This ambitious book examines the constitutional and legal doctrines of the antislavery movement from the eve of the American Revolution to the Wilmot Proviso and the 1848 national elections. Reveals the life and history of Yarrow Mamout and the subsequent generations of his family, linking their lives to the changing American landscape. Joining a wave of American institutions moving to offer a measure of restitution for their ties to slavery, Georgetown University announced on Tuesday that it would raise about . Born circa 1819 in St. Inigoes, Maryland; died circa 1916 in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana. In 1838, Georgetown University sold 272 slaves to plantations in Louisiana. During this time, the Jesuits funded some of the most prestigious institutions of higher education in America in part . Slaves, 1830 - 1864 | Georgetown University Archival Resources Found inside – Page 104Georgetown University (2015), Georgetown University: slavery, memory, and reconciliation, Georgetown University, available at http://slavery.georgetown.edu/, accessed 21 July 2020. Inclusion Project (2020), Snapshots of COVID-19: ... Many of their descendants still live in southern Maryland and Louisiana today. Human Trafficking: The Deafening Silence over Modern Slavery Crediting the university, Roaché calls the book "an encyclopedia of Georgetowners' shared experience." University Confronts Slavery Ties At the time, the Jesuits' most valuable assets were the hundreds of slaves who worked their local tobacco plantations. The Georgetown Memory Project has not succeeded in identifying the pregnant woman with whom Father Havermans spoke on November 12, 1838. Found inside – Page 253Reparations for Slavery: A Transnational and Comparative History London: Bloosmbury Academic. Arendt, H. (1958/1994). The Human Condition. ... Storytelling as Indigenous Media Project (ADSIMP). Psychology and Developing Societies, ... The Psychological Legacy of Slavery: Essays on Trauma, ... - Page 253 But the 1838 slave sale organized by the Jesuits, who founded and ran Georgetown, stands out for its sheer size, historians say. Here are a few indicators you may be related: Thank you to Helen and DuWayne Sayles, whose generous contribution made this project possible. Student research projects at Georgetown University relating to Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation are wide-ranging and arise through course work, collaborative research projects, and extra-curricular activities. Descendants · Georgetown Slavery Archive Found inside – Page xiiSlavery and Political Culture in Antebellum Kentucky Harold D. Tallant ... Georgetown College supported this project by providing sabbatical leaves and by partially underwriting the costs of photocopying, travel, student help, ... Higher education's response to the Covid-19 pandemic: ... - Page 104 Men, women, and children. After graduating in 1957, I did learn that a Jesuit, Patrick Healy, was born of a former slave woman in Georgia (in 1834 . Jesuits commit $100 million to the descendants of people ... You can support this project in several ways. Scarlet and Black: Slavery and Dispossession in Rutgers History If you are a GU272 descendant, please consider recording an oral history for the archive on this website. At Georgetown, slavery and scholarship were inextricably linked. Founding Partners. Close Search. Found inside – Page 302Incoming Correspondence, 1819–1917, Library of Congress, Washington, DC, Slavery and Anti-Slavery: A ... Gale, Georgetown University. ... Wilson Project, London, Ontario, Canada, available at: https://hiramwilson.wordpress.com. But almost one hundred survived the Civil War. August 3, 2020. The GMP is sustained by the voluntary contributions of its individual members. Second, the Georgetown Memory Project (www.georgetownmemoryproject.org) is an independent nonprofit dedicated to researching, finding, and advocating for . Found inside – Page 104Project 1655 Genevieve W. Chandler Georgetown County, S.C. FOLKLORE MOM ELLEN GODFREY (Ex-slave—Age 100) "I'm waitin' on the leese (RELIEF). He was to have my birthday the seven of October. "Slavery time Maussa buy 'em. First, the Georgetown Slavery Archive (slaveryarchive.georgetown.edu, herein abbreviated GSA) is a repository of archival materials related to the Maryland Jesuits and Georgetown University. Roaché's family was part of "Black Georgetown Remembered," a 1989 video and book project by Georgetown University, authored by Kathleen Lesko, Valerie Babb and Carroll Gibbs. Many of their descendants still live in southern Maryland and Louisiana today. The Georgetown Slavery Archive, a project initiated by the Archives Subgroup of the University's Working Group on Slavery, Memory and Reconciliation, currently is digitizing and making available online relevant documents from the Maryland Province Archives and elsewhere. The GMP is an independent tax-exempt organization founded