Nebraska Vacation Guide System
Nebraska History
The history of the U.S. state of Nebraska dates back to its
formation as a territory by the Kansas-Nebraska Act, passed by the
United States Congress on May 30, 1854. The Nebraska Territory was
settled extensively under the Homestead Act during the 1860s, and in
1867 was admitted to the Union as the 37th U.S. state.
Pre-historic
A Dinohippus fossil horse from the late Pliocene found at Ashfall State Historical Park near Royal
Mesozoic
During
the Late Cretaceous, between 65 million to 99 million years ago,
three-quarters of Nebraska was covered by the Western Interior Seaway,
a large body of water that covered one-third of the United States. The
sea was occupied by mosasaurs, ichthyosaur, and plesiosaurs.
Additionally, sharks such as Squalicorax, and fish such as
Pachyrhizodus, Enchodus, and the Xiphactinus, a fish larger than any
modern bony fish, occupied the sea. Other sea life included
invertebrates such as mollusks, ammonites, squid-like belemnites, and
plankton. Fossil skeletons of these animals and period plants were
embedded in mud that hardened into rock and became the limestone that
appears today on the sides of ravines and along the streams of Nebraska.
Cenozoic
Pliocene
As
the sea bottom slowly rose, marshes and forests appeared. After
thousands of years the land became drier, and trees of all kinds grew,
including oak, maple, beech and willow. Fossil leaves from ancient
trees are found today in the state's red sandstone rocks. Animals
occupying the state during this period included camels, tapirs,
monkeys, tigers and rhinos. The state also had a variety of horses
native to its lands.
Pleistocene
The Oglala National Grassland near Chadron, Nebraska
During
the last ice age, continental ice sheets repeatedly covered eastern
Nebraska. The exact timing that these glaciations occurred remain
uncertain. Likely, they occurred between two million to 600,000 years
ago. During the last two million years, the climate alternated between
cold and warm phases, respectively called "glacial" and "interglacial"
periods instead of a continuous ice age. Clayey tills and large
boulders, called "glacial erratics", were left on the hillsides during
the period when ice sheets covered eastern Nebraska two or three times.
During various periods of the remainder of the Pleistocene and into the
Holocene, the glacial drift was buried by silty, wind-blown sediment
called "loess".
Holocene (present-day)
As the climate became
drier grassy plains appeared, rivers began to cut their present
valleys, and present Nebraska topography was formed. Animals appearing
during this period remain in the state to this day.
European exploration: 1682–1853
Crow Dog Horse of the Omahas
Nebraska in 1718, Guillaume de L'Isle map, approximate state area highlighted
Several
explorers from across Europe explored the lands that became Nebraska.
In 1682, René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle claimed the area first
when he named all the territory drained by the Mississippi River and
its tributaries for France, naming it the Louisiana Territory. In 1714,
Etienne de Bourgmont traveled from the mouth of the Missouri River in
Missouri to the mouth of the Platte River, which he called the
Nebraskier River, becoming the first person to approximate the state's
name.
In 1720, Spaniard Pedro de Villasur led an overland
expedition that followed an Indian trail from Santa Fe to Nebraska. In
a battle with the Pawnees Villasur and 34 members of his party were
killed near the juncture of the Loup and Platte Rivers just south of
present-day Columbus, Nebraska. Marking a major defeat for Spanish
control of the region, a monk was the only survivor from the party,
apparently left alive as a warning to the colony of New Spain. With the
goal of reaching Sante Fe by water a pair of French-Canadian explorers
named Pierre and Paul Mallet reached the mouth of what they named the
Platte River in 1739. They ended up following the south fork of the
Platte into Colorado.
In 1762, the Treaty of Fontainebleau led
France to cede lands west of the Mississippi River to Spain, causing
the future Nebraska to become part of New Spain. In 1795 Jacques
D'Eglise traveled the Missouri River Valley on behalf of the Spanish
crown. Searching for the elusive Northwest Passage, D'Eglise did not go
any further than central North Dakota.
Early settlements
In
1794 Jean-Baptiste Truteau established a trading post 30 miles up the
Niobrara River. A Scotsman named John McKay established a trading post
on the west bank of the Missouri River in 1795. The so-called Fort
Charles was located south of Dakota City, Nebraska.
