed the tradition of his family, his father, grandfather and great grandfather all having been physicians. The last-named came to Virginia with Lord Dunmore in 1771. In addition to his regu- lar practice Dr. McCaw has been professor in the Medical College of Vir- ginia ; editor of the Virginia Medical Journal; and during the war was chief surgeon of the Chimborazo hospital, treating 76,000 patients in the four years.
In Richmond, May 20, 1845, he married Delia Patteson, born in Rich- mond, daughter of Dr. Wm. A. Patteson of Richmond, and they bad nine children. Dr. MeCaw and his wife are members of St. Paul Church, . Richmond; he is one of the Vestrymen.
HUNTER HOLMES M'GUIRE: M. D.
Was born in Winchester, Virginia, on October 11, 1835. At Staunton, Virginia, he married Mary Stuart, and they have nine children, three sons and six daughters, born in the order named : Stuart, Hugh, Mary. Fannie, Annie, Hunter, Augusta, Gettie, Margaret.
The family line of Dr. McGuire is thus traced : Edward McGuire, his great grandfather, left Ordfest, County Kerry, Ireland, in 1756, with a kinsman (first cousin), General M. McGuire. (See Smollett's History of England, pp. 643, 792, 855.) Hefinally settled in Winchester, Virginia, and died in 1806. His son Edward MeGuire, born and died in Win- chester, married Elizabeth Hohnes. Of this marriage was born, in Winchester, in 1801, Dr. Hugh Holmes MeGuire, who married Am Eliza, daughter of William Mossand Gertrude Holmes. On the maternal side Dr. Hugh Holmes MeGuire and his wife were of the same descent, and they were first cousins. He died in 1875, and his widow in 1878. These were the parents of the subject of this sketch.
Hunter Holmes, of the maternal line of Dr. McGuire, and after whom he is named, was killed at Mackinaw in 1814; a sword was voted and
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given to his nearest relatives by Virginia, for his gallant conduct in this battle. Judge Hugh Holmes of Winchester, and David Holmes, gover- nor of Mississippi and U. S. senator, brothers of Hunter Holmes, were descendants of Col. Joseph Holmes, of Bally-Kelly, County of London- derry, Ireland-see coat of arms of Col. Joseph Holmes, in "Book of Heraldry."
The wife of Dr. McGuire is the daughter of Hon. Alexander Hugh Holmes Stuart of Staunton, and Frances Stuart, nee Baldwin. She was born in Staunton in 1844.
The service of Dr. MeGuire and his immediate relatives in the late war was as follows: He entered the Confederate army as a private in Com- pany F, 2d Virginia regiment; in 1861 was made " Medical Director of the "Army of the Shenandoah;" later " Brigade Surgeon Stonewall Brigade;" then " Medical Director Stonewall Jackson's Army of the Valley;" later " Medical Director 2d Corps, Army of Northern Virginia;" serving successively under Jackson, Ewell, Early and Gordon. His father served as surgeon from 1861 to 1865. Hugh Holmes McGuire, jr., his brother, was captain of cavalry, Rosser's brigade; wounded at Amelia Springs; died of wounds a few days later. Another brother, Dr. W. P. McGuire, was a private in the Stuart Horse Artillery; served till close of war; was wounded, captured, and held a prisoner at Point Lookout many months; living now in Winchester. Edward McGuire, another brother, was a lieutenant in the Confederate States Navy.
The following are the titles that have been conferred on Dr. Hunter Holmes McGuire, and the offices he has held: M. D. 1855, Winchester Medical College, Winchester: M. D. 1859, Virginia Medical College, Richmond; LL. D. 1887, University of North Carolina; LL. D. 1888, Jefferson Medical College, Pennsylvania; Associate Fellow, College of Physicians, Philadelphia, 1887; Hon. Fellow, Virginia Medical Society; Hon. Fellow, North Carolina Medical Society; Hon. Fellow D. Haynes Agnew Surgical Society, Philadelphia ; professor of Anatomy, Win- chester (Virginia ) Medical College, 1855-58; professor of Surgery, Vir- ginia Medical College, 1865-78; emeritus professor Surgery, 1880; president Richmond Academy of Medicine, 1869; president Virginia Medical Society, 1880; president Association of Medical Officers of Con- federate States Army and Navy, 1875; president American Surgical Association, 1886; president Southern Surgical and Gynecological Association, 1889 : vice-president American Medical Association, 1881 ; vice-president International Medical Congress ( Philadelphia ) 1876; Surgeon St. Luke's Hospital, Richmond, from 1883, still serving in this position.
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