Unto A Good Land

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2005-08-30
Publisher(s): Eerdmans Pub Co
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Summary

"Unto a Good Land offers a distinctive narrative history of the American people -- from the first contacts between Europeans and North America's native inhabitants, through the creation of a modern nation, to the standing of the United States as a world power. Written by a team of distinguished historians led by David Edwin Harrell, Jr. and Edwin S. Gaustad, this textbook shows how grasping the uniqueness of the bAmerican experimentb depends on understanding the role of religion as well as social, cultural, political, and economic factors in shaping U.S. history.A common shortcoming of most United States history textbooks is that while, in recent decades, they have expanded their coverage of social and cultural history, they still tend to shortchange the role of religious ideas, practices, and movements in the American past. "Unto a Good Land addresses this shortcoming in a balanced way. The authors recognize that religion is only one of many factors that have influenced our past -- one, however, that has often been neglected in textbook accounts. This volume gives religion its appropriate place in the story."Unprecedented coverage of the forces that have shaped the history of the United States While none of America's rich history is left out, this volume is the first U.S. history textbook to give serious attention to the religious dimension of American life. This textbook is not a religious history; instead, it offers an account of American history that includes religious ideas, practices, and movements whenever they played a shaping role."Comprehensive and current This volume traces the American story from the earliest encounters between the first North Americaninhabitants and Europeans through the 2004 presidential election. Complete and balanced treatment is also given to issues of gender, race, and ethnicity, as well as cultural, political, and economic forces."A clear and compelling narrative The authors are more than expert historians; they are also talented writers who recognize history to be the retelling of human life. United by a seamless narrative structure, these chapters restore the bstoryb to history."Multiple formats specially designed for flexible classroom use "Unto a Good Land is available as a single hardcover edition or as two paperback volumes, offering maximum flexibility when adapting curriculum for one- and two-semester courses in U.S. history. The two paperback volumes can be used for U.S. history survey courses divided at 1865 or 1900 -- or at any date in between."Informative special features to complement the text In addition to the book's exceptional narrative, an array of special features enhances the instructional value of the text and points students to resources for further study."Includes assistance for teaching and test preparation The instructor's manual for "Unto a Good Land provides helpful suggestions for lesson plans and assignments, and the test bank provides multiple-choice and essay questions for use as study aids, quizzes, or tests."Suitable for instruction at both secular and religious colleges and universities Drawing on their experience in both secular and religious schools, the authors have ensured that this textbook is suitable for U.S. history classes in a wide variety of settings.

Table of Contents

Table of Features
xv
Preface xix
Reviewer Acknowledgments xxii
About the Authors xxiii
Prologue The North American Continent and Its Native Peoples xxv
Native Peoples xxvi
Language Groups and the Land xxviii
Economy and Trade xxxii
Cultures and Religions xxxiii
Discovery, Encounter, and Conquest, 1492--1607
1(32)
The European Rediscovery of North America
3(6)
Early Iberian Adventures
4(4)
France's First Probes
8(1)
Renaissance and Reformation
9(5)
The Renaissance
9(1)
The Reformation
9(3)
European Powers and Perceptions
12(2)
Spain in the Americas
14(3)
Spain's New World Possessions
14(2)
Imperial Government, Christian Missions, and Slavery
16(1)
French Colonization
17(4)
The French Empire
18(1)
Jesuit Missions
18(1)
The Fur Trade
19(2)
Holland and Sweden Join the Race
21(1)
New Netherland
21(1)
New Sweden
22(1)
England Catches Up
22(8)
The Cabots
22(1)
England on the Sidelines
23(1)
Protestant Crusaders, Pirates, and Explorers
24(1)
Roanoke
25(3)
A Lost Colony, A Saved Nation
28(2)
The Columbian Exchange
30(1)
Conclusion: A Time of Testing
30(3)
England's First ``Foreign Plantations'': The Chesapeake and New England, 1607--1676
33(32)
The Push for Emigration
34(4)
Upper Classes
34(1)
Land and Labor
35(1)
Population Growth and the Conquest of Ireland
36(1)
Religion and Rhetoric
36(2)
Success in the Chesapeake
38(12)
