Author Archive

June Announcement for the Utah Westerners

HO FOR PROVO!


AN EVENING AT BYU

It’s time once again for what is becoming our traditional, annual regional field trip within the state. This time we are headed south to Brigham Young University where we will dine at the famous Sky Room and then have an exclusive look at some of the treasures from the holdings of the L. Tom Perry Special Collections Library at the Harold B. Lee Library.

The Lee Library has 98 miles of shelving (if laid end to end, the shelves would stretch from Provo to Salt Lake and back again) with over 6,000,000 items in its various collections. The Special Collections Library was founded in 1957 and began with a mere 1000 books, 50 manuscript collections and one curator. Today the department consists of 14 full-time curators, plus manuscript processors assisted by 30+ student employees working with 350,000 books, more than 25,000 manuscript collections, and 1.5 million photographs. In 1990 Special Collections was moved into BYU’s impressive new library addition. With a generous donation from Aline and L. Sam Skaggs came a request that the school name its Special Collections after L. Tom Perry, an apostle of the LDS Church. Housed in this state-of-the-art facility and department is a vast array of printed books and pamphlets, manuscripts, maps, music, broadsides, fine artistic printing, posters, and photographs.

We could not begin to see more than a fraction of the vast holdings of the L. Tom Perry Special Collections, but in the short time we will be guests there, we will view such memorable items as early western brand books, books and manuscripts of Zane Grey’s works, Robert Spurrier Ellison’s photographs of the Little Bighorn, and photos taken by William Henry Jackson, Charles R. Savage, and Andrew J. Russell (including the “meeting of the rails” by the latter two photographers), materials from the fur trade, and much more.

There to present this fascinating assortment of materials are three key people at L. Tom Perry Special Collections: Maggie Gallup Kopp, Lyn Clayton, and John Murphy. Maggie Gallup Kopp is Curator of Rare Books and responsible for the European historical collections and rare British and American Literature. She holds an M.A. from Fordham University and an M.L.S. from the University of Texas at Austin.

Lyn Clayton is Collections Administrator and is also responsible for the extensive Yellowstone collection. He has a BS in chemistry and zoology and an M.A. in Western American History.

John Murphy is Curator for 20th and 21st Century Western and Mormon Manuscripts. He has a B.A. in history from BYU, an M.A. in history from Brandeis University, and an M.S.L.I.S. from Simmons College.

June 9, 2014 at 11:24 am Leave a comment

May Announcement for the Utah Westerners

STATE HISTORY

(AND THE STATE OF UTAH’S HISTORY)

 BRAD WESTWOOD

JULIE FISHER

BRIAN SOMERS

We at State History–known officially as the Utah Division of State History (UDSH) and the Utah Historical Society—are asking each of you Utah Westerners to lend an ear and your heart to a presentation about State History.

There has been a symbiotic relationship between State History and the Utah Westerners since the UW was established in 1967.  In the recent past, Michael Homer, longtime Board of History chair (13 years),  deputy board chair Greg Thompson (6 years), and State History directors Phil Notarianni, Wilson Martin, Kristen Rogers-Iverson, and the current director Brad Westwood, have all participated in the Utah Westerners’ energetic and independent forum for Western and Utah history.  State History and its parent organization, the Department of Heritage & Arts, want to carry on this relationship by making this presentation.

Established in 1897, this statewide enterprise documents and celebrates Utah’s history. Come learn about the “state” of Utah History (present and future).  We will explore the State’s efforts at collecting, protecting and writing its history.The Utah Westerners play a major role in the enterprise of history in Utah, so please come listen and play a part in the future of State History.

In June 2013, State History selected three broad, long-range goals: 1) Make Utah’s history relevant and valuable to every citizen (State History to be a household name); 2) Make the state’s history useful for public policy; and 3)Pursue a state-of-the-art professional facilityfor Utah’s premier history collection. At the same time, State History wishes to showcase or exhibit (digitally or otherwise) a history where all of Utah’s communities will see themselves in the pages of history.

Formed first as a private organization in 1897–amid the rush of the pioneers’ celebration (fiftieth  anniversary, 1847-1897), a growing national interest in genealogy and a grassroots desire to document the pioneer past–the Utah State Historical Society was embraced in 1920 as a worthy state-funded agency.  Following the establishment of a library and museum collection, the Utah Historical Quarterly was launched in 1928. In the 1970s, the division became the state’s agency for documenting and encouraging the protection of archaeological sites and historic architecture.