The United
States purchased the Louisiana Territory from France for $15,000,000 in
1803. What became Nebraska was the property of the United States for
the first time. In 1812 President James Madison signed a bill creating
the Missouri Territory, including the present-day state of Nebraska.
Manuel Lisa, a Spanish fur trader, built a trading post called Fort
Lisa in the Ponca Hills in 1812. His effort befriending local tribes is
credited with thwarting British influence in the area.
The U.S.
Army established Fort Atkinson near today's Fort Calhoun in 1820 in
order to protect the area's burgeoning fur trade industry. In 1822 the
Missouri Fur Company built a headquarters and trading post about nine
miles north of the mouth of the Platte River and called it Bellevue,
establishing the first town in Nebraska. In 1824 Jean-Pierre Cabanné
established Cabanne's Trading Post for the American Fur Company near
Fort Lisa at the confluence of Ponca Creek and the Missouri River. It
became a well-known post in the region.
In 1833 Moses P. Merill
established a mission among the Otoe Indians. The Moses Merill Mission
was sponsored by the Baptist Missionary Union. In 1842 John C. Frémont
completed his exploration of the Platte River country with Kit Carson
in Bellevue. He sold his mules and government wagons at auction in
there. On this mapping trip, Frémont used the Otoe word Nebrathka to
designate the Platte River. Platte is from the French word for "flat",
the translation of Ne-brath-ka meaning "land of flat waters."
1854–1867
Territorial period
Main article: Nebraska Territory
Further information: Nebraska Territorial Legislature
The
Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 established the 40th parallel north as the
dividing line between the territories of Kansas and Nebraska. As such,
the original territorial boundaries of Nebraska were much larger than
today; the territory was bounded on the west by the Continental Divide
between the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans; on the north by the 49th
parallel north (the boundary between the United States and Canada, and
on the east by the White Earth and Missouri rivers. However, the
creation of new territories by acts of Congress progressively reduced
the size of Nebraska.
Most settlers were farmers, but another
major economic activity involved support for travelers using the Platte
River trails. The Missouri River towns became important terminals of an
overland freighting business that carried goods brought up the river in
steamboats over the plains to trading posts and Army forts in the
mountains. Stagecoaches provided passenger, mail, and express service,
and for a few months in 1860–1861 the famous Pony Express provided mail
service.
Many wagon trains trekked through Nebraska on the way
west. They were assisted by soldiers at Ft. Kearny and other Army forts
guarding the Platte River Road between 1846 and 1869. Fort commanders
assisted destitute civilians by providing them with food and other
supplies while those who could afford it purchased supplies from post
sutlers. Travelers also received medical care, had access to
blacksmithing and carpentry services for a fee, and could rely on fort
commanders to act as law enforcement officials. Forts Kearny also
provided mail services and, by 1861, telegraph services. Moreover,
soldiers facilitated travel by making improvements on roads, bridges,
and ferries. The forts additionally gave rise to towns along the Platte
River route.
The wagon trains gave way to railroad traffic as
the Union Pacific Railroad--the first transcontinental railroad—was
constructed west from Omaha through the Platte Valley. In 1867 Colorado
was split off and Nebraska, reduced in size to its modern boundaries,
was admitted to the Union.
Land changes
On February 28, 1861,
Colorado Territory took portions of the territory south of 41° N and
west of 102°03' W (25° W of Washington, DC). On March 2, 1861, Dakota
Territory took all of the portions of Nebraska Territory north of 43° N
(the present-day Nebraska-South Dakota border), along with the portion
of present-day Nebraska between the 43rd parallel north and the Keya
Paha and Niobrara rivers (this land would be returned to Nebraska in
1882). The act creating the Dakota Territory also included provisions
granting Nebraska small portions of Utah Territory and Washington
Territory—present-day southwestern Wyoming, bounded by the 41st
parallel north, the 43rd parallel north, and the Continental Divide. On
March 3, 1863, Idaho Territory took everything west of 104°03' W (27° W
of Washington, DC).
Wagon train headed to California
Civil War
Main article: Nebraska in the American Civil War
Governor
Alvin Saunders guided the territory during the American Civil War
(1861–1865), as well as the first two years of the postbellum era. He
worked with the territorial legislature to help define the borders of
Nebraska, as well as to raise troops to serve in the Union Army. No
battles were fought in the territory, but Nebraska raised three
regiments of cavalry to help the war effort, and more than 3,000 men
served in the military.