The Virginia Company of London
38(1)
Jamestown
38(2)
The Weed and the Economy
40(2)
Demography and Representative Government
42(1)
Virginia and the Indians
43(1)
Virginia Society
44(2)
Catholicism and the Calverts
46(1)
Slavery and Servitude in the Chesapeake
47(3)
A New England Way
50(11)
The Separating Pilgrims
51(2)
The Reforming Puritans
53(1)
Settlement Patterns
54(1)
The Puritan Ideology of New England
55(2)
Dissenters
57(2)
Expansion and Trade
59(2)
Native Americans and the English
61(2)
Missionary Activity
61(1)
The Pequot War
61(1)
King Philip's War
62(1)
Bacon's Rebellion
62(1)
Conclusion: Differentiating Cultures
63(2)
The Empire: Torn, Restored, Enlarged, 1640--1732
65(30)
Turmoil in England
67(5)
The Civil War and After
67(1)
Religion Unleashed and Religion Restrained
68(2)
Mercantilism
70(2)
The Restoration Colonies and the Dominion of New England
72(10)
The Carolinas
72(2)
New York and New Jersey
74(2)
Pennsylvania and the ``Lower Counties''
76(5)
James II and the Dominion of New England
81(1)
Colonial Unrest and Puritan Strife
82(6)
The Glorious Revolution in America
82(3)
Puritanism Under Pressure
85(3)
Imperial Wars, Imperial Interests
88(5)
King William's and Queen Anne's Wars
88(3)
Colonial Reorganization
91(1)
Outpost of Empire: Georgia
91(2)
Conclusion: Establishing Stability and Order
93(2)
From Plantations to Provinces: The Evolution of American Society and Culture, 1660--1763
95(32)
Colonial Society
96(14)
Pre-Industrial Colonial Economies
97(3)
Colonial Family Life
100(3)
Servants and Slaves
103(4)
Schools and Scholars
107(3)
The American Enlightenment
110(9)
Literature: New Secular and Enduring Spiritual Concerns
110(3)
The Waning of Artistic Provincialism
113(1)
``And All Was Light'': Science and the American Enlightenment
114(2)
Practical Sciences: Medicine and Law
116(3)
The Great Awakening and Its Consequences
119(6)
George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards
119(2)
Religious Realignments
121(2)
Slave Religion
123(1)
Colleges: ``Nurseries of Piety''
124(1)
Conclusion: Growth, Revival, and Cultural Maturity
125(2)
Self-Governing Colonies in a Changing Empire, 1700--1775
127(26)
The Practice of Colonial Politics
128(5)
Politics at Home
128(3)
Politics Abroad
131(2)
The Contest for a Continent
133(3)
Spain: Safeguarding an Empire
134(1)
France: Winning an Empire
134(2)
Political Thought and Political Passion in British North America
136(15)
The Great War for Empire
136(4)
An Aggressive Kingdom
140(5)
A Roused People
145(2)
Religious Imperialism
147(2)
Colonists Convene a Congress
149(2)
Conclusion: Battles for Control
151(2)
The Struggle for American Independence, 1775--1783
153(36)
Going to War
155(7)
On Lexington Green
155(1)
The Road to Concord---and Back
156(1)
Toward Independence
157(3)
Loyalists, Patriots, and Pacifists
160(2)
The Declaration of Independence
162(4)
Getting Congress to Move
163(1)
Thomas Jefferson and the Declaration
164(2)
The Continental Army: Friends and Foes
166(5)
American Strategy---Hit and Run
166(2)
British Strategy---Occupy, Divide, and Conquer
168(1)
Saratoga and France
168(1)
Defeat, Treason, Despair
169(2)
The War and American Society
171(8)
Race and the Revolution
171(1)
Native Americans and the West
172(1)
Women and the Revolution
173(1)
Soldiers at the Front, Citizens on the Line
174(1)
Science, Art, and Literature amid the Carnage
175(2)
Moral and Religious Values
177(2)
Victory and Peace
179(8)
The War at Sea
180(1)
The Road to Yorktown
180(4)
Diplomacy and Peace
184(3)
Conclusion: War and Nation-building
187(2)
From Confederation to Federal Union, 1781--1788
189(32)
The Sovereign States
191(4)
Revising the State Constitutions
191(3)
Revising State Expectations
194(1)
The Union and Its Limits
195(6)
Articles of Confederation
195(1)
Western Lands and the Northwest Ordinance
196(2)
State Government, Shays's Rebellion, and the Crisis of Confederation
198(3)
Religion after the Revolution
201(2)
Disestablishment and ``Decline''
201(1)
New and Vital Religious Forces
202(1)
A Constitutional Convention
203(8)
Delegates and Principles
203(3)
The Critical Compromises
206(4)
The Final Result
210(1)
The Rocky Road toward Ratification
211(8)
The Federalists
211(2)
The Anti-Federalists
213(1)
The State Conventions and the People
214(2)
The Bill of Rights
216(3)
Conclusion: A New Republic
219(2)
First Presidents and Crucial Precedents, 1789--1809
221(38)
George Washington and National Unity
222(12)
The Executive: Washington and His Cabinet
222(2)
Millennialism and the Republic
224(1)
The Legislature: Washington and Congress
225(1)
The Judiciary and the Supreme Court
226(1)
Alexander Hamilton and Economic Structures
227(3)
Foreign Affairs and Bitter Final Days
230(4)
John Adams and the Rise of Political Parties
234(6)
The Party Spirit
234(2)
The Contest of 1796
236(1)
War with France?