For sixty-two years, State History has also hosted the Utah History Conference (held each September).  We hope you will be surprised and pleased with both the present services and the future plans for State History.

This presentation will be offered by UDSH director Brad Westwood, assisted by Julie Fisher, Executive Director of the Department of Heritage & Arts, and Department Deputy Director, Brian Somers.

In addition to her duties as Executive Director, Julie Fisher, also administers support to the State Library, Division of Arts & Museums, Office of Indian Affairs, Mulitcultural Commission, and the Commission on Service & Volunteerism.  Before her appointment by Governor Gary Herbert in 2011, Julie was a state representative (District 17) serving four terms, representing Fruit Heights, Kaysville and Farmington.

Deputy Director Brian Somers, has held this position since February 2013. Prior to this, he was Governor Herbert’s speech writer, before which he was a congressional staff member in Washington, D.C.

Brad Westwood has been director of State History since May 2013. Prior to that appointment, he managed programs and departments at the LDS Church History Department, Brigham Young University, and The Athenaeum of Philadelphia. He also owned a private business, Westwood Research & Consulting, which he ran for four years.  Brad has degrees in American Studies from BYU and Historic Preservation from University of Pennsylvania.

May 12, 2014 at 8:50 am Leave a comment

April Announcement for the Utah Westerners

SILVER TO SAVE ZION:

THE BULLION, BECK & CHAMPION MINING COMPANY AND THE REDEMPTION OF ZION

 R. JEAN ADDAMS

A fundamental tenet of the LDS Church and other churches of the 1830 “Restoration,” inspired by Joseph Smith, is the “redemption of Zion,” meaning a “return to Jackson County, Missouri,” from which the early church was driven in the fall of 1833. The “return” to “redeem Zion” was, thereafter, a promise proclaimed by leaders of the various churches of the Restoration. The Church of Christ was the first group of early members to return to Independence, Jackson County, Missouri, in 1867. The Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints began their movement back to Jackson County a decade later. The LDS Church was “late to the gathering” notwithstanding the frequent discussion and desires of the church leaders and members from the 1850s through the 1890s.

In 1870, John Beck, a German Mormon convert, staked a mining claim in the Tintic Mountains in and around what is now Eureka, Utah. He went on to establish the Bullion Beck and Champion Mining Company and became its principal owner, president, and general manager. He was also a major owner of the Bullion-Beck Tunnel and was sole owner of the hot spring resort, Saratoga Springs. In 1883, Beck solicited the help of LDS Church President John Taylor and Taylor’s first counselor George Q. Cannon in his mining venture. Soon the three men entered into an arrangement which turned over 60% of their individual shares to John Taylor and established a “consecrated” stock fund with Taylor as trustee. A select group of other church officers and clerks were also included, but on a minor scale. The primary purpose of this fund was to re-acquire land in Independence, Missouri, building the Jackson County Temple and, in general, to re-establish a meaningful LDS Church presence in the area. The mine became profitable early on. However, the death of John Taylor in 1887 complicated the arrangement and dissension arose within the leadership of the church over the consecrated stock ownership and mine management.

Until now, this piece of Utah history has been virtually unknown and has gone untold. R. Jean Addams now tells the story of this fascinating tale of mining, money, and religious fervor in Utah.

R. Jean Addams is a lifelong enthusiast of Mormon and Utah history and has become a recognized independent historian. He has written and has had published several articles in various scholarly journals dealing with the Church of Christ (Temple Lot) in Independence, including “’Upon a Lot . . . Not Far from the Courthouse:’ A Photographic History of the Temple Lot in Independence, Jackson County, Missouri.” He also wrote a book on the subject. More recently, his interest has shifted to the LDS Church and the redemption of Zion and he has written on that topic. His article, “The Bullion, Beck, & Champion Mining Company and the Redemption of Zion” will be soon be published in the Journal of Mormon History. Addams is past president of the John Whitmer Historical Association. Besides researching and writing history, his interests include family, skiing, and fishing.

