
Matches 2,301 to 2,350 of 3,031
| # | Notes | Linked to |
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| 2301 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] James arrived on the Falcon in 1635 at Barbadoes where his older brother Richard had settled. They both came to New England a few years later. In Newport, RI in 1639, in Taunton, Bristol, Massachusetts in 1645. From the "Pioneers of Massachusetts" by Charles H. Pope: James BURT was a town officer in Taunton in 1645. He was guardian of his brother Richard's son, Richard BURT. (Richard's death was recorded in the Plymouth Colony Records in 1647). His will prob. March 2, 1680. He was aged and weak. He beq. to his oldest son James, son Thomas, daughters Hannah and Rachel, and Hannah's son Jacob Hathney (perhaps Hathaway!) According to the "Second Boat", Volume 4, Number 2, page 50, James BURT came over on the boat called the Falcon in April, 1635, which sailed from London to Barbadoes. | Burt, James (I829)
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| 2302 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] James lived in Green Bay, Wisconsin at the time of his marriage according the marriage certificate. Wedding ceremony was performed by L. B. Hills, a Justice of the Peace. Died in Omro, (Winnebago County) Wisconsin. He is buried in an unmarked grave in the Omro Cemetary (visited by Dave and Mary in August, 1988). According to the U. S. Census taken July 6, 1860 in Omro, Wisconsin, James was listed as a farmer. James had brown hair, black eyes, light complexion, and stood 5 ft. 9 in. tall. He served in the Union army during the Civil War in the 48th Reg., Wisconsin Infantry, having enlisted in Omro on February 11, 1965. He was "mustered out" on December 30, 1865 at Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas. As a matter of fact, his commanding officer, and the person that swore him in, A. B. Cady, happened to be the person that Ann Martin married after Martin's death. | Martin, James H. (I9460)
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| 2303 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Jesse was a farmer at South Farms, Middleton, Connecticut. His second marriage was to Elizabeth, no children. His third wife was Lucy (Atkins) Johnson in 1795, one son. | Coe, Jesse (I4578)
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| 2304 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Joane's will was proved Oct. 22, 1613. | Hulings, Joane (I8362)
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| 2305 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] John Baptist Neumayer worked for his father, John Qualbert Neumayer, in his native Germany until the age of 17 when he learned the cabinet-making trade. In 1839 he and his brother Arbogast left home for America. They travelled by stage through Strasburg, Paris, and Havere. On April 16 they set sail for New York with 307 passengers, and arrived in America on May 23, 1839. John worked in New York, Elizabeth, New Jersey, and Philadelphia. In June 1841 he left for St. Louis. There he learned the cigarmaker trade. He left St. Louis in September of 1843 and travelled north to Milwaukee where he worked a short time as a cigarmaker. He next moved to Nashville, Tennessee where he worked until April 1846. Next stops were Pittsburg, Philadelphia, New York, Buffalo, and Niagara Falls, where he ran into his old boss Medemeyer. He convinced John to return to Milwaukee. John worked for him from 1846 thru 1849. On November 15, 1849, John married Katherina Schneller, who was 18 years old. In August of 1850 they moved to Racine, Wisconsin where he started a short-lived cigarmaking business. In April of 1856 John bought eight acres of land one mile north of Milwaukee and began the hardest eleven years of his life as a vegetable farmer. He finally gave up and moved to Mendota, Illinois where his father-in-law (Simon Schneller (1803)) and Simon's sons were living. This was October 1867. He there bought two lots and built a house. He worked in the lumber yard most of the time. After Katherine's death in 1891 he moved to Aurora, Illinois. John was raised as a Catholic, but before the age of 30 he became a Rationalist. | Neumayer, John Baptist (I10705)
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| 2306 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] John inherited estates in Old Sampford and Great Maplestead and Gestinghorpe. | Coo, John (I4394)
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| 2307 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] John married Constance Johnson, daughter of John Johnson, D. D., Archdeacon of Worcester. | Wightman, John (I10660)
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| 2308 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] John owned an estate at Rowington, near Kenilworth at Warwichshire, England. He was in Boston, then Plymouth in 1643, Hartford in 1645, Wethersfield in 1649, and Middlefield from 1655 thru 1670. He probably died in Middlefield. | Kirby, John (I5559)
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| 2309 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] John possibly came from Norwich (Norfolk) to Watertown. | Pierce, John (I11159)
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| 2310 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] John was a tavern keeper, a surveyor, and a captain in the militia. He settled in Roxbury. He and his wife Mary arrived on the "Winthrop Fleet" in 1630 at Salem. Death certified in the Roxbury Vital Records (Vol II, p 563). | Johnson, Captain John (I18332)
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| 2311 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] John was born during reign of Edward III. He joined Hawkwood's "White Company" in Italy, and for many years participated in the famous exploits of that celebrated band. | Coo, John (I4374)
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| 2312 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] John was in Beckley, Bristol, Massachusetts in 1658, and in Norton, Mass. in 1695. Buried in Fox Cemetery. Married first to Martha Hathaway in March 1648/49, who died between 1683 and 1692. His second marriage was to Ruth (1640-1705), the widow of Christopher DYER, at the First Church, Braintree, Mass. on Dec. 25, 1692. (Ref. NEHGR 59-154). Deeds to three of his sons appear in the Bristol County Deeds, Vol. II pp 402, 433, and 492: to Isaac Feb. 7, 1701/2; to Abraham Feb 24, 1701/2; to John Feb. 5, 1704/5. For facsimiles of their signatures see American Gen. Oct. 1958. Jacobus. Vol.34,p.253. Some information from "Second Boat" Vol. 9, Issue #3, page 12, and "Branches and Twigs", Vol 18:4 (Autumn 1989), page 172. | Hathaway, John (I7533)
