The Locomotive Chase in Georgia.
by the author of Daring and Suffering
THE railroad raid to Georgia, in the spring of 1862, has
always been considered to rank high among the striking and novel incidents of
the civil war. At that time General O. M. Mitchel, under whose authority it was
organized, commanded Union forces in middle Tennessee, consisting of a division
of Buell’s army. The Confederates were concentrating at Corinth, Mississippi,
and Grant and Buell were advancing by different routes towards that point.
Mitchel’s orders required him to protect Nashville and the country around, but
allowed him great latitude in the disposition of his division, which, with
detachments and garrisons, numbered nearly seventeen thousand men. His attention
had long been strongly turned towards the liberation of east Tennessee, which he
knew that President Lincoln also earnestly desired, and which would, if
achieved, strike a most damaging blow at the resources of the rebellion. A Union
army once in possession of east Tennessee would have the inestimable advantage,
found nowhere else in the South, of operating in the midst of a friendly
population, and having at hand abundant supplies of all kinds. Mitchel had no
reason to believe that Corinth would detain the Union armies much longer than
Fort Donelson had done, and was satisfied that as soon as that position had been
captured the next movement would be eastward towards Chattanooga, thus throwing
his own division in advance. He determined, therefore, to press into the heart
of the enemy’s country as far as possible, occupying strategical points before
they were adequately defended and assured of speedy and powerful reinforcement.
To this end his measures were vigorous and well chosen.
On the 8th of April, 1862,—the day after the
battle of Pittsburg Landing, of which, however, Mitchel had received no
intelligence,— he marched swiftly southward from Shelbyville and seized
Huntsville, in Alabama, on the 11th of April, and then sent a detachment
westward over the Memphis and Charleston Railroad to open railway communication
with the Union army at Pittsburg Landing. Another detachment, commanded by
Mitchel in person, advanced on the same day seventy miles by rail directly into
the enemy’s territory, arriving unchecked with two thousand men within thirty
miles of Chattanooga,— in two hours’ time he could now reach that point,— the
most important position in the West. Why did he not go on? The story of the
railroad raid is the answer. The night before breaking camp at Shelbyville,
Mitchel sent an expedition secretly into the heart of Georgia to cut the
railroad communications of Chattanooga to the south and east. The fortune of
this attempt had a most important bearing upon his movements, and will now be
narrated.
In the employ of General Buell was a spy named
James J. Andrews, who had rendered valuable services in the first year of the
war, and had secured the full confidence of the Union commanders. In March,
1862, Buell had sent him secretly with eight men to burn the bridges west of
Chattanooga; but the failure of expected cooperation defeated the plan, and
Andrews, after visiting Atlanta and inspecting the whole of the enemy’s lines in
that vicinity and northward, had returned, ambitious to make another attempt.
His plans for the second raid were submitted to Mitchel, and on the eve of the
movement from Shelbyville to Huntsville Mitchel authorized him to take
twenty-four men, secretly enter the enemy’s territory, and, by means of
capturing a train, burn the bridges on the northern part of the Georgia State
Railroad and also one on the East Tennessee Railroad where it approaches the
Georgia State line, thus completely isolating Chattanooga, which was virtually
ungarrisoned.
The soldiers for this expedition, of whom the
writer was one, were selected from the three Ohio regiments belonging to General
J. W. Sill’s brigade, being simply told that they were wanted for secret and
very dangerous service. So far as known, not a man chosen declined the perilous
honor. Our uniforms were exchanged for ordinary Southern dress, and all arms
except revolvers were left in camp. On the 7th of April, by the roadside about a
mile east of Shelbyville, in the late evening twilight, we met our leader.
Taking us a little way from the road, he quietly placed before us the outlines
of the romantic and adventurous plan, which was: to break into small detachments
of three or four, journey eastward into the Cumberland Mountains, then work
southward, traveling by rail after we were well within the Confederate lines,
and finally, the evening of the third day after the start, meet Andrews at
Marietta, Georgia, more than two hundred miles away. When questioned, we were to
profess ourselves Kentuckians going to join the Southern army.