237(1)
Adams and the Ordeal of Liberty
238(1)
Defeat and Disillusionment
239(1)
The Revolution of 1800 and a Jeffersonian Republic
240(12)
The Election and Jefferson's First Inaugural
241(3)
John Marshall Leads the Supreme Court
244(1)
Economics and Politics at Home
245(2)
The Louisiana Purchase and the West
247(3)
To the Shores of Tripoli --- and Beyond
250(2)
The Jeffersonian Legacy
252(5)
Art and Architecture
252(1)
Education and Science
253(1)
Gender and Race
254(2)
Reason and Religion
256(1)
Conclusion: Building and Nurturing the New Nation
257(2)
Nationalism, Capitalism, Sectionalism, and Religion in the Early Republic
259(36)
Asserting Independence: From the War of 1812 to the Monroe Doctrine
260(16)
``Peaceful Coercion'' Fails
260(1)
American Expansionists
261(1)
Indian Resistance to White Expansion
261(2)
``Mr. Madison's War''
263(2)
The Failed Invasions of Canada
265(1)
The Naval War
266(2)
The Shifting Fortunes of War
268(2)
Making Peace and Winning a Victory
270(2)
A Burst of Nationalism
272(1)
The End of the Federalists
272(1)
John Quincy Adams's Continental Diplomacy
273(2)
The Monroe Doctrine
275(1)
Building a United Nation: The Market Economy and the Marshall Court
276(9)
The Emergence of a Capitalist National Economy
277(1)
An Economic Policy for Capitalist Development: The American System
278(1)
John Marshall and National Supremacy
279(1)
State Law and Corporations
280(1)
New Technologies and the Transportation Revolution
280(5)
The Seeds of Sectionalism
285(3)
``A Fire Bell in the Night''
285(2)
The Panic of 1819
287(1)
The Missouri Compromise
288(1)
The Evangelical Resurgence
288(5)
Northern Protestantism Responds to Challenges
289(1)
The Great Revival in the South
290(3)
Conclusion: Optimism and Challenges
293(2)
The Modernizing North
295(42)
The Industrial Revolution
296(7)
Traditional Production
297(2)
Emergence of a New Industrial System
299(1)
The Factory System Evolves
300(1)
The American System
301(2)
Immigration
303(2)
The Immigrants
304(1)
Urbanization
305(4)
Urban Growth
306(2)
Urban Life
308(1)
Labor Movements
309(1)
From Artisans to Workers
309(1)
Labor Unions
310(1)
Religious Revivalism and Social Reform
310(10)
The Democratization of Christianity
311(1)
Charles G. Finney and Modern Revivalism
312(1)
Religion and Reform
313(1)
Catholic Revivalism
314(1)
An Age of Reform
315(1)
Temperance
316(1)
Horace Mann and the Educational Crusade
317(2)
A Smorgasbord of Reforms
319(1)
Antislavery
320(5)
The Colonization Movement
320(2)
The New Antislavery Movement
322(2)
The Radical Abolitionists
324(1)
Women's Rights
325(2)
The Women's Movement
325(1)
The Cult of True Womanhood
326(1)
Arts, Letters, and Utopias
327(8)
The New England Renaissance
329(1)
Probing Human Nature
330(1)
Popular Culture
330(1)
Utopianism
331(4)
Conclusion: Dramatic Shifts and Unprecedented Changes
335(2)
The Old South
337(36)
Plantation Economies
338(4)
Rise of King Cotton
338(4)
White Southerners
342(9)
Plain Folk and Planters
342(3)
Daily Life in the Old South
345(1)
Towns and Industry
346(2)
White Women in the Old South
348(1)
Religion as an Institution
349(1)
Religion and Slavery
350(1)
Black Southerners
351(13)
Diversity within Slavery
351(2)
Life and Labor
353(2)
Urban and Industrial Slavery
355(2)
Free Blacks
357(2)
Slaves as Human Property
359(1)
Slave Family Life
359(2)
