Why Did the Virginia Company Continue to Transport People to Jamestown From 1607 to 1622
Jamestown - Why There?
(click on images for larger versions)
International rivalries with Spain and France shaped the location of Jamestown and the settlement of Virginia. The shape of the channel in the James River was also a factor.
The English were not the first people to arrive in Virginia, just as Columbus was not the first person to realize the earth was round. Asian hunter-gatherers got here first, about 15,000 years earlier. The Spanish explored the Chesapeake Bay before the English. In 1570, the Spanish even sent Catholic missionaries to convert the natives in Virginia and to expand the power of Spain north from Cuba.
In 1565 the Spanish established the first permanent European settlement in North America, St. Augustine in Florida. That settlement never developed beyond its role as a fort (presidio). Its primary role was to prevent pirates or other nations from establishing a base for capturing Spanish ships carrying gold and silver home from the New World. St. Augustine also protected Catholic missionaries - but the Spanish never tried to "plant" a large number of permanent settlers there.
Jamestown was intended to become the core of a long-term settlement effort, creating new wealth for the London investors and recreating English society in North America. The colonists arrived at Jamestown after a 4-month journey from London.
The three ships, the Susan Constant, Godspeed, and Discovery, left on December 16, 1606 from the docks at Blackwall on the Thames River, stopped at the Canary Islands for water, reached Martinique in the West Indies on March 23, sailed north from the Caribbean on April 10, reached Cape Henry on April 26 - and then spent over two weeks exploring places along the James River before settling at Jamestown on May 14, 1607.1
the first colonists to reach Jamestown in 1607 started their trip by sailing eastward from the docks at Blackwall in London to reach the English Channel
Source: ESRI, ArcGIS Online
One basic geography question is "Why did the English settle Virginia - and why did they start at Jamestown?" Factors to consider include:
- why Europeans had the resources/interest to colonize a new world, while the Algonquians lacked draft animals, the wheel, metals, and writing
- why the English, rather than some other culture, populated Virginia
- why the English created a successful colony in Virginia rather than abandoned it in failure
- and what adaptations the settlers had to make in order to succeed
- what happened to the First Families of Virginia - the Native Americans
- how the physical geography affected the settlement of Virginia by the English, and how the English changed the physical geography
- how the original culture of the English affected the settlement of Virginia
on the first trip to Jamestown, three English ships sailed south to the Canary Islands, then west to Martinique and other islands in the Caribbean, and finally north to the Chesapeake Bay
Source: ESRI, ArcGIS Online
The English spent over two weeks exploring the James River before choosing the site of their first settlement. Jamestown was placed on a peninsula with just a narrow link to the mainland, located 50 miles upstream from the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay. The original 1606 instructions to the colony, written by investors in London before anyone understood the local geography, prioritized safety over convenience for travel between England-Virginia.
The focus on safety was based on the French experience at Fort Caroline over 50 years earlier. The French settled in 1564 near the coastline in what today is Jacksonville, Florida. Within a year, the Spanish in nearby St. Augustine destroyed the fort and killed the French colonists attempting to flee. Jamestown was located far north of the Spanish base at St. Augustine and, in recognition of that threat, placed further inland:2
- But if you choose your place so far up as a bark of fifty tuns will float, then you may lay all your provisions ashore with ease, and the better receive the trade of all the countries about you in the land; and such a place you may perchance find a hundred miles from the river's mouth, and the further up the better.
- For if you sit down near the entrance, except it be in some island that is strong by nature, an enemy that may approach you on even ground, may easily pull you out; and if he be driven to seek you a hundred miles [in] the land in boats, you shall from both sides of the river where it is narrowest, so beat them with your muskets as they shall never be able to prevail against you.
