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FRANK L. FAIRCHILD,
of the firm of C. & G. Cooper and Company, Mt. Vernon, was born
in Lorain county, Ohio, Dec. 4, 1843, where he resided until
1865. During the earlier part of his life he was engaged
on the home farm, and attending school at Oberlin. For two
years after leaving school he was engaged as book-keeper in a
dry goods house in Oberlin. At the expiration of those two
yeas, 1865, he came to Mt. Vernon, and was engaged by the firm
of C. & J. Cooper & Co., as book-keeper, where he
remained until Jan. 1, 1868, when he was admitted as a member of
the firm, in which he still remains.
~ Page 663- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
JOHN L. FAIRCHILD,
retired, Fredericktown, was born in Woodbury, Litchfield county,
Connecticut, in 1818; came to Mt. Vernon, Ohio, and was married
in 1849 to Lucinda B. Runnian, who was born in Mt. Vernon
in 1823. They had two children, Mary, born in 1851;
John, 1853.
Mrs. Fairchild died in Mt. Vernon in 1877.
Mr. Fairchild's occupation has been a tinner, and
sheet-iron smith. He was engaged in Mt. Vernon in this
business for some yeas, ahs lived in this county for over forty
years, and at present is residing with his son in Fredericktown.
John was married to Sabra E. Talmage, who
was born in Morrow county, Ohio. They have one daughter,
Stella S., born 1879. Mr. John Fairchild is
engaged in the insurance business.
~ Page 663- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
BASIL FARQUHAR,
Middlebury township, farmer, post office, Fredericktown, was in
Frederick county, Maryland, in December, 1796, and came to Knox
county in 1807, locating in this township. In 1824 he was
married to Susan Wright, who died in 1843. In 1852
he was married the second time to Elmer M. Farquhar.
Amos Farquhar, father of Basil, was born in
1775, and was married to Jane Moor. They had a
family of five children - Basil, Mary, Phebe, Elizabeth,
and Abraham. Amos Farquhar died in
1861, Jane Farquhar in 1856, and Phebe in 1836.
Abraham resides in Missouri. The Farquhar family
are among the earlier settlers, pioneers who came when the
country was all new, and cleared up and improved several farms,
among them being the Burkholder farm. They were
prominent pioneers of Knox county.
~ Page 664- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
EDWIN FARQUHAR,
Berlin township, was married to Margaret E. Gibson,
daughter of Hiram E. and Elizabeth Gibson. They had
three children - Flora L., Laura E. and Emma.
The mother departed this life in 1866. He is a
millwright and worked at this trade for many years.
~ Page 664- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
MRS. ELIZA
FERENBAUGH, post office, Rossville, was born Sept. 6,
1813, in Knox county, Ohio. Her father was born in
Virginia, and came to Knox county in 1805 with a wife and one
child. Not long after his wife died, and he was again
married. In 1866 he died, in his eighty-eighth year.
Eliza Ferenbaugh married F. Ferenbaugh May 14,
1835, and bought her present farm. June 29, 1875, her
husband died and left five children - Joseph, born Feb.
17, 1836; Mary, born Oct. 28, 1840; Leo, born Oct.
20, 1843; Edman born Nov. 25, 1848; and Franklin,
born Sept. 20, 1856. Edman died Sept. 8, 1878.
Leo and Joseph are married and settled in Knox
county.
~ Page 664- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
JOSEPH FERENBAUGH,
farmer, post office, Millwood, was born in Union township, Knox
county, Feb. 17, 1836 - a son of Fidel and Eliza Ferenbaugh
He was educated by his father, and remained with him until he
was thirty-five years old. On the third of January, 1874,
he was united in marriage with Susanna Stillinger, a
daughter of John Sillinger, of Union township, born Oct.
8, 1834. After his marriage he located in Howard township,
where he remained two years; he then moved to Union township,
where he remained a short time; from there to Harrison township,
Knox county, where he purchased a farm, and at present resides.
Mr. Ferenbaugh served as land appraiser in 1870.