Housing, Food, and Health Care
361(1)
Work Routines
362(1)
Discipline
363(1)
Slave Culture
364(7)
Africa Forgotten and Reclaimed
365(1)
Black Christianity
366(3)
Slave Rebellion
369(2)
Conclusion: The Stark Anomaly of Slavery
371(2)
The Coming of Democratic Politics: Andrew Jackson and the Second Party System, 1824--1844
373(36)
The Democratization of American Politics
374(6)
The End of the Virginia Dynasty
375(2)
President John Quincy Adams
377(1)
Martin Van Buren and the Rise of the Political Party
378(1)
The Election of Andrew Jackson
379(1)
The Jackson Administration
380(11)
The ``Spoils System'' and the New Presidency
381(1)
Jackson's Indian Policy
382(4)
Nullification
386(5)
The Bank War
391(5)
The Second B.U.S. and the Nation's Banking System
391(1)
Jackson Takes on the B.U.S.
392(3)
The Consequences: The Panic of 1837
395(1)
The Origins of the Second Party System
396(4)
Traditional Political Opposition to Jackson
396(3)
Anti-Masonry
399(1)
Religion in Jacksonian Politics
400(7)
Sabbatarianism
400(2)
The Anti-Sabbatarianism Backlash
402(2)
Ethnic and Cultural Origins of the Whig Party
404(3)
Conclusion: Emerging Sectionalism
407(2)
Territorial Expansion, Manifest Destiny, and the Mexican War
409(32)
Controversies with Canada
409(3)
The Caroline Incident
410(1)
The Aroostook War
411(1)
The Webster-Ashburton Treaty
411(1)
The Near West: Texas
412(5)
Spanish Texas
412(1)
Stephen F. Austin and Anglo Settlement in Texas
412(2)
The Texas Revolution
414(1)
The Texas Nation
415(1)
The Failed Attempt to Annex Texas
416(1)
The Far West: Oregon and California
417(8)
Spanish California
417(1)
The Fur Trade and Mountain Men
418(1)
The Santa Fe Trail
419(1)
Army Exploration of the West
420(1)
Early Settlement of the Oregon Territory
420(3)
Oregon Fever and the Oregon Trail
423(2)
The Election of James K. Polk
425(1)
Victory of a Dark Horse Candidate
425(1)
The Annexation of Texas
426(1)
Manifest Destiny
426(4)
The ``All of Oregon'' Movement
426(1)
Polk's Campaign for Oregon
427(2)
Polk Maneuvers for California
429(1)
The Mexican War
430(4)
Mr. Polk's War
430(1)
Military Success in Mexico
431(2)
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
433(1)
Growth of Utah and California
434(6)
Joseph Smith and the Origins of Mormonism
434(1)
Opposition to the Mormons
435(1)
The Mormons' Deseret Empire
436(1)
The Mormon War
437(1)
California and the Gold Rush
438(2)
Conclusion: News from the South
440(1)
Sectionalism and Slavery's Dark Cloud: The Coming of the Civil War, 1846--1861
441(36)
Confronting ``the Slave Power''
442(11)
Slavery in the Territories
442(3)
From the California Gold Rush to the Uneasy Compromise of 1850
445(2)
Uncle Tom's Cabin
447(1)
The Collapse of the Whig Party
448(1)
The Storm over Fugitive Slaves
449(2)
Douglas's Kansas-Nebraska Bill
451(2)
The Party System in Flux
453(22)
Anti-Catholicism and the Know-Nothings
453(2)
The Rise of the Republican Party
455(1)
The Road to Civil War
456(1)
Bleeding Kansas
456(3)
The Ominous Election of 1856
459(2)
The Dred Scott Decision
461(1)
National Divisions Widen
462(3)
Lincoln and Douglas Debate
465(1)
John Brown's Raid
466(2)
The Fateful Election of 1860
468(4)
Lincoln and the Secession Crisis
472(3)
Conclusion: Outbreak of War at Fort Sumter
475(2)
``This Mighty Scourge'': The Civil War Years
477(34)
Mobilizing and Nation-Building
478(8)