On the journey we were a good deal annoyed by
the swollen streams and the muddy roads consequent on three days of almost
ceaseless rain. Andrews was led to believe that Mitchel’s column would be
inevitably delayed; and as we were expected to destroy the bridges the very day
that Huntsville was entered, he took the responsibility of sending word to our
different groups that our attempt would be postponed one day — from Friday to
Saturday, April, 12. This was a natural but a most lamentable error of judgment.
One of the men detailed was belated and did not
join us at all. Two others were very soon captured by the enemy; and though
their true character was not detected, they were forced into the Southern army,
and two reached Marietta, but failed to report at the rendezvous. Thus, when we
assembled very early in the morning in Andrews’s room at the Marietta Hotel for
final consultation before the blow was struck we were but twenty, including our
leader. All preliminary difficulties had been easily overcome and we were in
good spirits. But some serious obstacles had been revealed on our ride from
Chattanooga to Marietta the previous evening.(1)
The railroad was found to be crowded with trains, and many soldiers were among
the passengers. Then the station— Big Shanty—at which the capture was to be
effected had recently been made a Confederate camp. To succeed in our enterprise
it would be necessary first to capture the engine in a guarded, camp with
soldiers standing around as spectators, and then to run it from one to two
hundred miles through the enemy’s country, and to deceive or overpower all
trains that should be met — a large contract for twenty men. Some of our party
thought the chances of success so slight, under existing circumstances, that
they urged the abandonment of the whole enterprise. But Andrews declared his
purpose to succeed or die, offering to each man, however, the privilege of
withdrawing from the attempt — an offer no one was in the least disposed to
accept. Final instructions were then given, and we hurried to the ticket office
in time for the northward bound mail-train, and purchased tickets for different
stations along the line in the direction of Chattanooga.
Our ride, as passengers, was but eight miles.
We swept swiftly around the base of Kenesaw Mountain, and soon saw the tents of
the Confederate forces camped at Big Shanty gleam white in the morning mist.
Here we were to stop for breakfast and attempt the seizure of the train. The
morning was raw and gloomy, and a rain, which fell all day, had already begun.
It was a painfully thrilling moment. We were but twenty, with an army about us,
and a long and difficult road before us, crowded with enemies. In an instant we
were to throw off the disguise which had been our only protection, and trust our
leader’s genius and our own efforts for safety and success. Fortunately we had
no time for giving way to reflections and conjectures which could only unfit us
for the stern task ahead.
When we stopped, the conductor, the engineer,
and many of the passengers hurried to breakfast, leaving the train unguarded.
Now was the moment of action. Ascertaining that there was nothing to prevent a
rapid start, Andrews, our two engineers, Brown and Knight, and the fireman
hurried forward, uncoupling a section of the train consisting of three empty
baggage or boxcars, the locomotive, and the tender. The engineers and the
fireman sprang into the cab of the engine, while Andrews, with hand on the rail
and foot on the step, waited to see that the remainder of the party had gained
entrance into the rear box-car. This seemed difficult and slow, though it really
consumed but a few seconds, for the car stood on a considerable bank, and the
first who came were pitched in by their comrades, while these in turn dragged in
the others, and the door was instantly closed. A sentinel, with musket in hand,
stood not a dozen feet from the engine, watching the whole proceeding; but
before he or any of the soldiers or guards around could make up their minds to
interfere all was done, and Andrews, with a nod to his engineer, stepped on
board. The valve was pulled wide open, and for a moment the wheels slipped round
in rapid, ineffective revolutions; then, with a bound that jerked the soldiers
in the box-car from their feet, the little train darted away, leaving the camp
and the station in the wildest uproar and confusion. The first step of the
enterprise was triumphantly accomplished.
According to the time-table, of which Andrews
had secured a copy, there were two trains to be met. These presented no serious
hindrance to our attaining high speed, for we could tell just where to expect
them. There was also a local freight not down on the timetable, but which could
not be far distant. Any danger of collision with it could be avoided by running
according to the schedule of the captured train until it was passed; then at the
highest possible speed we could run to the Oostenaula and Chickamauga bridges,
lay them in ashes, and pass on through Chattanooga to Mitchel, at Huntsville, or
wherever eastward of that point he might be found, arriving long before the
close of the day. It was a brilliant prospect, and so far as human estimates can
determine it would have been realized had the day been Friday instead of
Saturday. On Friday every train had been on time, the day dry, and the road in
perfect order. Now the road was in disorder, every train far behind time, and
two “extras” were approaching us. But of these unfavorable conditions we knew
nothing, and pressed confidently forward.