Capital changes
The capital of the
Nebraska Territory was at Omaha. During the 1850s there were numerous
unsuccessful attempts to move the capital to other locations, including
Florence and Plattsmouth. In the Scriptown corruption scheme, ruled
illegal by the United States Supreme Court in the case of Baker v.
Morton, local businessmen tried to secure land in the Omaha area to
give away to legislators. The capital remained at Omaha until 1867 when
Nebraska gained statehood, at which time the capital was moved to
Lincoln, which was called Lancaster at that point.
1867–1900
Statehood
A
constitution for Nebraska was drawn up in 1866. There was some
controversy over Nebraska's admission as a state, in view of a
provision in the 1866 constitution restricting suffrage to White
voters; eventually, on February 8, 1867, the United States Congress
voted to admit Nebraska as a state provided that suffrage was not
denied to non-white voters. The bill admitting Nebraska as a state was
vetoed by President Andrew Johnson, but the veto was overridden by a
supermajority in both Houses of Congress.
Further information: History of slavery in Nebraska
Railroads
Railroads
played a central role in the settlement of Nebraska. The land was good,
but without transportation would be impossible to raise commercial
crops. The railroad companies had been given large land grants that
were used to back the borrowings from New York and London that financed
construction. They were anxious to locate settlers upon the land as
soon as possible, so there would be a steady outflow of farm products,
and a steady inflow of manufactured items purchased by the farmers. In
the 1870s and 1880s Union veterans and immigrants from Europe came by
the thousands to take up land in Nebraska, with the result that despite
severe droughts, grasshopper plagues, economic distress, and other
harsh conditions the frontier line of settlement pushed steadily
westward. Most of the great cattle ranches that had grown up near the
ends of the trails from Texas gave way to farms, although the Sand
Hills remained essentially a ranching country.
A land offer from the Burlington and Missouri River Railroad, 1872
A
typical development program was that undertaken by the Burlington and
Missouri River Railroad to promote settlement in southeastern Nebraska
during 1870–80. The company participated enthusiastically in the
boosterism campaigns that drew optimistic settlers to the state. The
railroad offered farmers the opportunity to purchase land grant parcels
on easy credit terms. Soil quality, topography, and distance from the
railroad line generally determined railroad land prices. Immigrants and
native-born migrants sometimes clustered in ethnic-based communities,
but mostly the settlement of railroad land was by diverse mixtures of
migrants. By deliberate campaigns, land sales, and a vast
transportation network, the railroads facilitated and accelerated the
peopling and development of the Great Plains, with railroads and water
key to the potential for success in the Plains environment.
Populism
Main article: People's Party (United States)
Populism
was a farmers' movement of the early 1890s that emerged in a period of
simultaneous crises in agriculture and politics. Farmers who attempted
to raise corn and hogs in the dry regions of Nebraska faced economic
disaster when drought unexpectedly occurred. When they sought relief
through political means, they found the Republican Party complacent,
resting on its past achievement of prosperity. The Democratic Party,
meanwhile, was preoccupied with the prohibition issue. The farmers turn
to radical politicians leading the Populist party, but it became so
enmeshed in vehement battles that it accomplished little for the
farmers. Omaha was the location of the 1892 convention that formed the
Populist Party, with its aptly titled Omaha Platform written by
"radical farmers" from throughout the Midwest.
20th century
Progressive Era
In
1900 the Populace faded away and the Republicans regained power in the
state. In 1907 they enacted a number of progressive reform measures,
including a direct primary law and a child labor act, in what was one
of the most significant legislative sessions in Nebraska's history.
Prohibition was of central importance in progressive politics before
World War I. Many British-stock and Scandinavian Protestants advocated
prohibition as a solution to social problems, while Catholics and
German Lutherans attacked prohibition as a menace to their social
customs and personal liberty. Prohibitionists supported direct
democracy to enable voters to bypass the state legislature in
lawmaking. The Republican Party championed the interests of the
prohibitionists, while the Democratic Party represented ethnic group
interests. After 1914 the issue shifted to the Germans' opposition to
Woodrow Wilson's foreign policy. Then both Republicans and Democrats
joined in reducing direct democracy in order to reduce German influence
in state politics.
