USA > West Virginia > Braxton County > History of Braxton County and central West Virginia > Part 42
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In 1886, Mr. Hyer married for his second wife, Mary C., the daughter of Wm. Hawkins of Buckhannon. By this union, he had the following children, Harry Jackson, Thomas Hawkins and Lulu Winifred.
Mr. Hyer accumulated a large estate, and was considered one of the finest business men and financiers in the central part of the state. He died at his home in Sutton July 7, 1903, of typhoid fever, greatly beloved by his country- men.
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JACOB HYER.
Jacob Hyer, son of Christian and Judy Sirk Hyer, born 1828, owned a farm on the Elk river near Hyer. He married Mary, daughter of Eliga Squires. She was born in 1837. They were married in 1849. Their children were Ellis, B. F., and Jacob.
ELLIS HYER.
Ellis Hyer, son of Christian and Judy Sirk Hyer, married Clara Wheeler. Their children were Sherman, L. D., John, and one daughter. Mr. Hver was a farmer. He lived several years in Clay county and owned valuable land on O'Briens creck where he lived. He died some years after the Civil war, and was buried at his old home where rest the remains of most of his children who died in middle life.
In 1816, Isaac Shaver and Christian Hyer, brothers-in-law, moved from Rockingham county, Va., to Flatwoods, now Braxton county, and settled on lands, part of which is still in the hands of their descendants. They landed . in October, bringing their goods in one wagon.
REV. LEVI J. HUFFMAN.
Rev. Levi J. Huffman, son of Alexander and Hannah (Vannoy) Huffman, was born in Calhoun county, June 9, 1839. On Nov. 17, 1860, he married Ruhala, daughter of Jacob and Jane (Boggs) Stump. Her birth was in Gilmer county, Oct. 3, 1842. Mr. Huffman was converted in 1860, and was ordained to the work of the ministry on July 23, 1866. Since that time, he was con- stantly and actively engaged in the work of his ealling in the Baptist church until a few years ago when he elosed ont his fiftieth ycar in active ministry. Rev. Huffman was married Aug. 24, 1916, to Mrs. Lelia Belsches of Charles- ton, his former companion having deceased some years previous.
WILLIAM S. HEFNER.
William S. Hefner, son of Samuel and Elizabeth (Propst) Hefner, was born in Pendleton county, Nov. 20, 1817. He was twice married, Rachel Me- Wallaee being the former wife and Elizabeth (Morgan) Talbert, the latter. His former wife was mother of the following family: Hannah M. E., Rachel Evaline, Lyda C., Benjamin L., Samuel, Mott, Matthew W., William C., Edna, John B., and Rachel Mc.
WILLIAM HUDKINS.
William Hudkins was born in Randolph county, Va., in 1805. He was the ' son of Bascal Hudkins. He came to Braxton when a young man, and married
Polly, daughter of James and Becca Boggs. She was born in 1814. Mr. Hud-
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kins died in June, 1877, and his wife died in Nov., 1886. Their children were Susan who married James Squires (son of Eligah), Hanson B., married Lyddia Squires, daughter of Eligah Squires; Caroline married H. A. Baxter, son of Wm. D. Baxter; one chiid died young; James P. married Kizer. Mary married Thomas C. Meadows, Jane married Nelson Mclaughlin, Francis B. married Bucy Stewart, daughter of Richard Stewart; Sarah married Harvey, son of Leonard Hyer; Minter and Lisa Link were twins: Minter married a Miss Young, and she having died, he married for his second wife Lisa Link married Gillespie.
ELIAS HUGHES.
Elias Hughes was born on the South Branch of the Potomac, his birth oc- curring sometime before Braddock's defeat in 1755.
He first appears on the public stage as a soldier, participating in the bat- tle of Point Pleasant in 1774, in which he took an active part. He was the last survivor of that conflict and lived seventy years after it was fought.
He next appears in Harrison county where for many years he was engaged as a scout, watching the Indian war parties and giving notices of their ap- proach to the settlers of the Monongahela Valley, and in this capacity he was of great service to the frontier by his activity and knowledge of Indian war- fare.