April 8, 2014 at 2:37 pm Leave a comment

March Announcement for the Utah Westerners

A EUPHONIOUS EVENING

RED DESERT RAMBLERS

We are in for a real treat this month as we change direction a bit by not having a speaker and by just asking you to come, relax, and have fun as you listen to the harmonious sounds of a superb regional band, The Red Desert Ramblers. The band plays Bluegrass, Classic Country, Celtic, and Swing music with a style all their own. The Ramblers, whose members hail from Salt Lake and Summit Counties, have achieved national recognition and have participated in numerous regional and national festivals including the International Bluegrass Music Association FanFest in Nashville, Pickin’ in the Pines (Arizona), Memorial Day Bluegrass Festival (Grand Junction, CO), Bluegrass in the Barn (Nampa, ID) Red Rocks Bluegrass Festival (St. George, UT), Windwalker Ranch Bluegrass Festival (Spring City, UT), and more.

The Red Desert Ramblers have been honored by the International Bluegrass Music Association by being the first Utah band to ever be hired for an IBMA performance and were the only bluegrass band featured at the Mountain West Conference of the Arts. Members have won several awards including band leader, Sharon Mitchell, as best Utah hammered dulcimer player and Rick Martinez as best banjo player for the Intermountain Acoustic Music Association (IAMA). The Salt Lake Tribune says, “When it comes to locally produced bluegrass bands, it’s hard to do better.”

Sharon Mitchell (hammered dulcimer, harmony vocals) is the band leader/manager and has played the dulcimer since 1989. She is the first hammered dulcimer player ever to be hired for an IBMA performance. Sharon also plays with the Public Domain String Band and The American Irish Duo. In addition, she runs the IAMA Local Concert Series. She’s considered the “roots and branches” of the Red Desert Ramblers.

Steve Hewson (lead vocals, guitar, and mandolin) is best known as the host of the Rockport Dam Jam and is the former manager of Rockport State Park. After “going electric” with the country band “Desert Skies,” Steve returns to his first love of acoustic music with the RDR. He also plays with Detour Utah.

Rick Martinez (5-string banjo) has a style of 30 years steeped in traditional and progressive bluegrass music. His clean, precise, and dynamic playing reinforces the authentic sound of the band. Rick has played with the Rick Martinez Band, Holdin’ Out, and the Prairie Dogs.

David Bates (upright bass) has been a mainstay in the SLC/Summit County communities for many years. He has been or is a pilot, bus driver, and farmer. He helps mentor teenagers and youths as they seek to become proficient musicians. Dave also plays with the Silver Creek String Band.

Richard Schmeling (lead/harmony vocals, mandolin) adds to his impressive vocals with impressive guitar and piano playing. His ballads are amazing and no one can belt out traditional heart-wrenching songs like Richard. He also performs with the band, Bluegrass Rising.

March 5, 2014 at 2:16 pm Leave a comment

February Announcement for the Utah Westerners

A CLASH OF CULTURES

SEVIER AND PIUTE COUNTY NATIVE AMERICANS AND  THEIR RELATIONS WITH EURO-AMERICANS BETWEEN 1810 AND 1874

EDWARD LEO LYMAN

The so-called Old Spanish Trail from New Mexico to southern California (1829-1848) was first a slave capturing trail into central Utah utilized by Ute Indians and New Mexico traders to carry Southern Paiute women and children to its southeastern terminus as slaves. When the first Anglo-American explorer in the Sevier Valley, Jedediah Smith, arrived in 1826, he noted a line of Paiute smoke signals warning of his approach extending from later Salina through Clear Creek Canyon and on toward later Beaver, demonstrating great apprehension regarding  strangers. By the time fellow mountain man, Elijah Barney Ward, settled near Salina in 1848 and Mormon explorers commenced reconnoitering that region, there were no Paiutes noted residing anywhere nearby.

The formerly besieged Native Americans had clearly relocated to safer areas. Almost twenty years later, during the Black Hawk War between the Latter-day Saint militiamen, mainly of Sanpete and Sevier Counties and the Northern Utes of central Utah, the Southern Paiutes of the same region remained neutral, certainly distrusting their former oppressors in the slave trade far too much to assist them. However, the Mormons did not differentiate between hostile and neutral Native Americans and on two tragic occasions, a large number of Paiutes were mistakenly killed. Possibly up to fifty people died in two massacres, which constituted nearly two thirds of the total lives lost in the war on all sides. Thus the horrible fact was that neutral persons suffered much more than the belligerents and their families.