Mr. and Mrs. Ferenbaugh are the parents of two children, one
of whom only is living - a son, George H., born Nov. 20,
1875. In 1877 Mr. Ferenbaugh purchased a hardware
store in Rossville, where he did business for about eighteen
months.
~ Page 664- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
PETER FERENBAUGH,
Union township, farmer, post office Rossville, was born in
Germany, Jan. 1, 1810. He came to America in Sept. 1831,
with his brother, his father being dead. He came to New
York, then to Buffalo, then to Cleveland; he then settled in
Fairfield county for a few years, then came to Knox county,
Ohio, and settled on his present farm.
In 1845 he was married to Lena Whehond.
They have five children: Rosinda, born December, 1848;
Priscilla, Aug. 24, 1851; Eliza Ellen, Oct. 24, 1855;
Manvilla, Jul. 7, 1858; and Mary Francis, Apr. 12,
1862. All are married except Mary and Manville.
Peter Ferenbaugh learned to make clocks in Germany,
and after coming here he sold them all through the country,
especially in the Scioto valley valley and Kentucky, and all
over the State of Ohio. After they had established a good
trade in this sort of merchandise, they shipped their clocks
from Germany in large lots. One day a vessel was about to
land which contained about eight thousand dollars worth of
clocks for them. It struck a barge which stove in the
bottom of the ship, and all sunk - ship, cargo, clocks, and all.
The clocks were under a partial insurance, and after a long
litigation they managed to obtain a portion of the value of
their goods. But this crippled them in such a way as to
destroy their clock trade, and they lost about three-fourths of
their capital, and could not fulfill their engagements.
After this disaster Peter Farenbaugh was compelled
to preempt his piece of land which he had cleared for a home.
~ Page 664- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
HARRISON
FERRIS was born on the farm on which he now resides, on
Sept. 29, 1842, a son of Embry and Phoebe (Holmes) Ferris.
The father was born in Dutchess county, New York, and after
arriving at man's estate he there learned the wagonmaker's
trade. He was also married in his native county, and there
two of his children were born. In 1832 he family emigrated
to Knox county, Ohio, purchasing one hundred and sixty acres of
land where our subject now resides, most of which was covered
with a dense growth of timber. He at once erected a log
cabin and began the arduous task of placing his fields under
cultivation. Their primitive log cabin served as a
habitation for a number of years, after which it was replaced by
a modern frame residence, but ere its completion both the
husband and wife were called to the home beyond. They were
prominent members and active workers in the Baptist church, and
he was a Whig in his political views. Five of their eight
children still survive, namely: William, of Tama county,
Iowa; Egbert, a resident of Henry county, Illinois;
Harrison, the subject of this review; Oscar, also
of Tama county, Iowa; and Sarah, the wife of Dr. Fred
Gager, of Rochester, Missouri.
Harrison Ferris was but nine years of age when
he was called upon to mourn the loss of his parents, and he
afterward made his home with different residents of the
neighborhood, working for his board. At the age of fifteen
years he was employed as a farm hand by Lemuel Beckley,
and from that time on he was employed by different farmers until
September, 1859, when he joined the gold seekers to Pike's Peak.
After a short time spent in the mines, however, he contracted
chills and fever, and he was advised by a physician to leave the
mountains, which he did during the following winter, returning
to Knox county, Ohio. Here he again began work by the
month, thus continuing until Aug. 1862, when he enlisted for
service in the Civil war, becoming a member of Company G, One
Hundred and Twenty-first Ohio Volunteer Infantry. During
his army career he took part in the battles of Perryville,
Chickamaugua, Missionary Ridge, Kenesaw Mountain and Atlanta,
also many other engagements and skirmishes. He was wounded
at Bentonville, North Carolina, Mar. 20, 1865, and on the 18th
of May, of that year, was honorably discharged from the service
at Camp Denison, returning to his home with a most creditable
military record.
After his return from the war Mr. Ferris resumed
work as a farm hand. In 1866 he was united in marriage to
Miss Sarah Darling a native also of Wayne township, Knox
county, and a daughter of Abraham Darling, now deceased.