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| 2313 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] John was In Dorchester by 1639. It is belived that he had been in a group of Puritans who moved out to Weymouth from Boston and Dorchester in 1636. The land assigned to John was in what is now known as North Weymouth, ten miles to the south of Boston and three miles east of Quincy. John Staple's will, probated August 2, 1683, does not mention his wife; she must have died earlier. It is interesting to note that his daughters shared equally with his sons (a very uncommon practice in 1681). | Staple, John (I11320)
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| 2314 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] John was in Milford in 1639. | Rogers, John (I11378)
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| 2315 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] John was possibly from Waltham, Essex, England, and settled in Charleston, Massachusetts. | Blott, Robert (I2520)
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| 2316 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] John was the last Gestingthorpe to be a Catholic. In the floor of Gestingthorpe church may still be seen the stone slab over John's grave. | Coo, John (I4384)
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| 2317 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] John Wightman, sold the manor of Wykin and moved to Hinckley. His wife was Ann, the dughter of Thomsa Moreton of Croton in Warwickshire. | Wightman, John (I10658)
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| 2318 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] John Wightman, the immigrant, with four of his five sons, his wife having died in England, reached Newport in Rhode Island in 1654. They made their way to Richard Smith's trading post at Wickford in the Narrangansett country, where Valentine Wightman, eldest son of John, had been employed for six years as an interpreter to the Indians. He was also a member of the general assembly. All of the Wightmans apparently arrived in the New World with considerable wealth, so it would seem that it was not for material gain that they came to Rhode Island. The time of their immigration was during the Crimwell Protectorate, and perhaps the disturbed condition of political and religious affairs in England had something to do with leaving England. | Wightman, John (I21035)
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| 2319 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Joseph sailed on the "Transport of London" from Gravesend, England on July 4, 1635. He and Mary had thirteen children. In Springfield in 1636, back again in 1679. He was also in Northampton in 1655, and Boston in 1679. The house built for Joseph and Mary by her brother (John Bliss) is still in existence, and now used by the Northampton Historical Society. | Parsons, Joseph (I22660)
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| 2320 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Joseph was a pioneer settler of Durham, Connecticut in 1706, and he stayed there his entire life. He attained the rank of Captain. He and Abigail had five sons and two daughters. | Coe, Joseph (I4563)
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| 2321 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Joseph was in Boston in 1629, Stratford in 1649. Some of the information came from Prodigy (Joanne Andrus). | Hawley, Joseph (I7550)
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| 2322 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Joseph was the Captain of the Westfield Company in 1728 in Middlefield. | Cornwell, Joseph (I4463)
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| 2323 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Katherine Schneller Neumayer died at the age of 59 years, 7 months, and 10 days, after a short illness of only 11 days. Children Albert and Julie came from Kansas, Clara and Louis from Nebraska. | Schneller, Katherine (I10713)
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| 2324 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Laura is buried in Beaver Dam's Oakwood Cemetery, (gravesite visited by Dave and Mary Lossos) Obituary in Beaver Dam Newspaper: "WEBB - At her home in the third ward, at 3:30 a. m. Tuesday, Feb 8, 1898, Mrs Douglas Webb, aged 71 years, 8 months, and 17 days. In the spring of 1844 Mr. and Mrs. Webb removed form their native state to Wisconsin. They located in Waukesha County where they remained one year. In May 1845 they settled upon a farm in the northwest part of the township of Lowell, Dodge County. This was their home until 1884 when the farm was sold and they came to this city where they have since resided. Mrs Webb was an earnest, conscientous woman who exerted an influence for good upon all with whom she associated. She knew the hardships of pioneer life in Wisconsin and struggled the most of her life with poor health, but was always deeply interested in the welfare of her neighbors and the good of society. Her sympathies were especially enlisted in religious and temperance work, and their kindred interests. Her parents dying while she was quite young she was brought up by devoted grand parents by the name of Curtiss. From her grand father's life and teachings she received moral and religious impressions that continued with her during all the years of her life. She was always fond of dwelling upon his words and example. During the last fourteen years of her life was connected with the Free Methodist church of this city. She leaves her husband, five children and a number of grand children to mourn her lost. Her first child died in infancy while the parents were visiting in the state of New York. The living children are Mrs. Mattie M. Taylor of this city, Chas. C. Webb, of Fox Lake, Rev. Lynn B. Webb, of Evansille and Mrs Minnie M. Hughes and Willard H. Webb of Beaver Dam. Mrs. Webb endured much physical suffering for several years from combination of diseases. Comsumption of the bowels is supposed to have caused her death." | Berry, Laura Debora (I2172)