Jamestown was located on the "Powhatan" river, according to John Smith's map
Source: Library of Congress, Virginia / discovered and discribed by Captayn John Smith, 1606
Fort Caroline was built in 1564, only seven miles from the coastline
Source: ESRI, ArcGIS Online
The English colonists who arrived in 1607 picked that site far upstream from the coast to avoid the Spanish. To a lesser extent, the English also feared the French and the Dutch. The constant international conflicts between European nations were a key factor in determining the location and the defenses of the new English colony halfway across the world.
location of Jamestown, in relation to mouth of the Chesapeake Bay
Map Source: US Fish and Wildlife Service Wetlands Mapper
The Susan Constant, Godspeed, and Discovery sailed past the later sites of Norfolk, Suffolk, Hampton, and Newport News. Those locations were clearly convenient places to settle and offered plenty of fresh water from inland streams and wells. Point Comfort would have been far more convenient. As economic historian Philip Alexander Bruce later noted:3
- The proper site for the Colony was at the modern Hampton.
the site of Hampton was closer to England - and would have avoided the delay in sailing/rowing upstream to Jamestown
Source: ESRI, ArcGIS Online
However, all the future ports in Hampton Roads (and of course the Eastern Shore) were too exposed to attack by one or more enemy ships. The fears were realistic; at various times, pirates, Dutch, British, and Yankee attacks showed that settlements in Hampton Roads were vulnerable to enemy raids.
In 1607 the English sailed "so far up as a bark of fifty tuns will float" and chose to settle on a peninsula that was almost an island. A slender neck of land on the northwest corner allowed access to the mainland, but could be defended easily against the Native Americans.
Width of the peninsula, or at least descriptions of it, changed over time. In 1676 the peninsula was calculated to be 50 feet wide. In 1688, estimates were 60-90 feet, but in 1694 the "slender neck" had grow to be nearly 200 feet wide. By 1748 erosion had washed away the link, but a human-built causeway allowed regular access to Jamestown.
during the Civil War, Union cartographers showed Jamestown as an island
Source: US War Department, Atlas to accompany the official records of the Union and Confederate armies, Southeastern Virginia and Fort Monroe Showing the Approaches to Richmond and Petersburg (1862)
Jamestown was an island at high tide during the American Revolution. By 1844 the isthmus had washed away completely, and a bridge over "Back River" connected the mainland to Jamestown Island.4
Jamestown was built on an peninsula that was connected to the mainland at the northwest corner, but storms have washed away/expanded that peninsula (a causeway provides road access now)
Source: ESRI, ArcGIS Online
In 1607 there were no permanent Native American villages on the peninsula. The Pasapaheghs hunted and fished there, but lived upstream closer to the Chickahominy River. Captain Gabriel Archer advocated for Archer's Hope because that site offered better onshore conditions, but the river channel was not deep enough there. Today, the Kingsmill Resort has covered Archer's Hope with houses and golf courses.
Gabriel Archer proposed locating Jamestown on land just east of what is known today as College Creek; Kingsmill Resort occupies the site now
Source: ESRI, ArcGIS Online
Edward Maria Wingfield chose the specific location, and the election that made him President of the Council occurred a day later. Wingfield probably asserted authority as the only investor in the Virginia Company of London to travel to Virginia, and as the recruiter of 40% of the colonists who arrived in 1607. Wingfield believed that his rejection of Gabriel Archer's preferred location for the town was a key reason the Council removed Wingfield from his office as President and imprisoned him for four months, starting in September 1607.
Another factor would have been the imminent collapse of the colony. By September 10, 1607, 46 of the 104 colonists were dead due to disease and Native American attacks, and fod supplies were low. The Virginia Company had relied upon the experience of Spanish colonies and the Roanoke settlements in the 1580's, and had planned to acquire food from the "naurals" in exchange for copper, glass beads, and other trade items. By September 1607, it was becoming clear that Wahunsenacawh/Powhatan was a skilled diplomat as well as the leader of powerful military forces. He limited access to food, and the Council finally decided that new leadership was needed in Jamestown to counter him and perpetuate the colony.5
The James River channel was deep enough at the north end of the island for ocean-going ships to dock at the riverbank, eliminating any need to ferry goods from ship to shore on smaller boats. The fort built in 1607 was not located exactly at the deep-water site, however; it was built slightly downstream.
The colonists may have grumbled about carrying everything that distance, but the military advantages of the fort's location were obvious to people of that time. The fort was built at a site where Spanish/French/Dutch warships would have to sail further away from the riverbank; enemies would not be able to sail close to shore and bombard the English at point-blank range.