After his marriage our subject located with his bride on a small
farm near Mount Vernon, but after a residence there of one year
he rented a place near Fredericktown, where for the following
three years he was engaged in agricultural pursuits. On
the expiration of that period he moved to Fredericktown, where
for about three years he was engaged in the livery business, and
on selling his interests there he purchased thirty-six acres of
land one mile west of his present home. There he made his
home until 1887, when he sold that tract and purchased another
of one hundred and fifteen acres, sixty-four acres of which was
a portion of the old Ferris homestead and the remainder
was a portion of an adjoining farm. There Mr. and Mrs.
Ferris have since made their home, surrounded by the
comforts and many of the luxuries of life. He is a
practical and progressive agriculturist, and his place is neat
and thrifty in appearance, owing to his consecutive labors and
careful supervision.
Unto our subject and wife were born eight children, but
only four are now living, namely: Minnie B., the wife of
William G. Norris, of Richland county, Ohio; Norma,
the wife of Frank Cramer, a resident of Liberty township,
Knox county; Embry R., and Frederick, at home.
The Democracy receives Mr. Ferris' hearty support and
co-operation, and in 1896 he was elected a county commissioner
of Knox county. He was also land appraiser in 1890, and
has held a number of other offices of honor and trust.
Socially he is a member of Thrall Lodge, No. 170, F. & A. M.
He is highly respected by those who have known him from boyhood,
and is indeed a worthy representative of an honored pioneer
family. At all times he has been safely relied upon to use
his influence and means in the advancement of whatever has been
for the good of the community.
~ Page 254 |
HARRISON
FERRISS, Wayne township, farmer, post office,
Fredericktown, born in Wayne township, and was married in 1867
to Sarah Darling, who was born in Knox county in 1843.
They have five children: Willie, born Nov. 28,
1868; Minnie, Mar. 28, 1871; Norma, Oct. 7, 1873;
Jennie, deceased, and Emery, Mar. 26, 1880.
Mr. Ferriss was in the late war, being a member
of the One Hundred and Twenty-first regiment, Ohio Volunteer
infantry, and continued in that service two years and ten
months. He is now a citizen of Wayne township.
~ Page 664- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
DANIEL FIDLER, Middlebury
township, farmer, post office, Fredericktown, born in this
county in 1832, and was married in 1862 to Mary J. Cross,
who was born in Richland county in 1843. They had the
following family: Willie, born in 1863; Bertha D.,
in 1866; Ida R., in 1868; Elmina, in 1872;
Minte E., in 1874, and Walter D., in 1878.
Mr. Fidler was in the late war, a member of the
One Hundred and Forty-second regiment, Ohio National guard, and
served out the time of his enlistment. He is one of the
active and prominent men of this township.
~ Page 664- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
CHARLES FIDLER,
Middlebury township, farmer, post office, Fredericktown, born in
Middlebury township in 1833, and married in 1864 to Melisse
Needham, who was born in Guernsey county Jan. 20, 1832.
They have the following family, namely: Milo E., born
Nov. 12, 1865; Lovilla, born June 30, 1867; Howard,
born Jan. 22, 1877, and died Feb. 21, 1877.
~ Page 664- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
THOMAS
FIELDS, Pike township, deceased, born in 1826, and was
married in 1851 to Sally Gooddale, who was born in Monroe
township in 1830. They had the following children:
Ellen, born in 1852; Joseph, in 1853; George,
in 1854; Permelia, in 1856; Thomas, in 1857;
Robert, in 1858; Mary, in 1859, and Charlotte,
in 1861.
The following have deceased: Thomas, 1802;
Sarah, 1866; George, 1856; Mary, 1861, and
Charlotte, 1862.
~ Page 664- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
W. H. FINK, Mt. Vernon, was born in
1836 in Seneca county, Ohio. He was married in 1856 to
Miss Mary J. Tryon, of Ottawa county, Ohio, by whom he had a
daughter, Ida, and a son, Frank. Mr. Fink
was married a second time to Miss Angeline Conley, of
this city, in 1879.