Land use
Since 1870 the average size of
farms has has steadily increased, whereas number of farms rapidly
increased until about 1900, remained stable until about 1930, then
rapidly decreased, as farmers buyout their neighbors and consolidate
the holdings. Total area of cropland in Nebraska increased until the
1930s, but then showed long-term stability with large short-term
fluctuations. Crop diversity was highest during 1955–1965, then slowly
decreased; corn was always a dominant crop, but sorghum and oats were
increasingly replaced by soybeans after the 1960s. Land-use changes
were affected by farm policies and programs attempting to stabilize
commodity supply and demand, reduce erosion, and reduce impacts to
wildlife and ecological systems; technological advances (e.g,
mechanization, seeds, pesticides, fertilizers); and population growth
and redistribution.
Transportation
The 450 miles of the
Lincoln Highway in Nebraska followed the route of the Platte River
Valley, along the narrow corridor where pioneer trails, the Pony
Express, and the main line of the Union Pacific Railroad ran.
Construction began in 1913, as the road was promoted by a network of
state and local boosters until it became U.S> Highway 30 and part of
the nation's numbered highway system, with federal highway standards
and subsidies. Before 1929 only sixty of its miles were hard surface in
Nebraska. Its route was altered repeatedly, most importantly when Omaha
was bypassed in 1930. The final section of the roadway was paved west
of North Platte, Nebraska, in November 1935. The Lincoln Highway was
planned as the most direct route across the country, but that did not
happen until the 1970s, when Interstate 80 was built parallel to US 30,
giving the Lincoln Highway over to local traffic.
Retail stores
In
the rural areas farmers and ranchers depended on general stores that
had a limited stock and slow turnover; they made enough profit to stay
in operation by selling at high prices. Prices were not marked on each
item; instead the customer negotiated a price. Men did most of the
shopping, since the main criteria was credit rather than quality of
goods. Indeed, most customers shopped on credit, paying off the bill
when crops or cattle were later sold; the owner's ability to judge
credit worthiness was vital to his success.
In the cities
consumers had much more choice, and bought their dry goods and supplies
at locally owned department stores. They had a much wider selection of
goods than in the country general stores; price tags that gave the
actual selling price. The department stores provided a very limited
credit, and set up attractive displays and, after 1900, window displays
as well. Their clerks—usually men before the 1940s—were experienced
salesmen whose knowledge of the products appealed to the better
educated middle-class housewives who did most of the shopping. The keys
to success were a large variety of high-quality brand-name merchandise,
high turnover, reasonable prices, and frequent special sales. The
larger stores sent their buyers to Denver, Minneapolis, and Chicago
once or twice a year to evaluate the newest trends in merchandising and
stock up on the latest fashions. By the 1920s and 1930s, large
mail-order houses such as Sears, Roebuck & Co. and Montgomery Ward
provided serious competition, so the department stores rely even more
on salesmanship, and close integration with the community.
Many
entrepreneurs built stores, shops, and offices along Main Street. The
most handsome ones used pre-formed, sheet iron facades, especially
those manufactured by the Mesker Brothers of St. Louis. These
neoclassical, stylized facades added sophistication to brick or
woodframe buildings throughout the state.
Government
Under
the original constitution, the Nebraska Legislature was bicameral, with
a House and a Senate. However, following a 1931 visit to Australia,
U.S. Senator George Norris campaigned for the abolition of the
bicameral system, following the example of the Australian state of
Queensland which had adopted a unicameral system ten years previously;
he argued that the bicameral system was based on the "inherently
undemocratic" British House of Lords. In 1934, a state constitutional
amendment was passed introducing a single-house legislature, and also
introducing non-partisan elections (where members do not stand as
members of political parties).
Government was heavily dominated
by men, but there were a few niche roles for women. For example, Nellie
Newmark (1888–1978) was the clerk of the District Court at Lincoln for
a half-century, 1907–56. She gained a reputation for assisting judges
and new attorneys assigned to the court.
