FDNY and NYC Firehouses and Fire Companies

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mack said:
Notes:
    - Battalion 31 originally organized in Flatbush and moved to Brooklyn Heights
    - FDNY organized Battalion 41 to replace Battalion 31

At 2261 Church Ave, Flatbush:
  Brooklyn FD District Engineer 11 became FDNY Brooklyn Battalion 11 in 1898
  FDNY Brooklyn Battalion 11 became FDNY Battalion 31 ten weeks later in 1898
  Battalion 31 became Battalion 41 in 1906

At 245 Pearl St, Brooklyn Heights:
  Brooklyn FD District Engineer 3 became FDNY Brooklyn Battalion 1 in 1898
  FDNY Brooklyn Battalion 1 became FDNY Battalion 21 ten weeks later in 1898
  Battalion 21 became Battalion 31 in 1906

The 14 original Brooklyn District Engineers came into the FDNY as Battalions 1 to 14
Ten weeks later, 20 was added to their number (i.e. 1 became 21, 2 became 22, 14 became 34, etc) to distinguish them from Manhattan and Bronx battalions with the same number.

In 1906, the Brooklyn and Queens battalions (21 to 38) had 10 added to their number (becoming 31 to 48), releasing the 20 series for Staten Island (21 & 22), (23 was later) and some new battalions in Manhattan (24 & 25) and Bronx (26).  Battalions 27, 28, & 29 were not reorganized until the 1960's.
 

mack

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Brooklyn fire protection - 1800s:

   

The City of Brooklyn in the 1800s, before incorporation into New York City, had it's own paid Brooklyn Fire Department which became part of FDNY when Brooklyn, along with Queens and Staten Island, consolidated with New York City in 1898.  The City of Brooklyn, however, did not include much of the current borough of Brooklyn.  There were several independent towns to include:  Flatbush, Gravesend, Flatlands, New Utrecht and Bushwick.  These towns were considered part of Long Island. 

In the 1800s, fire protection in the City of Brooklyn and the neighboring towns was initially provided by volunteer companies, which then became a paid department in Brooklyn or merged into volunteer departments with chief officers in the towns.

The City of Brooklyn was protected by approximately 51 volunteer fire companies, organized in Eastern and Western Districts, prior to the Brooklyn Fire Department being organized in 1869.  Williamsburgh also had its own fire department before being covered by the Brooklyn Fire Department in 1855.


The independent town volunteer departments prior to 1898 included:
   
    Bay Ridge:  2 companies
    Coney Island: 4 companies
    East New York: 4 companies
    Flatbush: 8 companies
    Flatlands: 3 companies
    Gravesend: 2 companies
    New Lots: 11 companies
    New Utrecht: 10 companies
    Sheepshead Bay: 4 companies

The volunteer fire department boundaries did not necessarily match the towns as depicted on the above map.  There was a continual evolution of units and political boundaries as communities developed.  Volunteer fire companies had to receive charters from NY state and political support was required.  Many volunteer firemen were hired by the paid Brooklyn Fire Department or later by FDNY.  Many of the original volunteer firehouses were used as initial quarters for the paid units until quarters which provided appropriate facilities could be constructed.  Horses and apparatus were also purchased from the volunteer units. 


Mike Boucher's "Early Brooklyn and its Volunteer Fire Department History" history:  http://www.nyfd.com/history/bfd.html


Early City of Brooklyn firehouses built post-1869:

    BFD Engine 4 (later FDNY Engine 204):
   

    BFD Engine 9 (later FDNY Engine 209):
   
   
    BFD Engine 16 (later FDNY Engine 216):
   

    BFD Engine 18 (later FDNY Engine 218):
   

    BFD Engine 26 (later FDNY Engine 226)
   

    BFD Ladder 5 (later FDNY Ladder 105)
   

    BFD Engine 8, BFD Ladder 8 (later FDNY Ladder 108)
   

    BFD Ladder 18 (latter FDNY Ladder 114)
   












 

mack

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Ladder 25/Division 3/Collapse Rescue Unit 1 firehouse - 207 West 77th Street  Upper West Side, Manhattan    Battalion 11, Division 3
    Also quarters of Engine 74/Division 2/Battalion 18

    Ladder 25 organized 207 W 77th Street w/Engine 74                          1901
    Ladder 25 moved 120 W 83rd Street at Engine 74                              2003
    Ladder 25 moved 207 W 77th Street                                                  2004

    Engine 74 organized 207 W 77th Street w/Ladder 25                          1901
    Engine 74 moved 120 W 83rd Street                                                  1972
    Engine 74 moved 207 W 77th Street at Ladder 25                              1992
    Engine 74 moved 120 W 83rd Street                                                  1992

    Division 3 located 207 W 77th Street at Ladder 25  1902-1903,1997-2003, 2004-present

    Division 2 located 207 W 77th Street at Ladder 25                        1995-1997   