Most of the fighting in this largest of all Utah Indian wars ended in 1868-69, except for a few Utes residing between Fish Lake and Red Lake (later Wayne County). In 1872, they informed Latter-day Saints they were willing to also talk peace. Thereafter up to 150 Ute and Paiutes cooperated with Mormon interpreter-agents in establishing individual farms in Grass Valley in Sevier County, founding an Indian reservation without any input or assistance from the federal government.

Edward Leo Lyman, a native of Delta, Utah, received degrees in U. S. History from BYU the University of Utah. While studying for a PhD. in U. S. History at UC Riverside, he also taught and coached in high school locally. For some twenty years he spent most vacations at the LDS Church Historical Department, partly being mentored by Leonard J. Arrington. During and after completing his doctorate, he commenced writing western American and LDS history, which he has continued for over forty years, producing many articles and books. He recently won awards for a biography of his great-great grandfather, Amasa Mason Lyman: Mormon Apostle and Apostate, A Study in Dedication; an edited work, Candid Insights of a Mormon Apostle: The Diaries of Abraham H. Cannon, 1889-1895; and a journal article, “Chief Kanosh: Champion of Peace and Forbearance.” He is presently awaiting publication of his history of Utah’s seven attempts at statehood, 1848-1896, and is currently writing a history of the Southern Paiute tribe of Native Americans. He and his wife, Brenda, reside in Silver Reef, Utah. Lyman is presently an adjunct history professor at Dixie State University.

March 5, 2014 at 2:15 pm Leave a comment

January Announcement for the Utah Westerners

HISTORICAL VIGNETTES

  FROM THE JOE HATCH FILM LIBRARY

                       DR. JOSEPH L. HATCH               

Joseph Hatch has had a life-long fascination with still and movie photography; he even filmed and co-directed an 8mm color silent western melodrama when he was only 17 years old. He also made several Super-8 color sound movies and has put together an impressive photographic archive. Joe will lead off the new year at our January meeting with historical vignettes from his film library that he will narrate. They include Ab Jenkins’s record-breaking last race on the Salt Flats in the “Mormon Meteor III,” a footrace with Henry Eyring and other University of Utah faculty (with entertaining, perhaps surprising results), the floods of 1983 in the Salt Lake Valley and the brilliant way firefighters coped with them, the horse head figure on the north flank of the east side of Mt. Timpanogos, and the implosion of the Newhouse Hotel in 1983. Joe will show us fascinating snippets of local history not likely to be seen anywhere else.

Utah Westerner, Joseph Hatch, comes from early Utah pioneer stock; all eight of his great- and some of his great-great-grandparents came to the Salt Lake Valley prior to the Pony Express and the completion of the railroad here in  the 1860s. He was born and raised in Salt Lake City, but there was always a horse for him in Heber City where his father was born. He spent many summers of his youth there riding his horse almost everywhere. Over the years he participated in horse club activities and even calf-roping while he was in the army. To this day he enjoys cattle roundups, trail rides, and horse pack trips in the Uinta Mountains and Yellowstone.

Some years ago Joe became interested in and involved with the National Pony Express Association and is currently a Re-ride Captain in the organization’s Utah Division. In 2012, the book he did with fellow Utah Westerner, Patrick Hearty, The Pony Express Stations of Utah, was published.

Dr. Hatch has an impressive resume in his chosen professional field of medicine, chiefly, ophthalmology. He has done extensive research and writing in that field and has won numerous awards and received scholastic honors as well. He has extensive professional and administrative experience, serving on and often leading dozens of medical and other boards and committees over the years. He has been an active participant in various community activities and has frequently served as a consultant and teacher in his field. Joe is currently an Adjunct Associate Professor of Ophthalmology at the Moran Eye Center of the University of Utah where he serves as senior consultant to the ophthalmology residents in some of the general and corneal eye clinics at the VA Hospital

January 10, 2014 at 11:17 am Leave a comment

December Announcement for the Utah Westerners

UTAH RADIO: AN INSIDERS PERSPECTIVE

DOUG WRIGHT

With a career that has spanned nearly a half-century in radio, Doug Wright has a unique perspective on Utah’s illustrious radio and broadcast history and the people who have filled the airwaves for the past 91 years. He has had the opportunity to rub shoulders with, be mentored by, and work along-side many of the men and women who shaped that very history.