by friends, allies, and alumni of Georgetown University. Education 7 hours ago The Georgetown Slavery Archive is a repository of materials relating to the Maryland Jesuits, Georgetown University, and slavery.This project was initiated in February 2016 by the Archives Subgroup of the Georgetown University Working Group on Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation and is part of Georgetown University's . The Jesuits have pledged $100 million to a foundation for the descendants (some pictured above) of the 272 enslaved people sold . © 1996–2021 New England Historic Genealogical Society. In the Sayles' own words: “The remarkable story behind the GU272 Memory Project ignites the soul of every human being who struggles with the history of slavery at any time and in any place. SMR: Student Projects. Found inside – Page 223The percent of population 0 to 4 for Georgetown , however , is higher than that of all southern slaves , while the percent of ... is supported by the recollections of the Georgetown County ex - slaves in the Federal Writer's Project . Quallen spoke about the history of slavery at Georgetown. In examining the slaves’ embodied agency, the book moves away from spectacular images of suffering to concentrate on slow, incremental acts of regeneration by the enslaved. Georgetown University Library and the Maryland Province are committed to . Opportunities to lead and support GMP initiatives. Your family has historic ties to southern Maryland. Maryland Archaeologists Unearth Jesuit Plantation's 18th Century Slave Quarters. Norman R. Yetman, American Memory, Library of Congress This paperback edition of selected South Carolina narratives is reprinted in facsimile from the typewritten pages of the interviewers, just as they were originally typed. Legacy of Slavery in Maryland. After Union forces captured New Orleans in 1862, Rose Herera’s owners fled to Havana, taking her three children with them. Adam Rothman tells the story of Herera’s quest to rescue her children from bondage after the war. As new historical information is uncovered this site will be updated. This digital repository of materials documents the relationship of the Maryland Jesuits and Georgetown University to slavery. From Newtown to Georgetown: Connections and Legacies. Editor's note: The story has been updated to reflect the fact that the sale of slaves was made by the Maryland Province of the . Georgetown Slavery Archive. Adam served on Georgetown's Working Group on Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation in 2015-2016, and is currently the principal curator of the Georgetown Slavery Archive. UNESCO Slave Route Project and Guerrand-Hermès Foundation for Peace co-organised an international symposium, hosted by the Berkley Center at Georgetown University on October 18-19, 2018. GU272 descendants can also contribute relevant documents, such as birth, death, or marriage records, diaries or letters, or photographs. Acknowledge them as members of the Georgetown family. In all, the Jesuits sold 314 men, women and children over a 5-year period stretching from 1838 to 1843. Found insideTable of Contents Project 1655 Genevieve W. Chandler Georgetown County, S.C. FOLKLORE MOM ELLEN GODFREY (Ex-slave — Age 100) "I'm waitin' on the leese (RELIEF). He was to have my birthday the seven of October. "Slavery time Maussa buy ... The research being conducted by the Georgetown African American Historic Landmark Project and Tour, in connection with architect Rodney Leon at Yale University, is critical to uncovering the role that the District may have played in the slave trade. Found inside – Page xxxTuesday's program included the second “Teaching Faulkner” session, “Faulkner, Slavery, and the AP/IB Classroom,” led by ... Richard Cellini spoke on “The Ethics of Memory: The Search for 272 Georgetown Slaves” at the J. D. Williams ... The Maryland Province Archives, Georgetown University Archives, and personal manuscript collections are major sources for these books, articles, and documentary collections that address aspects of slaveholding by the Jesuits . This project was initiated in February 2016 by the Archives Subgroup of the Georgetown University Working Group on Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation and is part of Georgetown University's Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation initiative. GENEALOGY: Ancestry.com. Found inside99 In 1838 two presidents of Georgetown, William McSherry, SJ, and Thomas Mulledy, SJ, sold 272 slaves in order to save the ... In addition, Georgetown alumnus Richard J. Cellini funded the Georgetown Memory Project, which employs ... And here are other Georgetown recollections - so valuable to our local history — Jerry submitted to our Mapping Georgetown Project: "I moved to Washington, D.C. in the fall of 1978 to attend American University as a transferring Junior. Yet. How do I know if I am related to the GU272? Georgetown Slavery