He pre-empted four hundred acres of land in 1770 on the West Fork river near the mouth of Hacker's creek.
Hughes' father, and others of his kindred ,and a young lady to whom he was much attached were murdered by the Indians. These acts of barbarity made him ever after an unrelenting and merciless enemy of the Indian race, and he never spared one of them when opportunity occurred.
The Indian troubles having ceased by the treaty at Greenville in 1795, Hughes' services not being longer required, he enterd into the employmnt as a hunter for a party of surveyors in Ohio, probably under the direction of John G. Jackson, Deputy Surveyor under Rufus Putnam, Surveyor for the United States Government.
Hughes was attracted by the fine appearance of the land on the Licking river, and concluded to locate on it. Accordingly in 1797, with his wife and twelve children, his nephew John Ratcliff with his wife and four children on foot and pack horses, started west and settled on what is called the Bowling Green on the banks of the Licking four miles east of the present city of Newark. This colony of twenty-one souls was the first permanent white settlement in the present county of Licking, State of Ohio.
In 1801, four horses were stolen by two Indians from Hughes and his neigh- bors. They were followed and overtaken, and though his companions en- deavored to persuade Hughes to spare their lives, he strenuously objected, his
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old hatred for the race was too great to be overcome and the horse thieves paid the penalty.
Although about sixty years of age, he served in the war of 1812, as also- did three of his sons, one of whom died from disease.
He died in 1844, at about the age of ninety years, and was buried with military honors.
JESSE HUGHES.
Jesse Hughes, the noted border and Indian scout, was, it is supposed, born on the South Branch of the Potomac, and came to the West in 1770, and lo- cated his four hundred acres on Hacker's creek, adjoining lands afterwards owned by Colonel William Lowther.
He participated in many expeditions against the Indians, and was perhaps better known and had a wider reputation for daring than any other man on the upper waters of the Monongahela, and he did much to protect the settlers: from the forays of the savages.
He had a fierce temper and bore an intense hatred to the Indians, and no one of that race was safe with him either in war or peace.
He lived to a great age and died at the house of his son-in-law, George Henshaw, in Jackson county, West Virginia, about 1830.
(HUTCHINSON.)
The name is Scotch and can be traced back as far as the days of Charles Stuart, first of the family that reigned as king of England, in his parliament was a Colonel Hutchison who was a faithful and efficient leader for the Stuart cause. However when Charles the first was beheaded and Oliver Cromwell be- came the same as king, all the assistants and sympathizers of Charles the first that did not seek safety in fight were put to death. As it happened Colonel Hutchison died at this time and certain ones of his descendents, his children. to be exact, emigrated to the new world, with William Penn, and the Pennsyl- vania colonists. This was in the year of 1682. Joseph Hutchison settled some- where near Chester, Pa. David Hutchison, son of Joseph Hutchison, settled in Westmoreland county. In 1745 William, son of David, settled in the valley of Virginia where one of his daughters married Jacob Warwick and moved to Clover Lick, Pocahontas county. September 17, 1770, William, son of Wil- liam, married Rebecca Warwick. (They were cousins.) In June, 1771, he- took pneumonia fever and died. His wife went and lived with her father where on Oct. 17, 1771, she gave birth to three children, Rebecca, William and Jacob. Rebecca married David Hanna of Greenbrier county, William went to Ohio and was lost sight of, and Jacob married Hanna MacMillian June 27, 1797. Four children were born: John, May 4, 1798; William, May 6, 1800; Jacob, May 22, 1802; Joseph, July 23, 1804.
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William and Jane MacMillian, daughter of Joseph and Jane MacMillian, were married February 6th, 1825. (They were cousins). For his second wife he married Elizabeth, daughter of William and Mary Bell; to this union no children were born. To the former marriage the following children were born :
Nathan MacMillian Hutchison, born Dec. 15, 1825.
Daughter (not named), born Feb. 9, 1827. Died Feb. 10, 1827.
Hannah Jane, born March 6, 1828.
Joseph, born Sept. 22, 1829.
Felix, born Feb. 20, 1831. Died April 22, 1916.
Virginia, born Nov. 8, 1832.