 

Doug will share stories, memorabilia, and a behind-the-scenes view on Utah’s major broadcast accomplishments. He’ll also highlight the lives of broadcasting pioneers and other past and present professionals who have built Utah’s nationally respected radio legacy.

 

Public service and community involvement are important to Doug and he has long been recognized as one of the most trustworthy voices in the Intermountain West. The largest part of his more than forty years in the broadcast industry has been spent at KSL Radio and Television in Salt Lake City where faithful listeners depend on his level insight and knowledge of worldwide and local political and current events to keep them informed.

 

Doug is a Utah native, proud of pioneer roots tracing back to the 1840s. Raised in the Sugarhouse area of Salt Lake, Doug began his broadcast career while still a high school student. He has been honored with many awards for his professional and community efforts including induction into the Utah Broadcast Association Hall of Fame and a Marconi Award for Large Market Personality of the Year in 2010—the highest honor in the broadcast industry. He is an avid reader who loves history, coin collecting, hiking, movies, his historic home in Eureka, and, above all, his family. Married for 33 years to his wife D., they are the parents of three wonderful children.

January 7, 2014 at 3:48 pm Leave a comment

November Announcement for the Utah Westerners

DEAF, BUT NOT DUMB

OR, WHY DALE MORGAN’S WORKS WILL OUTLIVE

THOSE OF ANYONE LIVING TODAY

RICHARD L. SAUNDERS

Of those who aspire to tell stories across the sweep of the American West, only a handful create works that outlast their generation. One of those is a brilliant and complex native of Salt Lake City, who came to history in the 1930s and died an untimely death from cancer well before reaching his sixtieth birthday. In the span of two-and-a-half decades, Dale Morgan produced works that stand as unassailable foundations to the study of the early American West. The book for which he is perhaps best known, Jedediah Smith and the Opening of the West, has never been out of print since its publication in 1953.

Frenetically busy, well liked by those with whom he associated, Morgan’s career was nonetheless filled with desperation and disappointment. Deafened by illness as a teen, Morgan became of the leading regional historians of the twentieth century. Though he could not hear, his pen was not still. Eloquence flowed out in letters, in books, and in encouragement to the rankest buff in measures equal to what he afforded professional peers. Labeled as a “dilettante to history” by some, his work still outshines the careers of lesser professionals. With the experience of twenty years studying the historian and his work, Dr. Saunders will share key reasons why Morgan will remain one of the bedrock figures in later readers appreciating the West.  

Richard L. Saunders earned a Ph.D. in history from the University of Memphis and also holds degrees from BrighamYoungUniversity and UtahStateUniversity. He is currently Head of Reference and professor at the University of Tennessee at Martin, Tenn. He has extensive experience in editing, book production and conservation, cataloging, and other book- and library-related activities. He has written or edited several books including Dale Morgan on the Mormons: Collected Works, 1938-1970, 2 vol. ed., (published by The Arthur H. Clark Co., 2012-2013), Printing in Deseret: Mormons, Politics, Economy, and Utah’s Incunabula 1849-1851, (published by University of Utah Press, 2003), and Eloquence from a Silent World: A Descriptive Bibliography of the Published Writings of Dale L. Morgan, (published by Caramon Press, 1990). Saunders has also written scores of articles and book chapters for a number of scholarly journals and has won several awards for his writing and other academic pursuits.   He is currently at work on a biography of Dale Morgan. It is safe to say that no one alive knows as much about Morgan’s life and writings as Richard L. Saunders

November 8, 2013 at 10:24 am Leave a comment

Jack Tykel (1930-2013)

JACK B. TYKAL 1930-2013

I came into this world on 27 June 1930 in Chicago, IL, born to Henry F. and Mae G. (Thompson) Tykal, and I left it on 24 September 2013. I grew up in the Midwest, and attended college in Indiana, where I met an Ohio girl, Helen Gibson. She later became my wife of 59 years.