The North-South Balance Sheet
478(2)
Raising Armies
480(1)
The First Battles
481(5)
Stalemate
486(14)
Slavery and the War
486(1)
The Emancipation Proclamation
487(2)
Turning the Tide
489(3)
The Diplomatic and Naval War
492(1)
Wartime Social Strains
493(5)
A New Kind of War
498(1)
The Grapes of Wrath: Faith in Battle
498(2)
Toward Union Victory
500(7)
Grant's New Strategy
500(2)
Bringing the War Home to the South
502(1)
The Last Days of Southern Slavery
503(1)
The War Ends
504(3)
Conclusion: The Meaning of the Civil War
507(4)
Reconstruction and the New South
511(38)
Wartime Reconstruction
512(25)
The Thirteenth Amendment
514(1)
Andrew Johnson and ``Restoration''
515(1)
A Defiant South
516(2)
The First Congressional Reconstruction Plan
518(2)
The Fourteenth Amendment
520(2)
The Second Congressional Reconstruction Plan
522(1)
The Impeachment of Johnson
522(1)
The Fifteenth Amendment
523(1)
The Supreme Court and Reconstruction
524(1)
Forming Reconstruction Governments in the South
525(2)
The New Southern Electorate
527(1)
Republican Governments in Action
528(2)
White Violence
530(2)
The Disputed Election of 1876
532(2)
Democratic Governments in a ``Redeemed'' South
534(1)
The Populist Challenge and the End of Black Voting
535(2)
The Rise of Jim Crow
537(1)
The Supreme Court and Jim Crow
538(1)
Black Exertions for Freedom
538(7)
The Church
539(2)
The School
541(1)
Booker T. Washington and Self-Help
542(1)
Land and Labor
543(2)
The ``New South'' Promise
545(2)
Conclusion: The South at Century's End
547(2)
Remaking the Trans-Mississippi Wests
549(38)
Native Peoples
550(3)
Diverse Ways of Life in the Southwest and Northwest
550(1)
Hunting Buffalo on the Great Plains
551(1)
Tribal Beliefs, Relations, and Practices
552(1)
The Indian Wars
553(7)
Challenges of White Settlement
553(1)
Local Militia
554(1)
Total War
554(1)
Negotiations and Reservations
555(2)
The Great Sioux War
557(2)
Devastation of the Buffalo Herds
559(1)
Surrender and Flight
560(1)
Attempts at Assimilation
560(5)
Partnership of Church and State
560(1)
Arousing Public Concern
561(1)
A Three-Pronged Approach: Education, Suppression, and Allotment
561(4)
New Settlers in the West
565(3)
Long Overland Journeys
565(1)
The Rise of the Railroads
566(1)
Settlers from Overseas and the Eastern States
567(1)
Mining the West
568(5)
Dreams of Gold
569(1)
Booming Towns and States
570(1)
Boom and Bust Economies
571(1)
Establishing Law and Order
572(1)
Cattle and Cowboys on the Plains
573(4)
Driving Cattle to Market
573(1)
Cowboy Culture
574(1)
Fences and Water Rights
575(1)
Natural Changes and Challenges
576(1)
Sheep versus Cattle
577(1)
Farming the West
577(4)
Free Land, Harsh Conditions
578(1)
New Technologies and Tactics
579(1)
The Rise of Agribusiness
579(2)
Farm Life and Community on the Plains
581(2)
Challenges of Settling Down
581(1)
Coming Together as Communities
582(1)
Immigrant Settlements and Americanization
582(1)
The West(s) of Imagination
583(1)
Conclusion: Profits and ``Progress''
584(3)
The New Industrial Order
587(34)
Post--Civil War National Economic Expectations
588(1)
The Railroads
589(6)
Building an Integrated Railway System
591(1)
Government Aid to Railroad Construction
592(1)
Travel by Train
593(2)
The Managerial Revolution
595(5)
Managerial Control
595(1)
Information and Management
596(1)
Business Education
597(1)
Taylorism and Scientific Management