Miles M., born Nov. 11, 1834.
Ann, born March 9, 1838. Died Dec. 22, 1838.
William Hutchison dicd May 16, 1866. His former wife died April 5th, 1838.
Felix Hutchison married Ann F. Knicely, daughter of John and Nancy Knicely, Aug. 28, 1852, by the Rev. William Sisk. She was born May 23, 1832, and died Aug. 7, 1906. The children were:
William, born Sept. 12, 1853.
Henderson B., born April 25, 1855.
John R., born July 25, 1857.
Elizabeth J., born Nov. 10, 1859.
Ellis Lee, born March 27, 1862. Died Sept. 15, 1880.
Nancy F., born Aug. 9, 1864. Died Aug. 28, 1877.
Clark, born June 5, 1868. Died May 12, 1869.
Winfield S., born April 7, 1870. Died March 17, 1872.
CHARLES L. HUTCHINSON.
Charles L. Hutchinson was born June 4, 1887, at Gem, Braxton county. His father, H. B. Hutchinson, was born at Corley, April 25, 1855, and his mother, Sarah V. (Moyers) Hutchinson, was born at Cutlip, May 28, 1860. His grandparents, Felix Hutchinson and Ann (Knicely) Hutchinson, were born at Corley, in the years 1831 and 1832, respectively.
Charles L. Hutchinson was married Feb. 5, 1910, to Elsie D. Hefner. Mr. Hutchinson is a manufacturer of knit goods, and now resides in Cleveland, Ohio.
JOHN JACKSON.
John Jackson, the pioneer of the Jackson family in West Virginia, was born in Londonderry, Ireland, about the year 1719, his father removed to Lon- don when John was quite young and there he learned the builders trade.
In 1784, he imigrated to Cecil county in the colony of Maryland and there married Elizabeth Cummins, an English woman, who according to tradition
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was a large, strong minded, energetie, courageous woman of great strength of eharaeter, which traits were inherited by her deseendants.
This couple were the progenitors of a long line of able enterprising men who were distinguished in military and eivil life and left their impress on the times in which they lived.
Several years after their marriage the young couple moved West and after several temporary loeations, in 1769, erossed the mountains and located on the Buekhannon river at the mouth of Turkey Run. Jaekson had under the guid- anee of Samuel Pringle explored the country in the year previous, 1768.
John Jaekson did his share of pioneer work and took an aetive part in the Indian wars of the period. He was the father of George, who was distinguished above his brothers, the grandfather of John G., the able United States Judge and Congressman, and the great grandfather of Thomas J. (Stonewall) whose fame as a soldier is world wide.
He died at Clarksburg in 1804, aged 85 years. His wife, Elizabeth, also died in Clarksburg in 1825 at the age of 101 years.
JACKSON FAMILY.
Very early in the settlement of the country, Jesse, Robert and Abraham Jaekson came and settled on the Bireh. They were the sons of Robert Jaekson who lived in Bath county, Va.
JESSE JACKSON.
Jesse Jackson was born Sept. 18, 1811. He married Rebeeea, daughter of Andrew and Margaret (Johnson) Skidmore. Their children were Polly, Robert, Sylvester, David M. and Abigal. His home was on the Little Bireh where the turn pike road erosses the river. He built the first mill on the Little Bireh, and it is still in use, bein gowned by his son, David M. Jesse Jackson died May 1, 1888.
DAVID M. JACKSON.
David M. Jackson, son of Robert Jackson, married Elizabeth, daughter of Sarah Cuberly, and granddaughter of Andrew Skidmore, Sr. The children of Robert Jackson were William, David, Henry L., James (who died in the south- ern army), Washington, Clayton, Felix, Sarah, Mary and Eliza. Mr. Jackson built a mill about two miles below his brother Jesse's residence where he lived and reared his family.
ABRAHAM JACKSON.
Abraham Jackson, son of Robert Jackson, eame to Braxton eounty in an early day. His wife was Polly Ralph. They were married before coming to this county.
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DAVID M. JACKSON.