    Battalion 18 located 207 W 77th Street at Ladder 25                          1903     


207 West 77th Street firehouse:



















Engine 74 steamer:





Engine 74 WLF hose wagon:


Engine 74 1938 Ahrens Fox 1000 GPM pumper:







Ladder 25 1960 ALF 100 ft.:


Ladder 25:











Ladder 25 response:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cAgrhYd8JXQ

Engine 74/Ladder 25 MVA:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5voQ3rq5ngU


Ladder 25 rescue:  http://www.nyc.gov/html/fdny/html/events/2010/021910a.shtml

207 W 77th Street firehouse history:  http://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2014/09/engine-co-74-and-hook-ladder-25-207.html


Ladder 25 scaling ladder rescue - Morgan Annex Fire - Box 676 - December 15, 1967 - 2107 hrs - 31 degrees



40 engines/15 trucks/rescues/Superpumper - 11 alarms


Ladder 25 made scaling ladder rescue of 3 trapped workers.  FF Dowling, FF Williams, FF Rizutto



    See WNYF, 2nd issue, 1968

Ladder 25 - 1968 FDNY Medals:








Ladder 25 LODDs:

    Lt Glenn Perry:

   


    FF Kenneth Kumpel:

   


    FF Matthew E Barnes

   


    FF John M. Collins

   


    FF Robert J. Minara

   


    FF Joseph R. Rivelli

   


    FF Paul G. Rubak

   
   
   
   


    Never forget.


   




 
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mack said:
    Engine 74 organized 207 W 77th Street w/Ladder 25                          1901
    Engine 74 moved 120 W 83rd Street                                                  1972
    Engine 74 moved 207 W 77th Street at Ladder 25                              1992
    Engine 74 moved 120 W 83rd Street                                                  1992

Engine 74 is keeping the timeline of Engine 56's station (120 W 83rd St) open.
This was Engine 56's quarters until 1960.  Then it was Squad 6's quarters until 1972.
Clearly FDNY wants to keep this house open.  Not sure why Engine 56 was disbanded in the first place.
 
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I believe 1972 was the year the RAND CORP study hit the job with its Adaptive Response policy.  Lots of companies, particularly 2d sections, closed.
 
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Members of L-25 made the scaling ladder rescue/rescues at the Morgan Annex fire in December of 1967. it was probably one of the most spectacuar made in FDNY history. F/F Gene Dowling ascended the aerial and scaling ladders to rescue three trapped civilians (one at a time) during brutal conditions and when he descended to the aerial's tip handed then off to F/F Clyde Williams and F/F Don Pizzuto. Great teamwork and a great rescue.
 
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fdhistorian said:
mack said:
    Engine 74 organized 207 W 77th Street w/Ladder 25                          1901
    Engine 74 moved 120 W 83rd Street                                                  1972
    Engine 74 moved 207 W 77th Street at Ladder 25                              1992
    Engine 74 moved 120 W 83rd Street                                                  1992

QUOTE..Engine 74 is keeping the timeline of Engine 56's station (120 W 83rd St) open.
This was Engine 56's quarters until 1960.  Then it was Squad 6's quarters until 1972.
Clearly FDNY wants to keep this house open.  Not sure why Engine 56 was disbanded in the first place.UNQUOTE.........It is smoke & mirrors.... the City wanted to close an ENG in that area .....closing a FH as well as a Company brings more heat than just eliminating a Company but keeping a FH open.
 
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1261Truckie said:
Members of L-25 made the scaling ladder rescue/rescues at the Morgan Annex fire in December of 1967. it was probably one of the most spectacuar made in FDNY history. F/F Gene Dowling ascended the aerial and scaling ladders to rescue three trapped civilians (one at a time) during brutal conditions and when he descended to the aerial's tip handed then off to F/F Clyde Williams and F/F Don Pizzuto. Great teamwork and a great rescue. Unrelated to

  An interesting fact regarding Ladder 25's member Clyde Williams. I have a Recruitment Poster from back around 1977 when the FDNY was giving a test for firefighters. The test had been given and this poster was being removed from the enclosed glass case on the front wall of a firehouse. When one of the members was removing it, I went up to him and he told me they were throwing it away. I asked him if I could have it and he gave it to me. From that time on, I have had it on the wall in my spare room. It has Firefighter Clyde Williams, Ladder 25 on it along with another FDNY Member named Frank Martinez of Ladder 27.

  Along with the two members pictures, on the top in large bold letters it says: "FIREFIGHTER EXAM", below that it says "Career with a future". Apply September 7, 1977 through October 25, 1977.  Abe Beame was the Mayor and John T O'Hagan was the Commissioner and Chief of Department.

  A discussion just recently came up (Nov 20, '14) at a meeting of the Suncoast Retirees in Sarasota, Fla. about this poster I have. I only have one poster, but if anybody knows how I can get that poster to either one of these members or their families, I'd be glad to make an effort to get it to them. I think it would be great if this can be passed down to their kids, or their grand kids.