598(2)
Thomas Edison and Industrial Technology
600(3)
Big Business America
603(9)
Andrew Carnegie and Big Steel
603(2)
Vertical and Horizontal Integration
605(2)
Competition and Combination
607(2)
Competition and Government Regulation
609(2)
The Bankers Step In
611(1)
The Character of Wealth
612(1)
Organized Labor
612(7)
Working-Class Protests and Strikes
614(3)
National Unions
617(2)
Conclusion: New Divides
619(2)
The Modern Industrial City, 1850--1900
621(36)
Peopling the Modern City
621(3)
Urban Growth
622(2)
The Lure of the City
624(1)
The New Immigration
624(9)
The Golden Door
625(2)
Restrictions on Immigration
627(1)
Immigrant Employment and Destinations
628(2)
The Immigrant Enclave
630(1)
Immigrant Religion
630(1)
Community and Identity
631(1)
Becoming American in the Immigrant City
632(1)
The New Face of the City
633(11)
The Development of Mass Transportation
634(1)
The Skyscraper
635(1)
The Palace of Consumption
636(2)
Urban Lifestyles
638(3)
Slums
641(3)
The Struggle for Control of the City
644(3)
City Machine Politics
644(3)
Awakening Social Conscience
647(7)
Early Efforts at Reform
647(3)
The Social Gospel
650(3)
The Settlement House
653(1)
The City Enters the New Century
654(1)
Conclusion: Points of Convergence in the American City
655(2)
Post--Civil War Thought and Culture
657(36)
National Culture and Faith in Progress
658(12)
Publishing: National and Local
659(1)
Modern Metropolitan Culture: The Growing Authority of Science and Progress
660(4)
Expertise
664(5)
Pragmatism and Religion
669(1)
Dissenting Views of Progress
670(8)
Rural and Small-Town North
670(4)
Negotiating Change in the Rural North
674(3)
The Distinctive South
677(1)
Divergent Subcultures
678(13)
Immigrants Encounter the New World
679(3)
Workers Respond to Industrial Progress
682(5)
Radical Visions of Progress
687(1)
Radical Critiques of Progress
688(3)
Conclusion: Voicing Alternatives
691(2)
The Politics of the Gilded Age
693(30)
Political Parties and Political Stalemate
694(4)
A Delicate Balance of Power
694(1)
Muted Differences
694(2)
Political Culture
696(1)
Lingering Effects of the Civil War
697(1)
Getting Out the Vote
698(4)
The Spectacle of Campaigns
698(2)
Women's Influence
700(2)
Reining in the Spoilsmen
702(4)
The Appeal of Civil Service Reform
703(1)
Newspapers and Reform
703(1)
Impetus for Reform
704(2)
The Presidency and Congress Remade
706(4)
The Money Question
710(1)
The Depression of 1893 and the Gold Standard
711(4)
The Populist Challenge
715(3)
Farmers Come Together
715(2)
Populist Themes
717(1)
The Cross of Gold and the Election of 1896
718(3)
Conclusion: The End of the Old and the Rise of the New
721(2)
Innocents Abroad: Expansion and Empire, America and the World, 1865--1900
723
Limits on Expansionism and Empire
724(2)
Forces for Expansion and Interest Overseas
726(3)
Securing North America
729(1)
Latin American Relations
730(3)
Pan-Americanism
731(1)
Rattling Sabers at the British
732(1)
American Business Interests
733(1)
Island Hopping in the Pacific
733(3)
An Open Door to China
736(2)
The Cuban Crisis
738(2)
A ``Splendid Little War''
740(2)
The Great Debate over Imperialism
742(4)
Annexation?
743(3)
A Foundation for Nation-Building
746(1)
Conclusion: America and the World in 1900
746
Appendix 1(1)
Credits 1(1)
Index 1

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