Regulation of industry
With
no cohesive federal protective legislation, Nebraska's Live Stock
Sanitary Commission was created in 1885 to safeguard the public
interest of Nebraska citizens through the regulation of the livestock
industry. In 1887 the commission was reorganized into the Board of Live
Stock Agents; it increased its collaborative efforts with the federal
Bureau of Animal Industry. The Nebraska leadership led to more federal
involvement in the livestock industry, including passage of the federal
Meat Inspection Act of 1906. The Nebraska initiative exemplified the
spirit of the Progressive Movement in the quest to impose scientific
standards especially in areas related to public health.
Women
Farm life
In
Nebraska, very few single men attempted to operate a farm or ranch;
farmers clearly understood the need for a hard-working wife, and
numerous children, to handle the many chores, including child-rearing,
feeding and clothing the family, managing the housework, feeding the
hired hands, and, especially after the 1930s, handling the paperwork
and financial details. During the early years of settlement in the late
19th century, farm women played an integral role in assuring family
survival by working outdoors. After a generation or so, women
increasingly left the fields, thus redefining their roles within the
family. New conveniences such as sewing and washing machines encouraged
women to turn to domestic roles. The scientific housekeeping movement,
promoted across the land by the media and government extension agents,
as well as county fairs which featured achievements in home cookery and
canning, advice columns for women in the farm papers, and home
economics courses in the schools.
Although the eastern image of
farm life in the prairies emphasizes the isolation of the lonely farmer
and farm life, in reality rural Nebraskans created a rich social life
for themselves. They often sponsored activities that combined work,
food, and entertainment such as barn raisings, corn huskings, quilting
bees, Grange meeting, church activities, and school functions. The
womenfolk organized shared meals and potluck events, as well as
extended visits between families.
Teachers
There were few
jobs available for young women awaiting marriage. Prairie schoolwomen,
or teachers, played a vital role in modernizing the state. some were
from local families, perhaps with their father on the school board, and
they took a job that kept money in the community. Others were well
educated and more cosmopolitan, and looked at teaching as a career.
They believed in universal education and social reform and were
generally accepted as members of the community and as extended members
of local families. Teachers were deeply involved in social and
community activities. In the rural one-room schools, qualifications of
the teachers were minimal and salaries were low: male teachers were
paid about as much as a hired hand; women were paid less, about the
same as those of a domestic servant. In the towns and especially in the
cities, the teachers had some college experience, and were better paid.
Those farm families that value the education of their children highly,
often moved to town or bought a farm close to town, so their children
could attend schools. Those few farm youth who attended high school
often boarded in town.
Feminism
Clara Bewick Colby published
the Woman's Tribune newspaper in Beatrice in 1883–89. This suffragist
newspaper provided Nebraska women with information that transcended the
right to vote. The 'Woman's Tribune' consistently was framed within an
identifiable feminist ideology, in which Colby held to the notion that
suffrage and equality for women were moral rights in a democratic
society.
One of the main arguments of the suffragists is that
women were purer and less susceptible to "dirty" politics, and would be
more able to identify and remove corruption from the system. Maud E.
Nuquist, former president of the Nebraska Federation of Women's Clubs,
was the first woman to run for governor, entering the Democratic
primary of 1934. Nuquist's platform promoted "professional, not
political, control of state departments, especially roads and public
welfare." Her slogan was "Yours for Political Housecleaning." She ran a
self-financed campaign, distributing a considerable amount of platform
literature and using help provided by her family and her network of
allies and women's clubs and the League of Women Voters. Finishing
sixth of nine candidates, Nuquist supported the Democrats in the
general election, despite her misgivings about both parties' control by
special interests. The ultimate winner, Governor Roy Cochran, appointed
Nuquist director of the Nebraska Bureau of Child Welfare; two years
later and was named to the Board of Control, which governed the state's
17 reformatory and penal institutions.
Great Depression
The
Great Depression hit Nebraska hard, as grain and livestock prices fell
in half, and unemployment was widespread in the cities. Governor
Charles W. Bryan, a Democrat, was at first unwilling to request aid
from the national government, but when the Federal Emergency Relief Act
became law in 1933 Nebraska took part. Rowland Haynes, the state's
emergency relief director, was the major force in implementing such
national New Deal relief programs as the Federal Emergency Relief
Administration (FERA) and the Civil Works Administration. Robert L.