Most ships that arrived at Jamestown during the first three years, outside of local trips by the colony's Discovery, came with the First Supply and Second Supply in 1608 and the Third Supply in 1609. Carrying substantial amounts of cargo from ship to fort was a rare event.6
modern navigation chart showing river channel at Jamestown Island
Source: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Office of Coast Survey, Chart 12248
Most importantly, however, the island was far enough inland that any Spanish/French/Dutch ships would be spotted before they could reach Jamestown. As arriving enemy ships tacked back and forth to sail up the narrow river, the English would have time to prepare for defense and use gunfire effectively from the shoreline to attack the enemy ships ("beat them with your muskets") as they tacked back and forth in the narrow portion of the river.
There were clear alternatives to Jamestown. The Elizabeth River offered an excellent harbor (it is currently home to the US Atlantic Fleet at Naval Station Norfolk), but that site was too close to the Atlantic Ocean and at risk of enemy attack with minimal warning.
The English colonists could have settled further upstream than Jamestown. Their ships in 1607 were shallow draft. They would float in just a few feet of water, and the James River was easily navigated upstream to the Fall Line. The ships used by the English to sail across the Atlantic Ocean appear ridiculously small to modern viewers. Visitors to the Jamestown Settlement re-creation discover that the Discovery was the size of a modern school bus, and 21 people lived together in that small space for four months while crossing the Atlantic Ocean from London to Virginia.7
the ocean-going ships sailing to Jamestown in 1607 were tiny and crowded, so the colonists must have welcomed the opportunity to shift to a settlement on land at Jamestown
Map Source: National Park Service, What Happened to the Three Ships?
On that first visit in 1607, Christopher Newport did sail up the river until the Appomattox River. He stopped, and the location of the settlement was determined, before Newport discovered the falls on the James River at the current location of Richmond. There were no obvious, special locations for settlement that far upstream, and transatlantic shipping would be the lifeline for the new colony to receive supplies and reinforcements.
The English in 1607 were far better prepared for a long-term occupation than Father Segura and the Spanish missionaries when they landed nearby in 1570, but the Jamestown settlement depended upon resupply from England. Jamestown was located as close to the Atlantic Ocean as the initial colonial leaders thought was safe, rather than as far inland as ships could go, in order to balance military security with the logistics of getting back and forth to England.
Just as Goldilocks in "The Story of the Three Bears" preferred porridge that was not too hot and not too cold, Jamestown Island was not too close to the ocean and not too far from the ocean. It was a just-right compromise location.
Edward Maria Wingfield chose the specific location of Jamestown based on instructions from the Virginia Company in London
Map Source: ESRI, GIS Online
Jamestown was an international shipping point from the beginning in 1607, but the delivery of supplies from England was not always synchronized with colonial needs. The Virginia Company thought the colonists could trade with the Native Americans to meet basic needs, and the company lacked the capital to send multiple expeditions each year across the ocean just to ensure the colonists had enough food.
The initial years at Jamestown were rough. With 20-20 hindsight, we know that the English needed more farmers willing to labor in growing food, and fewer gentlemen interested in adventure and treasure hunting without having to get their hands dirty in Virginia soil. Also, the island lacked fresh water springs, one reason the Pasapahegh chose to live elsewhere.
In April, the runoff from upstream is powerful enough to push fresh water on the surface of the James River from the Fall Line all the way downstream to Jamestown Island. In the summer, and especially during the severe drought that affected the area during the early 1600's, the flow of fresh water slacks off and the boundary line in the James River between fresh/brackish water moves upstream past the island. The first colonists may have been sickened by drinking brackish water and suffered chronic salt poisoning until John Smith ordered a well to be dug in 1608.8
Trade with the Algonquian-speaking tribes provided an intermittent but unreliable source of corn and deer meat. Colonists started to die from disease during the first summer. Right after the First Supply ships arrived in January 1608, Jamestown was destroyed by fire. It was rebuilt, but conflicts within the colony's leadership and with the local Native Americans prevented acquisition of a reliable food supply.
New leadership was sent with additional supplies and colonists in the 1609 Third Supply. Most of the eight ships in that convoy arrived in August, 1609, but the 300 new settlers arrived after the planting season, and the colonists in Virginia did not have adequate supplies to feed the additional mouths.