Archive. The Georgetown Slavery Archive is a repository of materials relating to the Maryland Jesuits, Georgetown University, and slavery. Found insideBut this history of what many project to be the politically neo-conservative and economically neo-liberal fantasy age of the founding period, an era prior to publicly ... ; The Georgetown Slavery Archive. Join us for the next instalment of the monthly series, Free Speech at the Crossroads: International Dialogues, co-sponsored by the Free Speech Project at Georgetown University and the Project on the Future of the . Beginning work on the "On These Grounds: Modeling and Sharing Archival Materials about Slavery" project, a collaboration among Michigan State University, Georgetown University Library, and the University of Virginia that will develop and test a prototype linked open data model to better describe slavery-related archival materials and enhance . Their story is part of our story. University folklore says they perished without a trace. In 2015, Georgetown President John J. DeGioia established a Working Group on Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation, which led to dialogue with and apology to Descendants and key efforts to address the legacy of slavery and overcome racism at Georgetown, in Washington, and beyond. Found inside – Page 41supports the online Georgetown Slavery Archive (https://slaveryarchive.george town.edu/ ), a digital repository of archival materials relating to slavery, Georgetown, and the Maryland Jesuits. This ongoing project, which I direct, ... The Symposium aimed at healing the wounds of slavery and addressing the root causes of racial prejudices and discrimination derived from slavery, both past . Georgetown Memory Project. The project was initiated in February 2016 by the Archives Subgroup of the Georgetown University Working Group on Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation. The book will hold interest for persons who study educational and religious history, for individuals interested in the development of New England and Worcester, and for friends of Holy Cross."--BOOK JACKET. He was a Distinguished Visiting Scholar at the John W. Kluge Center at the Library of Congress in 2018, where he created the African-American Passages: Black Lives in the 19th . Though they faced incredible hardship, most didn't perish. Found insideAlice Liu, “Every Moment a Touchpoint for Building Trust,” Wharton Work/Life Integration Project, May 14, 2014, ... Rachel Swarms, “Georgetown University Plans Steps to Atone for Slave Past,” New York Times, September 1, 2016. This guide highlights the primary source documents at Lauinger Library that supports the goals of Georgetown University's Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation Initiative. Oct. 30, 2019. Original photograph courtesy of Nicholls State University, Thibodaux, LA. We receive no financial support of any kind from Georgetown University or the Maryland Jesuits. Updated 5:34 PM ET, Tue March 16, 2021. Georgetown Memory Project Genealogist Judy Riffel , Baton Rouge, La. All Rights Reserved. The double Hoya is working to enrich and amplify the project "Slavery in the President's Neighborhood" that examines the past atrocities […] A grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation supports the work . By Scottie Andrew, CNN. Here you will find digital copies of original do The Jesuit Plantation Project is a digital archival project of the American Studies Program at Georgetown University and is a precursor to the Georgetown Slavery Archive. Archaeological Discoveries: Archeologists Discover 300-year-old Slave Quarters. Alliance for New Music-Theatre to preview 'Black Georgetown Cemeteries Project' . Adam Rothman. A genealogical association has launched a new website detailing the family histories of slaves who were sold to keep Catholic-run Georgetown University from bankruptcy in the 1800s. The $550,000, two-and-a-half-year collaborative grant to Georgetown, University of Virginia (UVA) and Michigan State University (MSU), supports the creation of the On These Grounds: Modeling and Sharing Archival Materials about Slavery project.. On These Grounds is a digital initiative designed to describe and provide access to the history of enslavement found in American college and . The members of the Archives Subgroup included Professor Adam Rothman, Professor Marcia Chatelain, and Matthew Quallen (SFS '16). Found inside – Page 294211–12 slave owner or eugenicist: In 2019, the Eugenics at Stanford History Project formally requested that the school rename Jordan Hall, ... October 30, 2019, https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/30/us/georgetown-slavery-reparations.html. The Georgetown Slavery Archive, a project initiated by the Archives Subgroup of the University's Working Group on Slavery, Memory and Reconciliation, currently is digitizing and making available online relevant documents from the