Mr. Fink came to this city about three years
since, and entered the sash, door and blind factory of C.
Mitchell, as foreman where he remained one year, when he
went to the shop of White & Simpson where he remained
until the close of the firm in 1879.
Mr. Fink is a fancier of rare birds, of which he
has an extensive and beautiful aviary. He is now employed
with C. Mitchell, his former employer, in the planing
mills.
~ Page 664- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
JOSEPH A. FISH,
Middlebury township; farmer; post office, Fredericktown; born in
Morrow county Sept. 29, 1838, and married Oct. Oct. 13,
1859, to Mary Finfrock, who was born in Richland county
June 11, 1840. They have two children, viz: John F.,
born Oct. 23, 1860, and Miles J., Aug. 30, 1864.
Mr. Fish came to this county in 1872. He
owns a well improved farm with excellent buildings, and is one
of the active men of this county.
~ Page 664- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
CHARLES H. FISH, Brown
township, farmer, was born in Beverly, New Jersey, on the
twenty-second day of February, 1851, and was reared by his
mother till he arrived at the age of twelve years, when he was
brought to Cleveland by his uncle. While there, he
attended school one year. He then left his uncle, and
commenced working at whatever he could get to do. This he
continued until he arrived as the age of nineteen years, when he
enlisted in the regular army for the term of five years, where
he remained one year, when he was discharged. He then came
back to Cleveland, where he remained but a short time. He
came to Mt. Vernon, Knox county, and then went to Howard, where
he was engaged to clerk for John McFarland in a grocery
store, remaining about eight months. On Dec. 25, 1872, he
was united in marriage with Catharine Arnold, born in
Brown township, Knox county, Mar. 24, 1851. After his
marriage he moved to Loudonville, Ashland county. While
there, he performed labor for deacon Taylor, but remained
only a short time, soon entering into the service as brakeman
for the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne & Western railroad company.
He remained about three years, during which time he moved to
family to Crestline. From there he moved back to Knox
county, near Jelloway, where he has since remained.
In August, 1880, he purchased a small home in Jefferson
township, Knox county. Their union resulted in five
children, four of whom are living.
~ Page 664- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
HIRAM FISHBURN, Milford
township, farmer, was born in Dauphin county, Pennsylvania, Feb.
10, 1843. His father, Samuel Fishburn was a native
of the same county, born Sept. 5, 1803. Lewis Fishburn,
father of Lewis, and grandfather of Hiram, was a
soldier of the Revolution. He married Catharine Grimm.
They had ten children, Samuel being the only one living.
He married Elizabeth Muma in 1825. She died in
September, 1876. They remained in Dauphin county,
Pennsylvania, until 1852, then emigrated to Ohio, and settled in
Miller township. Mr. Fishburn now resides in
Dauphin. He married Mrs. Margaret Brackbill.
By his marriage they had ten children: David, Amos, Catharine
(married Henry Shupe), Jacob, Daniel, Elizabeth
(married Peter Beinhour); Mary (married James
Chambers), Josiah and Hiram. Samuel has
deceased.
~ Page 664- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
REUBEN M. FISHER, retired,
Berlin township, post office, Fredericktown; born in Berks
county, Pennsylvania, in 1816; came to Ohio with his parents
when a child, who located in Richland county. He was
married to Mary Carey, who was born in Sandusky, Ohio.
They have one son, H. W., who was born in Palmyra.
He has been engaged in farming and working at the cooper
business, but has retired from labor, and is enjoying the fruit
of his labor. He has in his possession twenty-six rattles
that came from one rattlesnake, which was killed by him and his
father in their house. He also has four pieces of
continental money, and three silver dollars - one piece handed
down from his great-grandfather, dated 1735; another dated 1791,
and the third dated 1807. They have been carefully
preserved. He is now the oldest living citizen of Palmyra.
~ Page 664- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
WILLIAM
C. FLAGG, Wayne township, farmer, post office
Fredericktown, born in Washington county, Ohio, Apr. 8, 1842,
and was married to Dora Littimer who was born in Indiana,
Oct. 31, 1850. They have the following children.