We stopped frequently, and at one point tore up
the track, cut telegraph wires, and loaded on cross-ties to be used in bridge
burning. Wood and water were taken without difficulty, Andrews very coolly
telling the story to which he adhered throughout the run, namely, that he was
one of General Beauregard’s officers, running an impressed powder train through
to that commander at Corinth. We had no good instruments for track-raising, as
we had intended rather to depend upon fire; but the amount of time spent in
taking up a rail was not material at this stage of our journey, as we easily
kept on the time of our captured train. There was a wonderful exhilaration in
passing swiftly by towns and stations through the heart of an enemy’s country in
this manner. It possessed just enough of the spice of danger, in this part of
the run, to render it thoroughly enjoyable. The slightest accident to our
engine, however, or a miscarriage in any part of our programme, would have
completely changed the conditions.
At Etowah we found the “Yonah,” an old
locomotive owned by an iron company, standing with steam up; but not wishing to
alarm the enemy till the local freight had been safely met, we left it unharmed.
Kingston, thirty miles from the starting-point, was safely reached. A train from
Rome, Georgia, on a branch road, had just arrived and was waiting for the
morning mail — our train. We learned that the local freight would soon come
also, and, taking the side-track, waited for it. When it arrived, however,
Andrews saw, to his surprise and chagrin, that it bore a red flag, indicating
another train not far behind. Stepping over to the conductor, he boldly asked:
“What does it mean that the road is blocked in this manner when I have orders to
take this powder to Beauregard without a minute’s delay?” The answer was
interesting but not reassuring: “Mitchel has captured Huntsville and is said to
be coming to Chattanooga, and we are getting everything out of there.” He was
asked by Andrews to pull his train a long way down the track out of the way, and
promptly obeyed.
It seemed an exceedingly long time before the
expected “extra” arrived, and when it did come it bore another red flag. The
reason given was that the “local,” being too great for one engine, had been made
up in two sections, and the second section would doubtless be along in a short
time; This was terribly vexatious; yet there seemed nothing to do but to wait.
To start out between the sections of an extra train would be to court
destruction. There were already three trains around us, and their many
passengers and others were all growing very curious about the mysterious train,
manned by strangers, which had arrived on the time of the morning mail. For an
hour and five minutes from the time of arrival at Kingston we remained in this
most critical position. The sixteen of us who were shut up tightly in a
box-car,— personating Beauregard’s ammunition,— hearing sounds outside, but
unable to distinguish words, had perhaps the most trying position. Andrews sent
us, by one of the engineers, a cautious warning to be ready to fight in case the
uneasiness of the crowd around led them to make any investigation, while he
himself kept near the station to prevent the sending off of any alarming
telegram. So intolerable was our suspense, that the order for a deadly conflict
would have been felt as a relief. But the assurance of Andrews quieted the crowd
until the whistle of the expected train from the north was heard; then, as it
glided up to the depot, past the end of our side-track, we were off without more
words.
But unexpected danger had arisen behind us. Out
of the panic at Big Shanty two men emerged, determined, if possible, to foil the
unknown captors of their train. There was no telegraph station, and no
locomotive at hand with which to follow; but the conductor of the train, W. A.
Fuller, and Anthony Murphy, foreman of the Atlanta railway machine shops, who
happened to be on board of Fuller’s train, started on foot after us as hard as
they could run. Finding a hand-car they mounted it and pushed forward till they
neared Etowah, where they ran on the break we had made in the road and were
precipitated down the embankment into the ditch. Continuing with more caution,
they reached Etowah and found the “Yonah,” which was at once pressed into
service, loaded with soldiers who were at hand, and hurried with flying wheels
towards Kingston. Fuller prepared to fight at that point, for he knew of the
tangle of extra trains, and of the lateness of the regular trains, and did not
think we should be able to pass. We had been gone only four minutes when he
arrived and found himself stopped by three long, heavy trains of cars, headed in
the wrong direction. ‘To move them out of the way so as to pass would cause a
delay he was little inclined to afford — would, indeed, have almost certainly
given us the victory. So, abandoning his engine, he with Murphy ran across to
the Rome train, and, uncoupling the engine and one car, pushed forward with
about forty armed men. As the Rome branch connected with the main road above the
depot, he encountered no hindrance, and it was now a fair race. We were not many
minutes ahead.