David M. Jackson, son of Jesse and Rebecca (Skidmore) Jackson, was born Aug. 4, 1838, and was married to Sylvina May, June 10, 1865. Their issue consisted of sixteen children, of whom fourteen are living, including one set of triplets : Abigal, Sarah, George C .. Edna J., Rebecca, Warder, Minter, Alice, Allia (last three named being triplets) ,Warner, Grover C., Bertie, Violet, Mariah, Lafayette, and one child who died unnamed. Mr. Jackson in- herited the old home farm where he was born, and where he has reared his family. His land is underlaid with very fine coal seams, and the old mill still grinds and mainly supplies his bread.
GOVERNOR JOSEPH JOHNSON OF HARRISON COUNTY, VA.
Joseph Johnson was born in Orange county, New York, December 19, 1785, and came with his mother, a widow, to near Bridgeport about 1803, where he lived until his death February 27, 1877.
He was self educated, and was always an eager participant in the debating societies in his neighborhood. In 1811, he was appointed a constable, his first appearance in public life. He was captain of a Company of Riflemen from Harrison county in the war of 1812 with England and marched it to Norfolk.
He was elected to the Legislature in 1818. In 1823, he was elected to the 18th Congress, also the 19th; to the vacancy in the 22nd, occasioned by the death of Philip Doddridge, serving from January 21 ot March 2, 1833; and to the 24th, 25th, 26th and 29th Congress retiring in 1847. He was again elected to the Legislature in 1847 and in 1850 he was chosen a member of the Con- stitutional Convention.
While serving in that body, he was elected Governor for a short term by the Legislature, and upon the adoption of the new constitution by which that office was made elective by the people, he was elected Governor for four years defeating George W. Summers.
Previous to this time, the Governor had always been chosen by the legis- lature and thus it came to pass that Mr. Johnson was the first Governor of Virginia chosen by the suffrage of the people, and the only one who ever held the office living west of the Allegheny mountains.
In the war of 1861, Governor Johnson's sympathies were with the South, and during that period he left Bridgeport, and lived quietly inside of the Con- federate lines in Virginia, and returned to his home in 1865 after the cessa- tion of hostilities.
Governor Johnson was a medium sized man of agreeable manners, a per- suasive stump speaker, an dof great political popularity among the people.
When he was a candidate for Governor, he was opposed by George W. Summers of Kanawha county, who was a finished orator, and the idol of the Whigs in Western Virginia.
There were no joint debates during the campaign, and Johnson's political
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opponents charged that he would not dare meet Summers on the stump to dis- cuss the issues of the campaign.
To this Johnson replied, "I do not shrink from meeting Mr. Summers, for have I not met the lion of the forest and shaken the dew drops from his mane?" This illusion is to Philip Doddridge who was perhaps the ablest man in the West, and had a reputation as a scholar, lawyer and orator, exceeded by none.
Governor Johnson was a good conversationalist, and having met all the prominent men of his time, his recollection of past events was exceedingly in- teresting.
He had the respect and admiration of the people of his county, and his private life was without reproach.
OKEY JOHNSON.
Okey Johnson was born Sept. 17, 1888, at Herold, W. Va. Both his father, L. N. Johnson, and mother, Malissa Isabel Johnson, were born at Herold. His grandfather, Wm. Johnson, was born in Monroe county, and his grandmother, Jane Given, was born in. Braxton county. He was married April 30, 1913, to Miss Bessie Leigh Robertson of Petersburg, Va., and now resides in Charles- ton where he holds the position as Credit Man in the Abney-Barnes Co. of that city.
JOHN McH. KELLY.
John McH. Kelly, son of Robert and Margaret (Hamilton) Kelly, was born Feb. 14, 1824, in Nicholas county. He made his home in Braxton county in 1850, and was married Oct. 23, 1860, to Allie V. Hamman who was born Oct. 23, 1860, at New Castle, Va., and her parents were Jacob and Amma (Ferrier) Hamman. Four children were born: Fanny F., Margaret, Sallie C., and Leonidas H. On March 9, 1863, Mr. Kelly was shot by bushwhackers while on his road as a private citizen, from Braxton to Nicholas, the dastardly deed oc- curring on Powells mountain. He died Nov. 27, 1873, and is interred in the Sutton cemetery.