The Sea Venture did not manage to complete the journey across the Atlantic Ocean. That ship, with the new governor Sir Thomas Gates, was wrecked at Bermuda.
gravesites of settlers who died in first years at Jamestown, buried inside the walls of the fort to disguise the deaths from local Algonquians
The Third Supply ships that did arrive did not carry enough food to feed those additional colonists through the winter until new crops would ripen in 1610, and that was of greater significance than the absence of Sir Thomas Gates. The winter of 1609-10 ended up being the "Starving Time," when the majority of the colonists at Jamestown died. Contemporary records report that one person even killed and ate his wife, after "powdering" the meat with salty-tasting gunpowder. Cannibalism is also documented by the bones of a 14-year old girl, excavated in 2012. Analysis at the Smithsonian Institution showed that her body was carved up by someone wielding a knife with their right hand.9
The 1606 instructions directed that the first English town be located where ships could arrive easily, but at a site that could be defended against attack. The Virginia Company in London knew that at the beginning, Jamestown would not be a self-sufficient community. It would be an isolated seaport at the end of the line for international trade, an outpost that required regular replenishment from Europe in its early years.
Resupply trips from Europe required 12-18 weeks, until the Virginia Company in London hired Samuel Argall. In 1609 he identified a route along the 30th parallel that required only nine weeks at sea and reduced the risk of landing on Spanish-controlled islands in the Caribbean.
The shorter route turned out to be key to the survival of Jamestown. Lord De La Warr used it when traveling to the colony in 1610, and arrived just in time to intercept the ships that were abandoning Jamestown completely after the "starving time" winter of 1609-1610. Had Lord De La Warr followed the traditional route used since Columbus in 1492, he would have found just an empty fort.10
Samuel Argall determined that turning west at the 30th parallel, rather than sailing south to catch the westerly winds at the latitude of the Caribbean, would reduce the London-Jamestown travel time by up to 50%
Source: ESRI, GIS Online
Had Sir Thomas Gates arrived with the rest of the Third Supply in 1609, Lord De La Warr may have found the colony already dispersing from Jamestown. The Virginia Company in London concluded within a year that the location chosen by Edward Maria Wingfield in 1607 that was not defensible against an attach by Spanish, French, or Dutch ships that might maneuver upstream.
The instructions given to Gates in 1609 included directions to maintain Jamestown as a port of entry, but to shift most of the colonists to other locations that were more healthy - and more isolated, so attacking European forces would end up starving before the fortified English settlements would have to surrender:11
- In the distribucon of yo men accordinge to these advises and relacons wch wee haue receauded, we advise you to continue the Plantacon at James Towne with a Convenient nomber of men, but not as yo
r situacon or Citty, because the place is vnholesome and but in the Marish of Virginia, and to keepe it onely as a fitt porte for yor Shippes to ride before to ariue and vnlade att [arrive and unload at], butt neither shall you make it yor principall Storehowse and Magazin either of armes victualls or goods, but because it is so accessable, with shippinge that an enemy may be easily vppon you with all the provision of ordinance and municon and it is not to be expected that anie fortification there can endure an enemy that hath the leasure to sitt downe before yt: - The place you chose for yor principall Residence and seate to haue yor Catle pvisions of Corne foode and Magazin of other municon in, as yor greatest strength trust and retraite, must be remouded some good distance from any navigable riuer except with small boates by wch no enemy shall dare to seeke yor habitacon and if in this place some good forticacon be made to wch no ordinance can be brought by water, if you be pvided of victuall you may dispute possession till a straunger be wearied and starved.
in 1611, Sir Thomas Dale located the second official Virginia Company settlement, Henricus, on a peninsula upstream from Jamestown
Source: Library of Congress, Virginia / discovered and discribed by Captayn John Smith, 1606
In 1611, Sir Thomas Dale started the new settlement at Henricus. It was more-defensible than Jamestown, located on a high bluff, but not isolated in the backcountry. Dale ignored the 1609 instructions to find an isolated location far from the water. He chose a peninsula along the river that could be easily fortified with a palisade, recognizing that the Native Americans posed a greater threat than any European country.
The danger was demonstrated clearly in 1622, when Henricus was destroyed in the uprising led by Powhatan's successor Opechancanough.