Four miles from Kingston we again stopped and
cut the telegraph. While trying to take up a rail at this point we were greatly
startled. One end of the rail was loosened, and eight of us were pulling at it,
when in the distance we distinctly heard the whistle of a pursuing engine. With
a frantic effort we broke the rail, and all tumbled over the embankment
with the effort. We moved on, and at Adairsville we found a mixed train (freight
and passenger) waiting, but there was an express on the road that had not yet
arrived. We could afford no more delay, and set out for the next station,
Calhoun, at terrible speed, hoping to reach that point before the express, which
was behind time, should arrive. The nine miles which we had to travel were left
behind in less than the same number of minutes. The express was just pulling
out, but, hearing our whistle, backed before us until we were able to take the
side-track. It stopped, however, in such a manner as completely to close up the
other end of the switch. The two trains, side by side, almost touched each
other, and our precipitate arrival caused natural suspicion. Many searching
questions were asked, which had to be answered before we could get the
opportunity of proceeding. We in the box-car could bear the altercation, and
were almost sure that a fight would be necessary before the conductor would
consent to “pull up” in order to let us out. Here again our position was most
critical, for the pursuers were rapidly approaching.
Fuller and Murphy saw the obstruction of the
broken rail in time, by reversing their engine, to prevent wreck; but the
hindrance was for the present insuperable. Leaving all their men behind, they
started for a second foot-race. Before they had gone far they met the train we
had passed at Adairsville, and turned it back after us. At Adairsville they
dropped the cars, and with locomotive and tender loaded with armed men, they
drove forward at the highest speed possible. They knew that we were not many
minutes ahead, and trusted to overhaul us before the express train could be
safely passed.
But Andrews had told the powder story again
with all his skill, and added a direct request in peremptory form to have the
way opened before him, which the Confederate conductor did not see fit to
resist; and just before the pursuers arrived at Calhoun we were again under way.
Stopping once more to cut wires and tear up the track, we felt a thrill of
exhilaration to which we had long been strangers. The track was now clear before
us to Chattanooga; and even west of that city we had good reason to believe that
we should find no other train in the way till we had reached Mitchel’s lines. If
one rail could now be lifted we would be in a few minutes at the Oostenaula
bridge; and that burned, the rest of the task would be little more than simple
manual labor, with the enemy absolutely powerless. We worked with a will.
But in a moment the tables were turned. Not far
behind we heard the scream of a locomotive bearing down upon us at lightning
speed. The men on board were in plain sight and well armed. Two minutes —
perhaps one — would have removed the rail at which we were toiling; then the
game would have been in our own hands, for there was no other locomotive beyond
that could be turned back after us. But the most desperate efforts were in vain.
The rail was simply bent, and we hurried to our engine and darted away, while
remorselessly after us thundered the enemy.
Now the contestants were in clear view, and a
race followed unparalleled in the annals of war. Wishing to gain a little time
for the burning of the Oostenaula bridge, we dropped one car, and, shortly
after, another; but they were “picked up” and pushed ahead to Resaca. We
were obliged to run over the high trestles and covered bridge at that point
without a pause. This was the first failure in the work assigned us.
The Confederates could not overtake and stop us
on the road; but their aim was to keep close behind, so that we might not be
able to damage the road or take in wood or water. In the former they succeeded,
but not in the latter. Both engines were put at the highest rate of speed. We
were obliged to cut the wire after every station passed, in order that an alarm
might not be sent ahead; and we constantly strove to throw our pursuers off the
track, or to obstruct the road permanently in some way, so that we might be able
to burn the Chickamauga bridges, still ahead. The chances seemed good that
Fuller and Murphy would be wrecked. We broke out the end of our last box-car and
dropped cross-ties on the track as we ran, thus checking their progress and
getting far enough ahead to take in wood and water at two separate stations.
Several times we almost lifted a rail, but each time the coming of the
Confederates within rifle range compelled us to desist and speed on. Our worst
hindrance was the rain. The previous day (Friday) had been clear, with a high
wind, and on such a day fire would have been easily and tremendously effective.