L. H. KELLY.
L. H. Kelly, son of John McH. Kelly, was born in Sutton, June 28th, 1871. After attending the public schools, he read law in local office in Sutton, and was Deputy Clerk of the County Court of Braxton from 1890 to 1892. At the expiration of his Deputy Clerkship, he attended the Washington & Lee Uni- versity at Lexington, Va., taking the law course, graduating in 1893, at the head of his class. He was admitted to the bar in that year. Mr. Kelly has been exceptionally successful in his profession. He formed a partnership with Wm. E. Hines, early in his professional career, that still exists. Mr. Kelly
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served his town as Mayor and his county as Prosecuting Attorney, and his party as Chairman of the Executive Committee, and also as a member of the State Executive Committee, and in 1918 he was appoined by President Wilson as District Attorney for the Southern District of West Virginia. He married for his former wife, Miss Bertha Gorrell, by whom he had two children, Robert and Janet. She died in March, 1904. For a latter wife he married Miss Nell Kid- dy, of Buckhannon, W. Va. Their home is in North Sutton, on a beautiful emi- nenee overlooking the Elk.
WM. KELLY.
Wm. Kelly, son of Robert and Margaret Hamilton Kelly, was born in Nieholas county, Va. He came to Braxton while yet a young man and entered the mercantile business. He married Sarah Newlon, daughter of Col. Wm. Newlon. They reared a large family. Two of their sons, Wm. and Robert, died shortly after the close of the Civil war. Mr. and Mrs. Kelly were noted for their kindness and hospitality. They are buried in the Duffy cemetery at Sutton.
DR. JOHN W. KIDD.
Dr. John W. Kidd was born Jan. 9, 1857, in Upshur county, Va. (now W. Va.) His father, Matthew Kidd, was born in Nelson county, Va., Jan. 28, 1833, and his mother, Sarah J. (Hodges) Kidd was born in Louisa county, Va., Sept. 13, 1838. His grandparents, Thos. Kidd and Margaret (Johnson) Kidd, were both natives of Nelson county, Va. The subject of this sketch was mar- ried Aug. 31, 1885, to Miss Mary B. Bodkin, and their children are Sarah A., Robert H., Wm. M., and Bernice. He was graduated from the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Baltimore in 1884. He has served one term as County Health Officer, one term in the West Virginia legislature, and at pres- ent is Health Officer of the municipality of Burnsville. His wife died in June, 1911.
Dr. Kidd has represented his party in one or two national democratic con- ventions, and was an alternate to the St. Louis national convention that nomi- nated Woodrow Wilson. In the West Virginia Legislature of 1917, he was made doorkeeper, a position he now holds.
Dr. Kidd is a prominent member of the M. P. church, and has served his church in various important positions.
JOHN KNICELEY.
John Kniceley, son of Jacob and Ann Kniceley, was born in Rockingham county, Va., Oct. 20, 1807. In 1827, he married Nancy, daughter of John and Ann (Irvin) Armstrong. She was born in Pendleton county, Oct. 22, 1802. Their children were Samuel E., James A., Ann E., George H., John T., Jacob D., (died while a baby), Mary Jane (deceased), Joseph H., William N., and
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Daniel B. In 1862, John Kniceley and three of his sons, Samuel, Joseph and William, enlisted in the Federal army, Company F, 10th W. Va. Infantry, and all served until honorably discharged.
John Kniceley was married a second time, Nancy Haymond being the maiden name of the second wife, and their children: Archibald M., Melinda. A., Ruhama R. (died young), and Ola U.
HON. A. A. LEWIS.