Jamestown was not attacked by Native Americans paddling across the James River during the first uprising led by Opechancanough in 1622, but European artists still included such an assault in their engravings
Source: Brown University, John Carter Brown Library, Massacre at Jamestown, Virginia, 1622
Today, the closest equivalent to Jamestown is Antarctica. Scientific facilities there are cut off from the rest of the world for several months a year. When humans colonize the moon and planets, or the seafloor, those new colonists will face a resupply a challenge not unlike what the English faced with Jamestown.
Jamestown - The First English Capital
Is Jamestown the Oldest European Capital in North America?
Spanish Exploration and Settlement in the Southeast
The Spanish at Ajacan
Spain and Jamestown
Was Virginia Destined To Be English?
The English in North America Before Jamestown
John Smith and Virginia
Historic Preservation and Tourism at Jamestown
Powerlines vs. the Scenic Vista at Jamestown
Links
- A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia by Thomas Hariot (From Documenting the American South, University of North Carolina)
- Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities
- Fair Trade? between English and Natives
- History of Jamestown
- Jamestown Island
- Jamestown Rediscovery
- Avalon Project at the Yale Law School: Documents in Law, History and Diplomacy
- Ordinances for Virginia; July 24-August 3, 1621 (closest documentation available for commission or instructions to Governor Yeardley to convene first Assembly of Virginia in 1619)
- Virginia charters for 1606, 1609, 1612
- Bermuda Online - Royal Charters between England and Virginia including Bermuda (the island was once the eastern edge of Virginia...)
- Colony of Avalon (where Lord Baltimore tried to establish a colony prior to Maryland)
- Conquest of America (from The History Channel)
- Council for Northeast Historical Archaeology
- English Population in Jamestown
- Google StreetView
- Jamestown
- Historic Jamestown
- Hypertext on American History
- An Ordinance and Constitution of the Virginia Company in England (1621)
- Bacon's Declaration in the Name of the People (1676)
- Discourse of Western Planting by Richard Hakluyt (1584)
- Instructions for the Virginia Colony (1606)
- Robert Beverley on Bacon's Rebellion, 1704 (with a note
- The First Virginia Charter (1606)
- The Second Virginia Charter (1609)
- The Third Virginia Charter (1612)
- Jamestown 2007 (Jamestown's 400th anniversary)
- The Jamestown Records of the Virginia Company of London: A Conservator's Perspective (from the Thomas Jefferson Papers)
- Jamestown Settlement and Yorktown Victory Center
- Jamestown Virtual Colony
- Jamestowne Society
- Library of Congress
- Jamestown Records of the Virginia Company of London: A Conservator's Perspective (from the Thomas Jefferson Papers)
- Library of Virginia, "Commemorating Jamestown: A Clash of Race and Memory" presentation on January 25, 2007 by W. Fitzhugh Brundage on white and black historical memory in the South since the Civil War, using examples from the Jamestown Ter-Centennial Exposition of 1907
- National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
- The Lost Colony and Jamestown Droughts
- National Park Service
- Bibliography of Jamestown Sources
- Cultural Resource Management, Volume 22, No. 01 - Jamestown Island Revisited 1607-
- Fort Caroline National Memorial (the French colony destroyed by the Spanish in 1565)
- Jamestown, Virginia National Historic Site: The Townsite and Its Story
- National Public Radio
- Bill Kelso: Digging Up the Truth About Jamestown (January 20, 2007)
- North Carolina Office of State Archeology
- NOVA
- Science of Jamestown
- Plymouth Colony Archive Project at the University of Virginia: Archives and Analysis of Plymouth Colony, 1620-1691
- Archeology Channel - Popham Colony
- ImagineMaine: Popham Colony - A Slice of Time
- Popham Colony ("The First English Colony in New England")
- Relation of a Voyage to Sagadahoc, 1607-1608
- Secrets of the Dead: Death at Jamestown (a PBS broadcast)
- St. Mary's City (the Maryland equivalent to Jamestown...)