Maryland Province Archives and elsewhere. Found insideSee chapter 3 of my monograph for additional discussion of the history of activist digital humanities projects, ... http://slavery.virginia.edu; The Georgetown Slavery Archive, http://slaveryarchive.georgetown.edu; and The Lemon Project ... Through engagement with the members of […] The Georgetown University graduate went looking for the stains of slavery all over the neighborhood, finding them obscured by the diners and shoppers who throng the waterfront park and main drag . Georgetown announced it would commit to raising around $400,000 a year to create a fund for reparations to the descendants of 272 slaves sold by the college in the pre-Civil War era. THE GEORGETOWN MEMORY PROJECT. Oct. 30, 2019. A project designed to create a better understanding of the "lived reality of bondage at institutions of higher education" will be created by Georgetown and two other universities . This is mandatory reading for those who are serious about facing the sins of a university, a church, and a nation."--Michael Pasquier, associate professor of religious studies and history, Louisiana State University The GU272 were enslaved people who were sold by Georgetown University and the Maryland Jesuits to southern Louisiana in 1838. The Georgetown Slavery Archive is dedicated to reaching out to descendants, gathering their knowledge of their family histories, and telling their stories. This collaborative initiative will implement a novel approach to connecting thousands of archival items across the universities . Search. The data found here on this historically-rich website will assist generations to come to find, give identity to, and connect with their ancestors from this recently recovered history.”. Membership lists are confidential, and will not be shared with any third party. Back to top. Published with the permission of Richard Cellini. Debts were mounting from the construction and maintenance of Georgetown College, and an infusion of cash was urgently needed. The November 1838 manifest of the Katharine Jackson lists only a relatively small number of women from Newtown Manor of child-bearing age. Funds support creation of the searchable database, the website, and travel to Louisiana and Maryland to record oral histories and offer family history workshops for descendants. "A Best Book of the Year" —Library Journal and Booklist Using excerpts from the thousands of interviews conducted with ex-slaves in the 1930s by researchers working with the Federal Writer's Project, this astonishing collection makes ... Working Group member Professor Marcia Chatelain, a 2008 Brown University Ph.D., discussed the work of Brown's Steering Committee on Slavery and Justice in the 2000s. University folklore says they perished without a trace. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. Found insidemedia projects that promote multimedia literacy, or the ability to create new works using digital texts, images, audio, and video, ... An ongoing initiative allows students and faculty to contribute to the Georgetown Slavery Archive, ... Found inside – Page 340Project Syndicate, Jan. 10, 2013. Edvinsson, Rodney. Portal for Historical Statistics. ... Georgetown University Working Group on Slavery, Memory and Reconciliation, Historical Timeline, College Records Indicate Two Slaves on Campus. Posted on October 18, 2021 by Tanya Fortner Posted in News, Reckoning, . Slavery is a "no-go." So, the thing about the churches . L to R: Earl Williams Sr.; Cheryllyn Branche; Fr. The move by Jesuit priests is the largest such effort by the Roman Catholic Church and comes amid growing calls for . Found insideIn Proceedings of the GGMC Mining Week Conference, Georgetown, Guyana. Craton, Michael. 2000. “Death, Disease and Medicine on the Jamaican Slave Plantation: the Example of Worthy Park 1767 1838.” In Shepherd, Verene and Beckles, ... In 1838, the Maryland Jesuits sold more than 300 enslaved people to sugar plantations in southern Louisiana, in order to rescue Georgetown University from bankruptcy. Updated 2134 GMT (0534 HKT) March 16, 2021. Historical Society, Photo courtesy of Georgetown University Press, Photo courtesy of the Friends of Francis Field, Georgetown African American Historic Landmark Project & Tour. The college relied on its plantations to help pay for its operations. Charles Marshall III catches the longest fish at the rodeo, A Chorographical and Statistical Description of the District of Columbia, c. 1816, Escaped slave announcement, October 9, 1761, Georgetown waterfront taken November 13, 1865 by William Morris Smith. online at the Georgetown Slavery Archive. "We launched the Georgetown Slavery Archive in February 2016 with about 20 key documents, many of which had been previously digitized and put online by the Georgetown American Studies Program's Jesuit Plantation Project." Tianna Mobley (C'20), a first year master's student in the Department of