A 1952 college graduate, Uncle Sam put the arm on me for two years, of which thirteen months were spent in Korea. Army service ended, I married Helen and began a career as a banker. Seven years later, after deciding banking was not for me after all, I followed an earlier interest and became a Special Agent of the FBI. Several moves around the country saw me wind up in Salt Lake City, where I retired as Assistant Special Agent in Charge of the Salt Lake City office.

Believing that one does not retire to do nothing, but to do something different, I harkened back to a near-lifelong interest in western history, and the fur trade. Over the succeeding years I had two books published on western history/fur trade, and articles in historical journals. One of my most enjoyable associations were the years I spent as a member of the Utah Westerners. Another is Cottonwood Presbyterian Church, where I’ve served in a number of capacities over the years and have enjoyed friendships with my fellow members.
I leave behind my wife, Helen, four daughters: Karen Smith (Don), Elizabeth Barnhart (Jim), Susan Wood (Steve), and Barb Tykal, and eight wonderful grandkids. Leaving them is my only regret for I’ve had a great run at life and leave with no other complaints.

There will be a Memorial Service for me at Cottonwood Presbyterian Church (1580 Vine St.) at 11:00 a.m., Saturday, October 5. Not being one for flowers, if you want to honor and remember me I suggest a donation to either The Nature Conservancy or Heifer Project, both favorites of mine.

“Death is a debt to Nature due That I have paid, and so must you.”
( gravestone, Deerfield, Mass.)


October 11, 2013 at 9:23 am Leave a comment

October Announcement for the Utah Westerners

LOOKING INWARD

LeCONTE STEWART’S DEPRESSION-ERA ART

DONNA L. POULTON AND VERN G. SWANSON

LeConte Stewart (1891-1990) is considered to be Utah’s most important landscape painter. His paintings elicit a wide range of responses from his audiences—especially those images of the Great Depression.  From the sublime to the mundane, his depictions of rural and urban Utah evoke currents of emotion often described as nostalgic and melancholic.  LeConte Stewart turned his attention inward during the 1930s asking questions about what went wrong with the economy while also searching for what was solid and honest in the Utah landscape.  Woven throughout most of his rural landscape paintings are expressive traces of solitude and desolation, but it is important to note that they should not be confused with pessimism for a landscape that gave Stewart such inordinate pleasure. During the course of this presentation, both Donna Poulton and Vern Swanson will talk about the extraordinary content of his masterworks, the artist’s motivations, his sorrows and his joy.  The paintings offer the viewer an opportunity to identify, if only momentarily, with the mind of a profoundly introspective artist who made it his life’s work to express his deepest and innermost experience.

Utah Westerner, Donna L. Poulton, is the Curator of art of Utah and the West at the University of Utah’s Museum of Fine Arts.  She grew up in rural Montana and lived in Germany for twelve years where studied at the BostonUniversity extension in Stuttgart and later received her Ph.D from BrighamYoungUniversity.  She has juried and curated many exhibitions and has written articles on Utah and Western Art for Fine Art Connoisseur Magazine, is the author of Reuben Kirkham: Pioneer Artist and co-author of Utah Art, Utah Artists, Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts and LeConte Stewart: Masterworks. Her new book on Painters of the Tetons will be released next year for the 100-year anniversary of Teton National Park. Her new book, Mountains and High Plateaus, with co-authors Vern Swanson and Jim Poulton will be released in 2015.

Donna has taught Utah art history at the University of Utah, lectures throughout the state and has served on the boards of numerous arts organizations. She has produced commercial videos on Utah art and consulted with private art collectors and galleries.

Vern G. Swanson is a native of Oregon. He graduated from Brigham Young University (BA), University of Utah (MA), and University of London (PhD) in art history.  He started his career at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., taught art history at Auburn University as an Assistant Professor  and was later employed a Wasatch Bronzeworks in Lehi.  Since 1980, Dr. Swanson has been the director of the Springville Museum of Art, has helped the museum’s art collection of Utah and Russian art grow and has contributed toward the construction of the new wing dedicated in 2004.

Dr. Swanson has published fourteen art history books as sole or joint author. Six of these have been in collaboration with Drs. Robert Olpin, William Seifrit, and Donna Poulton. In 2007, this third and largest book, Soviet Impressionist Painting, was released. He is currently working on four books including the long awaited book on John Hafen and “The Chiasmatic Atonement.”

October 11, 2013 at 9:13 am Leave a comment

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