- Historic St. Mary's City
- St. Clements Island State Park
- Theodore De Bry Copper Plate Engravings
- U-S-History.com
- Settlement of Virginia
- Virginia Company Archives (subscription required)
- Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transportation
- Jamestown 2007 400th Anniversary Commemoration
- Virginia, Ships & Passengers, 1600-1609
- Virtual Jamestown
- John White's Watercolors and Theodor De Bry's Engravings
- Sidney King Drawings
Jamestown is located upstream of Hog Island and downstream of the Chickahominy River
Source: National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Earth Observatory, Four Centuries at Jamestown, Virginia
References
1. "Old Blackwall," Survey of London: Volumes 43 and 44, Poplar, Blackwall and Isle of Dogs, London County Council, London, 1994, http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-london/vols43-4/pp548-552; "Chronology of Events in Jamestown, 1606-1608," based on Philip L. Barbour, ed., The Complete Works of John Smith (1580-1631) in Three Volumes, The Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Virginia by the University of North Carolina Press (1986), Vol. 1, pp. 16-22, http://www.virtualjamestown.org/Timelines/Barbour%20Vol%201%201606-08.html (last checked December 19, 2014)2. Instructions for the Virginia Colony (1606), from A Hypertext on American History, http://odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/D/1601-1650/virginia/instru.htm (last checked October 1, 2011)
3. Philip Alexander Bruce, Economic History of Virginia in the Seventeenth Century, Macmillan and Company, 1895, p.193, https://books.google.com/books?id=b4U3AAAAMAAJ (last checked December 22, 2014)
4. Charles E. Hatch, Jr., Jamestown, Virginia: the townsite and its story, National Park Service, 1957, p.9, http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/003800088 (last checked December 27, 2014)
5. "Jamestown National Historic Site," National Park Service, Historical Handbook Number Two, 1957, http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/hh/2/hh2b1.htm; "Edward Maria Wingfield (1550-1631)," Encyclopedia Virginia, 2013, http://encyclopediavirginia.org/Wingfield_Edward_Maria_1550-1631; Edward Maria Wingfield, A Discourse of Virginia, 1608, republished by J. Wilson and Son, Boston, 1860, p.42, https://archive.org/details/adiscourseofvirg00wing; "Pocahontas Revealed," NOVA, Public Broadcasting System, May 8, 2007, https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/transcripts/3407_pocahont.html (last checked January 22, 2022)
6. "History of Jamestown," Jamestown Rediscovery Archaeological Project, http://apva.org/rediscovery/page.php?page_id=6 (last checked October 1, 2012)
7. "Jamestown Settlement Ships," Jamestown Settlement and Yorktown Victory Center, http://www.historyisfun.org/jamestown-settlement/jamestown-ships/ (last checked December 20, 2014)
8. "Did Jamestown's Settlers Drink Themselves to Death?" History.com, October 17, 2011, http://www.history.com/news/did-jamestowns-settlers-drink-themselves-to-death (last checked October 1, 2012)
9. Dennis Montgomery, "Such a dish as powdered wife I never heard of" in Colonial Williamsburg Journal, Winter 2007, http://www.history.org/foundation/journal/winter07/jamestownside.cfm; "Skeleton of teenage girl confirms cannibalism at Jamestown colony," Washington Post, May 1, 2013, http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/skeleton-of-teenage-girl-confirms-cannibalism-at-jamestown-colony/2013/05/01/5af5b474-b1dc-11e2-9a98-4be1688d7d84_story.html (last checked July 2, 2014)
10. "Samuel Argall," Encyclopedia Virginia, http://www.encyclopediavirginia.org/Argall_Samuel_bap_1580-1626 (last checked July 2, 2014)
11. "Instruccons Orders and Constitucons to Sr Thomas Gates Knight Governor of Virginia," in Susan Myra Kingsbury, editor. Records of the Virginia Company, 1606-26, Volume III: Miscellaneous Records, image 32 in "The Thomas Jefferson Papers Series 8. Virginia Records Manuscripts. 1606-1737," Library of Congress, http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/mtj.mtjbib026605 (last checked December 20, 2014)
Jamestown was an international seaport, starting with the Susan Constant, Discovery, and Godspeed
Source: US Navy (070426-N-4515N-261)
Virginia Cities and Towns
Virginia Places
Source: http://www.virginiaplaces.org/vacities/7jamestown.html
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