Eva L., born Feb. 21, 1869; Jennie C., Oct. 13, 1871;
Dora V., Sept. 29, 1872; Minnie M., Mar. 12, 1873;
Charlie C., June 14, 1876; and James L., June 18,
1879. Mr. Flagg was a soldier in the late war,
being a member of Company G, Ninety-sixty regiment Ohio
volunteer infantry; was in a number of engagements, and was
taken prisoner and kept three months, when he was exchanged.
He was in the service three years, and received an honorable
discharge.
~ Page 664- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
CHARLES FLETCHER, tanner,
Pike township, post office Democracy; born in Brown township,
this county, in 1847, was married in 1875 to Clara B.
Ridenhour, who was born in Washington county, Maryland in
1852. They have one son - Clarence C., who was born
in 1877. Mr. Fletcher is a tanner by trade, and
resides in Amity, where he has established a good trade.
~ Page 665- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
SYLVESTER
FLETCHER, Pike township, (deceased), was born in this
township in 1826, and was married in 1847 to Mary M. Frizzell,
who was born in this township in 1829. They had three
children: Ephraim (deceased, born in 1850; John,
in 1852; and Joel E., in 1856, now deceased.
Sylvester Fletcher died July 10, 1875, at home
in this township. He was a worthy member of the Methodist
Episcopal church, also a member of the Odd Fellows lodge in
Bellville. He was buried by the members of that lodge, and
procession at his funeral being the largest that was ever
witnessed in this vicinity. In his death this county lost
a good citizen, his wife an affectionate companion, and his
children a kind father. He died in the triumphs of living
faith, giving evidence of the power of religion in death.
~ Page 664- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
HENRY R. FOOT, farmer, post
office, Fredericktown. He was born in New York in 1834.
He came to Ohio with his parents in 1838, and was married in
1854 to Sarah A. Rowley, who was born in Michigan in
1837. They have three children, Abigail R., born in
1855; Ephraim, in 1848, and James H. in 1860.
Mr. Foot was a soldier in the late war, a member of
company H, One Hundred and Forty-second regiment O. N. G., and
was honorably discharged.
~ Page 665- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
GEORGE W. FOOTE, farmer,
Berlin township, post office Fredericktown; was born in this
township in 1848, and was married in 1876 to Harriet E.
Willits, who was born in Berlin township in 1857. They
have two children - Herbert W., born in 1878, and Lucy
R., in 1880.
Mr. Foote has always been in this county, with
the exception of the time when he was attending school in
Oberlin.
~ Page 665- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
JAMES S. FORSYTHE, Morgan
township, farmer; was born in Licking county, Ohio, Jan. 1,
1817. His grandfather, John Forsythe, emigrated
from Ireland with his family prior to the Revolutionary war, and
upon the breaking out of the war he enlisted and served four
years. He died in Lancaster county, Pennsylvania.
His family moved to Washington county, Pennsylvania. His
family moved to Washington county, Pennsylvania. Thomas
Forsythe, father of the subject of this sketch, married
Mary Hardy in Harrison county, Ohio, and in 1809 settled
near Utica, where he resided until 1844, when he moved to where
his son now resides and where they both died. They had
four children, all dead except the subject of this sketch.
He was reared on a farm, and has always followed farming as his
occupation, July 7, 1842, he married Mary J. McCullough.
They had eleven children, three of whom died in infancy - the
living are George W., in Iowa; Lovina, wife of James
Lahman; Thomas A., James L., William M., wife of James
Lahman; Thomas A., James L., William M., Lena, wife of
Manly W. Johnson John Wesley, and Samuel C. Mr.
Forsythe is an estimable citizen.