Cochran, a Democrat who became governor in 1935, sought federal
assistance and placed Nebraska among the first American states to adopt
a social security law. The enduring impact of FERA and social security
in Nebraska was to shift responsibility for social welfare from
counties to the state, which henceforth accepted federal funding and
guidelines. The change in state and national relations may have been
the most important legacy of these New Deal programs in Nebraska.
World War II
Nebraska
was fully mobilized for World War II. Besides sending its young men to
war, food production was expanded, and munitions plants were built. The
new Cornhusker Ordnance Plant (COP) in Grand Island, produced its first
bombs in November 1942. At its peak it employed 4,200 workers, over 40%
of whom were "Women Ordnance Workers" or "WOW's." The WOW's were a
major reason that the Quaker Oats Company, which managed the plant,
started one of the nation's earliest child care programs. For Grand
Island, the plant met high wages, high retail sales, severe housing
shortages, and an end to unemployment. The plant became a major social
force with activities that ranged from sponsoring sporting teams to
encouraging the local Boy Scouts. The city adjusted to the plant's
closing in August 1945 with surprising ease. During the Korean and
Vietnam wars COP resumed production, finally shutting down in 1973.
The Carhenge monument near Alliance
During
the Second World War Nebraska was home to several prisoner of war
camps. Scottsbluff, Fort Robinson, and Camp Atlanta (outside Holdrege)
were the main camps. There were many smaller satellite camps at Alma,
Bayard, Bertrand, Bridgeport, Elwood, Fort Crook, Franklin, Grand
Island, Hastings, Hebron, Indianola, Kearney, Lexington, Lyman,
Mitchell, Morrill, Ogallala, Palisade, Sidney, and Weeping Water. Fort
Omaha housed Italian POWs. Altogether there were 23 large and small
camps scattered across the state. In addition, several U.S. Army
Airfields were constructed at various locations across the state.
Postwar
After
the war, conservative Republicans held most of the state major offices.
A breakthrough came during the administration of Republican Governor
Norbert Tiemann (1967–1971) who successfully pushed for a number of
progressive changes. A new revenue act included a sales tax and an
income tax, replacing the state property tax and other taxes. The
Municipal University of Omaha joined the University of Nebraska system
as the University of Nebraska, Omaha. A new department of economic
development was created as well as a state personnel office. The way
was open for bonded indebtedness for the construction of highways and
sewage treatment plants. Improvement of state mental health facilities
and fair housing practices were also enacted, along with the first
minimum wage law and new of open-housing legislation.
The
nationwide farm crisis of the 1980s hit the state hard with a wave of
farm foreclosures. On the positive side, the interstates and other good
highways , together with a large well-educated workforce, allowed many
small factories to emerge. By the early 1990s, Omaha had become a major
center of the telecommunications industry, which surpassed meat-packing
in terms of employment. After 2000, however, Omaha's call centers face
stiff competition from India.
Culture
After World War II, and
especially after the 1960s, the arts humanities and sciences flourished
across the state, with new or expanded orchestras, museums and
galleries. Nebraska's universities and colleges were leaders, as were
the Nebraska Arts Council (funded by the National Endowment for the
Arts from 1972), and the Nebraska Humanities Council (funded by the
National Endowment for the Humanities).
Hispanics
Hispanics
were drawn to Nebraska by the labor shortages of the 1940s, but large
scale migration began in the 1980s and 1990s, reaching cities large and
small. In 1972, Nebraska was the first state to establish a statutory
agency devoted to the needs of Hispanics, who then numbered about
30,000. Hispanics generally entered low skilled, low-wage occupations,
such as hotels, restaurants, food processing factories, and
agricultural work. One example was the small city of Shuyler in Colfax
County, an area previously dominated by German and Czech ethnics who
had arrived around 1890. Another case study was Lexington, seat of
Dawson County. The Hispanic population soared tenfold between 1990 and
2000, from just over 400 to about 4,000, and the city's overall
population grew from 6,600 to over 10,000. The positive economic trends
in the 1990s contrasted sharply with the 1980s, when the county's
population and overall employment declined rapidly. Fears that
immigration would depress wages and raise unemployment rates were
unfounded. Indeed, just the reverse happened. The Hispanics increased
both labor supply and demand, as businessmen discovered that they could
profitably expand their operations in Douglas County, assured of a
fresh supply of willing labor. The result was an upsurge in employment,
average wages, and economic prosperity for all sectors.


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