History's Global, International & Comparative History program, is supplementing her research at Georgetown through a fellowship with the White House Historical Association. UNC-Chapel Hill joins project to investigate slavery and U.S. universities through archival records. Slave Country tells the tragic story of the expansion of slavery in the new United States. They married and raised children. Today, these enslaved people are known collectively as the “GU272 Ancestors.” Genealogists have identified many of the original people who were sold, along with 8,425 of their descendants, living and dead. At Georgetown, slavery and scholarship were inextricably linked. Found inside – Page 210One year later, university president John J. DeGioia formed the Working Group on Slavery, Memory, ... Inspired by the students, alumnus Richard Cellini formed the Georgetown Memory Project to help identify the names of those enslaved ... Found inside“Columbia University and Slavery”; “The Princeton and Slavery Project”; “Georgetown University, Slavery ...”. See, for instance, the website of Brown University, “Public Art”. The museum website gives a good measure of the space ... He is the author of Beyond Freedom's Reach: A Kidnapping in the Twilight of Slavery, which was named the Humanities Book of the Year by the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities and received the American Civil War Museum's book award. Friends of Georgetown Waterfront Park is proud to bring this talk on the focus on what occurred in the area before the first slave ship arrived in 1732, traveling through history of the first and subsequent arrivals and they'll ultimately link to UNECSO's Slave Route's Project mission to memorialize, preserve, and educate. Found inside – Page 393Washington DC: Georgetown University Press. Federal Writers' Project. 1936/2006. Georgia slave narratives. Carlisle, MA: Applewood Books. Federal Writers' Project. 1936–1938. Slave Narrative Project. Vol. 6, Kansas. Founders of the Georgetown Slavery Reconciliation Project. Found insideEbony and Ivy: Race, Slavery, and the Troubled History of America's Universities. ... “Park Project Will Recognize U.S. Slave Era. ... “Grappling with Its History of Slavery, Georgetown Gathers Descendants for a Day of Repentance. Just email us at:
. By continuing and using this site, you consent to the use of cookies. In conjunction with Michigan State University and the University of Virginia, Georgetown is continuing its commitment to slavery reconciliation by expanding access to these institutions' slavery-related archive material through the "On These Grounds" project. Professor Kirt von Daacke from the University of Virginia discussed the ongoing work of UVA's Commission on Slavery Georgetown's total population grew during 1830 to 8,441 and the . The Jesuits have pledged $100 million to a foundation for the descendants (some pictured above) of the 272 enslaved people sold by . Contributor. A brief guide to determining your genealogical connections to the GU272, composed by the Georgetown Memory Project. The Georgetown Memory Project is founded by Georgetown alumnus, Richard Cellini, as an independent nonprofit working to identify the GU272 and their descendants. In the summer of 1838, Georgetown's Jesuit priests made a fateful bargain. The Georgetown Memory Project, headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts, is an independent nonprofit research institute dedicated to locating and identifying the 314 enslaved people sold by Georgetown University to southern Louisiana in 1838, and to tracing their direct descendants (living and deceased). Georgetown slave descendants bring in legal team to help negotiate with university on reparations Another descendants group, the GU272 Descendants Association, was a little less critical of the . FamilySearch.org Your contributions are 100% tax- deductible. A fateful bargain. joinGMP@gmail.com. Your family is black or mixed race, with ties to slavery. Realize, Methodists don't believe in slavery. Found insideSee entries for Elias Collins, Georgetown, SC, U.S. Censuses of 1800, 1810, 1820, and 1840, available at ... 211); Petitions 21380802, 21381413 (first quotation), 21381421, Race and Slavery Petitions Project, ... A Georgetown alumnus, I've known nothing about this tragic history. A great deal of the credit for discovering the descendants goes to Patricia Bayonne-Johnson, a descendant of Nace and Biby Butler, a husband and wife who were sold by Thomas Mulledy to Jesse . However, Doyle also shows that childbearing women contradicted the ideal of the disembodied mother in their personal accounts and instead perceived motherhood as fundamentally defined by the work of their bodies. This project was initiated in February 2016 by the Archives Subgroup of the Georgetown Working Group on Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation and is part of the university's Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation initiative. The blog of the New England Historic Genealogical Society, 99 - 101 Newbury St. | Boston, MA | 02116, USA, A Community Betrayed: The Fate and Legacy of the GU272, Slaves Sold by Georgetown University. Offers information on the Jesuit plantations of Maryland from 1650-1838, compiled for an American studies project of Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. Includes a map, diary excerpts, slavery records, and a bibliography. Your family is Roman Catholic, or used to be Catholic. Found inside – Page 327First, the Georgetown Slavery Archive (slaveryarchive.georgetown.edu, herein abbreviated GSA) is a repository of archival materials related to the Maryland Jesuits and Georgetown University. Second, the Georgetown Memory Project ... Joining a wave of American institutions moving to offer a measure of restitution for their ties to slavery, Georgetown University announced on Tuesday that it would raise about . Found insideA Novel of the Iran Nuclear Weapons Interdiction Project Carl Douglass ... Slave trading in Georgetown began in 1760, when John Beattie established his business on O Street and conducted business at other locations around Wisconsin ... GMP members set their own level of participation and involvement. To learn more about how the Library can support teaching, research and scholarship on issues related to . Found inside – Page 183No apology had been offered, and no one had attempted to track down the descendants of the slaves who were sold. ... What's more, a Georgetown history professor discovered Cellini's nonprofit—the Georgetown Memory Project—and contacted ... For more information, contact Professor Adam Rothman at ar44 [@] georgetown.edu. A genealogical association has launched a new website detailing the family histories of slaves who were sold to keep Catholic-run Georgetown University from bankruptcy in the 1800s. But almost one hundred survived the Civil War. Adam Rothman is a professor in Georgetown University's Department of History. The GMP is guided by the Jesuit philosophy of magis (doing more), and committed to the ideals of Truth, Reconciliation & Reunion. GMP membership is open to anyone who wishes to show support for our mission and goals. The GMP is an independent group founded by friends, allies & alumni of Georgetown University, aligned with the Georgetown slaves and their living descendants. Slavery and the University is the first edited collection of scholarly essays devoted solely to the histories and legacies of this subject on North American campuses and in their Atlantic contexts. The GU272 were enslaved people who were sold by Georgetown University and the Maryland Jesuits to southern Louisiana in 1838. Found inside – Page 108In 1730, 42 percent of households in New York City's population owned slaves, and by the mideighteenth century, ... Georgetown University now collaborates with a nonprofit group, the Georgetown Memory Project, which assists in ... In the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries, the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) and the Catholic Church were among the largest slaveholding institutions in America. By 1810, the free African American population increased to 551 and the enslaved declined to 1,161 while the total population shrank to 4,948. The satisfaction of bearing witness to GMP ideals and goals. . Georgetown's American studies department developed an entire curriculum around Georgetown and slavery in the 1990s. The statistical model used by the project estimates that there are 12,000 to 15,000 living . Georgetown Slavery Archive is a digital archive housed by Georgetown University that was created by the school's Working Group on Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation. Publisher. The Georgetown Slavery Archive, a project initiated by the Archives Subgroup of the University's Working Group on Slavery, Memory and Reconciliation, currently is digitizing and making available online relevant documents from the Maryland Province Archives and elsewhere. In an insidious form of modern slavery, criminals in the shadows profit from the misery of the most vulnerable women and girls. 23andme.com. Melisande Short-Colomb, who stars in the one-woman play she wrote called "Here I Am." She is a descendant of some of the more than 270 enslaved people sold to support Georgetown University in 1838 . Georgetown Slavery Archive. Found insideFederal Writer's Project, Slave Narratives of South Carolina, vol. 14, 282. Duncan Allston of Midway Plantation was the last of the Georgetown planters to take the oath of allegiance to the United States. Mariah Heywood, an exslave of ... But Brown's troubling past was far from unique. In Ebony and Ivy, Craig Steven Wilder, a rising star in the profession of history, lays bare uncomfortable truths about race, slavery, and the American academy.
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