~ Page 665- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
JAMES FOWLER, Howard township,
farmer, post office, Howard; was born in Green township,
Washington county, Pennsylvania, in 1812. In 1827 he moved
to Tuscarawas county, Ohio, remained there until 1853, when he
moved to Knox county and settled in Jefferson township. He
then moved to Pike township in 1863 and remained there five
years. He then came to Howard where he has remained until
the present time. He was married in Harrison county, Ohio,
Feb. 11, 1830. He has twelve children: Maria, Andrew,
William, Hammer, Elizabeth, Margaret, John, Charles, Winfield,
Mary, Florence and Laura. Charles
graduated in medicine at Cleveland, Ohio, in 1879 and is doing
well. Maria died Jan. 15, 1831, Mary died
Aug. 12, 1853. In 1839 Mr. Fowler's services were
engaged to build the Holmes church in Tuscarawas county.
In 1845 his services were engaged in building another church
called Rahabetta. On Feb. 11, 1880, Mr. and Mrs. Fowler
gathered a number of their friends together and celebrated their
fiftieth anniversary of married life.
~ Page 665- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
THOMAS J. FRAZIER, farmer,
post office, Fredericktown, was born in Muskingum county, in
1849, and was married in 1874, to Sarah McKee, who was
born in this county. They have three children, viz:
Robert E., born in 1875; Edie E., in 1877, and
Louis G., in 1879.
~ Page 665- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
JOSEPH P. FRAZIER, farmer,
Berlin township, post office, Fredericktown; was born in
Muskingum county, in 1852, and was married to Mary J. McKee,
who was born in this this county in 1841. They have one
daughter (Dessie Belle), born in 1880.
~ Page 665- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
R. S. FRENCH, a native of New York
city, was born in 1827. His father, Robert French,
native of Maryland, was sergeant in the United States army for
twenty-five years. His mother, Hellen French, was a
native of New York city. Mr. R. S. French came to
Gambier, this county, entered Kenyon college in 1845, and
graduated in 1849. He studied medicine three years, then
purchased two hundred and fifty acres of the college land, and
conducted a stock-farm for three years. He was the first
man to bring a mowing machine into Knox county. In 1855 he
engaged in the mercantile business in Gambier, and was actively
engaged at the business for fifteen years. He then left
his store in the care of a clerk and became agent for J. H.
Gauter & Co., of Jersey City, and continued as their agent
for four years, travelling over twenty-six States and
territories. In 1878 he retired from all business and has
passed his time at his residence in Gambier. Nov. 13,
1851, he married Mrs. Sarah A. Evans, nee Hobb,
and sister of Professor Alexander Hobb, late of Kenyon
college. The union resulted in four children, two sons and
two daughters. One son and one daughter are deceased.
In 1876 he was succeeded by his son, H. H. French,
who is still engaged at the business in Gambier, dealing in
drugs of all kinds, patent medicines, stationery, etc.
~ Page 665- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
EPHRAIM FRIZZELL, Brown
township, farmer, post office Democracy, son of John M. and
Elizabeth Frizzell, born in Baltimore county, Maryland,
Sept. 16, 1816, and was brought by his parents to Ohio in 1826,
when a boy of ten years of age. His father located in Pike
township, Knox county, where he reared his family. At the
age of twenty-three years Ephraim Frizzell, the subject
of this sketch, married Miss Mary Muntis in 1859,
daughter of John and Susan Muntis, born in York county,
Pennsylvania, Sept. 10, 1816. After his marriage he
remained in Pike township a short time, and purchased a farm in
Brown township, where he moved in 1849 and remained until 1853,
when he exchanged said farm for farm and tannery in amity, Pike
township, where he then moved, operating said tannery and farmed
in connection with it until 1857. He then sold his
property in Pike township, and purchased a farm of one hundred
and seventy acres in Brown township, where he then moved and now
resides. While living in Pike township he held the office
of trustee for four years. By their marriage they became
the parents of nine children - George, Allen, Eleorah, Sarah
C., Mary A., Susan, John M., Elizabeth. Normanda died
May 2, 1862. Mr. and Mrs. Frizzell are members of
the German Baptist church of Danville.
Allen Frizzell, son of Ephraim Frizzell,
served four years in the late Rebellion, under Captain
A. Cassil in the Sixty-fifth Ohio volunteer infantry,
company E.
~ Page 665- History of Knox Co., Ohio - Publ. 1881 |
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