But to-day a bridge could be burned only with abundance of fuel and careful
nursing.
Thus we sped on, mile after mile, in this
fearful chase, round curves and past stations in seemingly endless perspective.
Whenever we lost sight of the enemy beyond a curve, we hoped that some of our
obstructions had been effective in throwing him from the track, and that we
should see him no more; but at each long reach backward the smoke was again
seen. and the shrill whistle was like the scream of a bird of prey. The time
could not have been so very long, for the terrible speed was rapidly devouring
the distance; but with our nerves strained to the highest tension each minute
seemed an hour. On several occasions the escape of the enemy from wreck was
little less than miraculous. At one point a rail was placed across the track on
a curve so skillfully that it was not seen till the train ran upon it at full
speed. Fuller says that they were terribly jolted, and seemed to bounce
altogether from the track, but lighted on the rails in safety. Some of the
Confederates wished to leave a train which was driven at such a reckless rate,
but their wishes were not gratified.
Before reaching Dalton we urged Andrews to turn
and attack the enemy, laying an ambush so as to get into close quarters, that
our revolvers might be on equal terms with their guns. I have little doubt that
if this had been carried out it would have succeeded. But either because he
thought the chance of wrecking or obstructing the enemy still good, or feared
that the country ahead had been alarmed by a telegram around the Confederacy by
the way of Richmond — Andrews merely gave the plan his sanction without making
any attempt to carry it into execution.
Dalton was passed without difficulty, and
beyond we stopped again to cut wires and to obstruct the track. It happened that
a regiment was encamped not a hundred yards away, but they did not molest us.
Fuller had written a dispatch to Chattanooga, and dropped a man with orders to
have it forwarded instantly, while he pushed on to save the bridges. Part of the
message got through and created a wild panic in Chattanooga, although it did not
materially influence our fortunes. Our supply of fuel was now very short, and
without getting rid of our pursuers long enough to take in more, it was evident
that we could not run as far as Chattanooga.
While cutting the wire we made an attempt to
get up another rail; but the enemy, as usual, were too quick for us. We had no
tool for this purpose except a wedge-pointed iron bar. Two or three bent iron
claws for pulling out spikes would have given us such incontestable superiority
that, down to almost the last of our run, we should have been able to escape and
even to burn all the Chickamauga bridges. But it had not been our intention to
rely on this mode of obstruction — an emergency only rendered necessary by our
unexpected delay and the pouring rain.
We made no attempt to damage the long tunnel
north of Dalton, as our enemies had greatly dreaded. The last hope of the raid
was now staked upon an effort of a different kind from any that we had yet made,
but which, if successful, would still enable us to destroy the bridges nearest
Chattanooga. But, on the other hand, its failure would terminate the chase. Life
and success were put upon one throw.
A few more obstructions were dropped on the
track, and our own speed increased so that we soon forged a considerable
distance ahead. The side and end boards of the last car were torn into shreds,
all available fuel was piled upon it, and blazing brands were brought back from
the engine. By the time we approached a long, covered bridge a fire in the car
was fairly started. We uncoupled it in the middle of the bridge, and with
painful suspense waited the issue. Oh for a few minutes till the work of
conflagration was fairly begun! There was still steam pressure enough in our
boiler to carry us to the next wood-yard, where we could have replenished our
fuel by force, if necessary, so as to run as near to Chattanooga as was deemed
prudent. We did not know of the telegraph message which the pursuers had sent
ahead. But, alas! the minutes were not given. Before the bridge was extensively
fired the enemy was upon us, and we moved slowly onward, looking back to see
what they would do next. We had not long to conjecture. The Confederates pushed
right into the smoke, and drove the burning car before them to the next
side-track.
With no car left, and no fuel, the last scrap
having been thrown into the engine or upon the burning car, and with no
obstruction to drop on the track, our situation was indeed desperate. A few
minutes only remained until our steed of iron which had so well served us would
be powerless.