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| 2325 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Lilah died in child birth, leaving Lilah Mae to be brought up by Chet Wilm's brother and wife. | Schneller, Lilah (I11711)
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| 2326 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Lord of the manors of Lee, Appurleyes, Colverton Appurley, Dry??ley in Gloucestershire, warden of the forest of Dene. | Throckmorton, John (I11576)
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| 2327 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Lord of Upton and Pauntly, Gloucestershire, England. | Whittington, Thomas (I12859)
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| 2328 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Louis and Esther had no children. He died before her. | Oches, Esther (I19619)
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| 2329 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Louise was Philmena Marseiler Tappeiner's twin sister. Accoding to her death certificate, Louise was born in Austria. Louise was nearly 72 years old at her death. The informant on her death certificate was her daughter, Louise Struharik. Obit: Strelow, Louise (nee Marseller) 2016a Senate, Friday, May 1, 1953 beloved wife of late Otto Strelow, dear mother of Alberta Gannon, Louise Freeman, and Ann Hunt, dear mother-in-law, grandmother, greatgrandmother, sister, and aunt. Funeral from Bebken Chapel, burial at Resurrection Cemetery. St. Louis Post | Marseiler, Louisa Strelow (I19716)
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| 2330 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Lucius (Louis) was living on a farm five miles east of Clay Center, Nebraska in 1891. | Schneller, Lucius (I8947)
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| 2331 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Mamie was baptized at St. Henry's, and her godmother was Marie Knichel. Mamie was fond of dancing at the annual picnics in the neighborhood. She perspired while dancing, caught a cold, developed pneumonis, and the following year died of pulmonary tuberculosis. The attending physician was L. E. Herchenroeder. | Lossos, Mary Mamie (I19616)
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| 2332 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Margaret died of cancer. | McKay, Margaret Irene (I10207)
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| 2333 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Margaret's godparent was Phillipine Hespen. Roy and Margaret spent nearly forty years apart during which time Roy remarried and had Shirley Byrne, Lloyd G. Phillips, and Audrey Dannemann. After his second wife died, Roy and Margaret resolemnized their vows on November 24, 1958. | Lossos, Margaret (I19605)
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| 2334 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Marge's obit: "dear wife of the late Charles Lake, dearest firend of Harold Dust, dear sister of Joseph E. Sly and the late William J. Sly....." | Sly, Margaret Marie (I19723)
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| 2335 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Marriage certification. | Whipple, Eleazer (I8404)
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| 2336 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Marriage certification. | Mowry, Captain Joseph (I10509)
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| 2337 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Marriage certified. | Lovett, James (I20613)
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| 2338 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Marriage certified. Buried in "Ballou Burial Grounds" in Cumberland. | Ballou, Nathaniel (I1275)
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| 2339 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Marriage date and surname from the Dinghy, Vol. 3, No. 5, pg 33. Surname still doubtful per Ancestral Lines (pg 229). Margaret arrived at Plymouth in June 1622 on the Anne with her children Samuel and Lydia (and her husband's brother, Thomas). In her will dated July 8, 1665, the widow Margaret HICKS of Plymouth named her son Samuel HICKS, daughter-in-law Lydia Hicks, son Samuel's seven children, grandchild John Bangs, and the children of her loving deceased daughter Phebe, who had married George Watson. | Morgan, Margaret (I16352)
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| 2340 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Marriage in Yarmouth conducted by Peter Thacher, Justice of the Peace - documented on page 141 of the Yarmouth, Massachusetts Vital Records. | OKilley, John (I20471)
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| 2341 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Married 1611 Sir Thomas Dale, Governor of Virginia. | Throckmorton, Elizabeth (I2163)
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| 2342 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Married Alice Gough. | Throckmorton, Sir Nicholas (I2001)
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| 2343 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Married Catherine, daughter of John Keymes. | Throckmorton, Anthony (I10081)
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| 2344 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Married daughter of Sir Edward Rogers. | Throckmorton, Anthony (I12431)
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| 2345 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Married Mr. Beard. | Hulings, Joane (I8364)
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| 2346 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Married Mr. Browne. | Hulings, Alice (I8389)
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| 2347 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Married Mr. Dowse and in 1613 had a daughter mentioned in her grandmother's will. | Hulings, Agnes Anne (I8385)
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| 2348 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Married Sir John Tracy of Toddington. | Throckmorton, Anne (I12420)
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| 2349 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Married St. John Marney. | Throckmorton, Joan (I11573)
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| 2350 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Married William Huntley of Boxwell. | Throckmorton, Elizabeth (I10083)
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