Hon. A. A. Lewis, son of Charles and Rebecca Lynch Lewis, was born Oct. 24, 1817, and died at his home in Weston at the ripe old age of cighty-five years. Mr. Lewis was a tailor by trade, and came to Sutton while quite a young man. He was a member of the County Court for several years, and was de- servedly a very popular gentleman. On leaving Sutton in 1845, after a sojourn of a few years, he established himself in Weston, Lewis county, as a merchant. where he was successful in business until his death. He was a constant at- tendant at the Episcopal church, and was a member of both the Masonic and the Odd Fellow lodges. He represented the county of Lewis in the Virginia Legis- lature. Few men had more personal friends than Albert A. Lewis. He has related to the writer many interesting and amusing incidents that occurred in the early formation of Braxton county, trials and decisions of the County Court while he was serving in that capacity, manners and customs of the people, his great admiration for the old settlers, his battle with a huge rattlesnake just be- yond the Morrison gate at Laurel fork, and many other incidents. Mr. Lewis never married.
H. S. LEAGUE.
Henry Samuel League, son of Samuel W. and Mary Elizabeth Smith League, was born and reared in Jefferson county, Virginia. Mr. League was the youngest of seven children. John F., the oldest of the family, was a grad- uate of West Point, and served in the 18th Mississippi Infantry in the Civil war as Lieutenant Colonel. He was killed in the battle of Fredericksburg, Va.
James W., another brother, was in the artillery service and served in A. P. Hill's Corps. He rose to the rank of Major. He was in the revenue service as storekeeper, under the administration of Grover Cleveland, Benjamin Har- rison and Theodore Roosevelt. His home was for many years in Smithfield, Jefferson county, West Virginia. He was a merchant.
Henry League married Ida F. Knicely of Jefferson county. Their chil- dren were John S., Harry E. and George Aldie.
After leaving Smithfield, he was a merchant in Martinsburg, W. Va., and in 1907, he moved to Gassaway, W. Va., and entered the mencantile business where he has been successful in accumulating valuable property. He still re- tains interests in Jefferson and Berkeley counties of this state. Mr. League is an old school Jeffersonian Democrat, and takes a very keen interest in political affairs.
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MICHAEL LANCASTER.
Michael Lancaster came to Braxton about 1848 as a minister of the M. E. church, South. He was a widower, having three children, Wm. Ransom, Mary and Belle, and shortly after eoming to Braxton, married Susan Newby. To this union were born two children, Lucy and Susan. Rev. Lancaster died of flux in 1861, and was buried at the Fisher cemetery.
Wm. Ransom, son of Michael Lancaster, married Alice, daughter of Wm. Floid. Their residence is on Salt Liek. Mr. Lancaster was a soldier in the Confederate service, owns a good farm and is prosperous in farming and stock- raising.
ASA LONG.
Asa Long, a highly respected citizen, son of Jacob Long, married Matilda, daughter of James and Polly Skidmore Sutton. Mr. Long raised a large fam- ily of boys and girls. He was twice married. His second wife was a Miss John- son. He owned a farm near the head of Buffalo. He was a neat and pros- perous farmer and local blacksmith. One of Mr. Long's sons, H. A. Long, is the president of the County Court of Braxton. He was a devoted member of the M. P. Church.
N. J. LONG.
N. J. Long was born March 22, 1884, near Tesla. His parents, Henry A. Long and Carrie B. Pettit, were both born in Braxton county, also his grand- father, Asa Long. His grandmother was a Miss Sutton. N. J. Long was mar- ried Jan. 5, 1911, to Miss Nora E. Weiser, and their only child is Lewis Wilmer Long. Mr. Long is now a resident of Basin, Wyoming, where he is manager of a milling and grain business.
EMERY B. LOYD.
Emery B. Loyd was born at Lloydsville, Oct. 12, 1856. His father, Isaac H. Loyd, was born in Rockingham county, Va., while his mother was born in Stafford county of same state. Names of grandparents, Isaac Loyd and Julia Ann Sirk. Mr. Loyd was married April 10, 1879, to Caroline Gerwig, and his children are Ida M., Osic C., Mary Grace and Isaac C. He is a member of the M. E. church, and is engaged in farming and stock raising.
JOHN L. LOYD.
John L. Loyd was born Feb. 14, 1859, in Braxton county being of the same parentage as above sketch. He was married Nov. 19, 1885, to Susan E. Fisher, and the names of their children are, Victor F., Gertrude M., Bruce, Mary, Frank, Annie, Susie and John L. Mr. Loyd is engaged in farming, being
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