But it might still be possible to save
ourselves. If we left the train in a body, and, taking a direct course towards
the Union lines, hurried over the mountains at right angles with their course,
we could not, from the nature of the country, be followed by cavalry, and could
easily travel — athletic young men as we were, and fleeing for life— as rapidly
as any pursuers. There was no telegraph in the mountainous districts west and
north-west of us, and the prospect of reaching the Union lines seemed to me
then, and has always since seemed, very fair. Confederate pursuers with whom I
have since conversed freely have agreed on two points — that we could have
escaped in the manner here pointed out, and that an attack on the pursuing train
would likely have been successful. But Andrews thought otherwise, at least in
relation to the former plan, and ordered us to jump from the locomotive one by
one, and, dispersing in the woods, each endeavor to save himself. Thus ended the
Andrews railroad raid.
It is easy now to understand why Mitchel paused
thirty miles west of Chattanooga. The Andrews raiders had been forced to stop
eighteen miles south of the same town, and no flying train met him with the
expected tidings that all railroad communications of Chattanooga were destroyed,
and that the town was in a panic and undefended. He dared advance no farther
without heavy reinforcements from Pittsburg Landing or the north; and he
probably believed to the day of his death, six months later, that the whole
Andrews party had perished without accomplishing anything.
A few words will give the sequel to this
remarkable enterprise. There was great excitement in Chattanooga and in the
whole of the surrounding Confederate territory for scores of miles. The hunt for
the fugitive raiders was prompt, energetic, and completely successful. Ignorant
of the country, disorganized, and far from the Union lines, they strove in vain
to escape. Several were captured the same day on which they left the cars, and
all but two within a week. Even these two were overtaken and brought back when
they supposed that they were virtually out of danger. Two of those who had
failed to be on the train were identified and added to the band of prisoners.
Now follows the saddest part of the story.
Being in citizens’ dress within an enemy’s lines, the whole party were held as
spies and closely and vigorously guarded. A court-martial was convened, and the
leader and seven others out of the twenty-two were condemned and executed. The
remainder were never brought to trial, probably because of the advance of Union
forces and the consequent confusion into which the affairs of the Departments of
East Tennessee and Georgia were thrown. Of the remaining fourteen, eight
succeeded by a bold effort — attacking their guard in broad daylight — in making
their escape from Atlanta, Georgia, and ultimately in reaching the North. The
other six who shared in this effort, but were recaptured, remained prisoners
until the latter part of March, 1863, when they were exchanged through a special
arrangement made with Secretary Stanton. All the survivors of this expedition
received medals and promotion. The pursuers also received expressions of
gratitude from their fellow-Confederates, notably from the governor and the
legislature of Georgia.
William Pittenger.
Below is a list of the participants in the raid:
Executed |
Escaped |
Exchanged |
James J. Andrews, leader |
Wilson W. Brown, Company F, 21st Ohio
Volunteers |
Jacob Parrott, Company K, 33d Ohio Volunteers |
William Campbell, a civilian who volunteered to
accompany the raiders |
William Knight, Company E, 21st Ohio Volunteers |
Robert Buffum, Company H, 21st Ohio Volunteers |
George D. Wilson, Company B, 2d Ohio Volunteers |
Mark Wood, Company C, 21st Ohio Volunteers |
William Bensinger, Company G, 21st Ohio
Volunteers |
Marion A. Ross, Company A, 2d Ohio Volunteers |
James A. Wilson, Company C, 21st Ohio
Volunteers |
William Reddick, Company B, 33d Ohio
Volunteers |
Perry G. Shadrack,* Company K, 2d Ohio
Volunteers |
John Wollam, Company C, 33d Ohio Volunteers |
E. H. Mason, Company K, 21st Ohio Volunteers |
Samuel Slavens, 33d Ohio Volunteers |
D. A. Dorsey, Company H, 33d Ohio Volunteers |
William Pittenger Company C, 2d Ohio Volunteers |
Samuel Robinson, Company G, 33d Ohio Volunteers |
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John Scott, Company K, 21st Ohio Volunteers |
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J. R. Porter, Company C, 21st Ohio, and Martin
J. Hawkins, Company A, 33d Ohio, reached Marietta, but did not get on hoard of
the train. They were captured and imprisoned with their comrades.— Editor.
(1)The different detachments
reached the Georgia State Railroad at Chattanooga, and traveled as ordinary
passengers on trains running southward.— EDITOR.
Pittenger, William, "The Locomotive Chase in Georgia," The
Century Magazine, Volume 36, Issue 1, May 1888, pp 141 - 147, New York: The
Century Company
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