  That poster has been on my wall for decades. I've never really given it much thought until the day I went to that Retirees luncheon and I thought one of the pictures was of one of the members there. If anybody can help out, I'd be happy to get that poster from 1977 to one of them or their families.

 
 

mack

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Morgan Annex Fire - Box 676 - December 15, 1967 - 2107 hrs - 31 degrees



40 engines/15 trucks/rescues/Superpumper - 11 alarms


Ladder 25 made scaling ladder rescue of 3 trapped workers.  FF Dowling, FF Williams, FF Rizutto




See WNYF, 2nd issue, 1968
 
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68jk09 said:
Not sure why Engine 56 was disbanded in the first place.UNQUOTE.........It is smoke & mirrors.... the City wanted to close an ENG in that area .....closing a FH as well as a Company brings more heat than just eliminating a Company but keeping a FH open.

Interesting that they closed a company (E56/S6) then replaced it with a company (E74), unless they thought it would be short term and that 74 would return if 56 was re-established. 

Not the only time that has happened - E17 was disbanded and E15 took their place - E6 moved in with 32, then 32 was disbanded.  Any others?
 

mack

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nfd2004 said:
1261Truckie said:
Members of L-25 made the scaling ladder rescue/rescues at the Morgan Annex fire in December of 1967. it was probably one of the most spectacuar made in FDNY history. F/F Gene Dowling ascended the aerial and scaling ladders to rescue three trapped civilians (one at a time) during brutal conditions and when he descended to the aerial's tip handed then off to F/F Clyde Williams and F/F Don Pizzuto. Great teamwork and a great rescue. Unrelated to

  An interesting fact regarding Ladder 25's member Clyde Williams. I have a Recruitment Poster from back around 1977 when the FDNY was giving a test for firefighters. The test had been given and this poster was being removed from the enclosed glass case on the front wall of a firehouse. When one of the members was removing it, I went up to him and he told me they were throwing it away. I asked him if I could have it and he gave it to me. From that time on, I have had it on the wall in my spare room. It has Firefighter Clyde Williams, Ladder 25 on it along with another FDNY Member named Frank Martinez of Ladder 27.

  Along with the two members pictures, on the top in large bold letters it says: "FIREFIGHTER EXAM", below that it says "Career with a future". Apply September 7, 1977 through October 25, 1977.  Abe Beame was the Mayor and John T O'Hagan was the Commissioner and Chief of Department.

  A discussion just recently came up (Nov 20, '14) at a meeting of the Suncoast Retirees in Sarasota, Fla. about this poster I have. I only have one poster, but if anybody knows how I can get that poster to either one of these members or their families, I'd be glad to make an effort to get it to them. I think it would be great if this can be passed down to their kids, or their grand kids.

  That poster has been on my wall for decades. I've never really given it much thought until the day I went to that Retirees luncheon and I thought one of the pictures was of one of the members there. If anybody can help out, I'd be happy to get that poster from 1977 to one of them or their families.

 
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5,756
mack said:
nfd2004 said:
1261Truckie said:
Members of L-25 made the scaling ladder rescue/rescues at the Morgan Annex fire in December of 1967. it was probably one of the most spectacuar made in FDNY history. F/F Gene Dowling ascended the aerial and scaling ladders to rescue three trapped civilians (one at a time) during brutal conditions and when he descended to the aerial's tip handed then off to F/F Clyde Williams and F/F Don Pizzuto. Great teamwork and a great rescue. Unrelated to

  An interesting fact regarding Ladder 25's member Clyde Williams. I have a Recruitment Poster from back around 1977 when the FDNY was giving a test for firefighters. The test had been given and this poster was being removed from the enclosed glass case on the front wall of a firehouse. When one of the members was removing it, I went up to him and he told me they were throwing it away. I asked him if I could have it and he gave it to me. From that time on, I have had it on the wall in my spare room. It has Firefighter Clyde Williams, Ladder 25 on it along with another FDNY Member named Frank Martinez of Ladder 27.

  Along with the two members pictures, on the top in large bold letters it says: "FIREFIGHTER EXAM", below that it says "Career with a future". Apply September 7, 1977 through October 25, 1977.  Abe Beame was the Mayor and John T O'Hagan was the Commissioner and Chief of Department.

  A discussion just recently came up (Nov 20, '14) at a meeting of the Suncoast Retirees in Sarasota, Fla. about this poster I have. I only have one poster, but if anybody knows how I can get that poster to either one of these members or their families, I'd be glad to make an effort to get it to them. I think it would be great if this can be passed down to their kids, or their grand kids.

  That poster has been on my wall for decades. I've never really given it much thought until the day I went to that Retirees luncheon and I thought one of the pictures was of one of the members there. If anybody can help out, I'd be happy to get that poster from 1977 to one of them or their families.

  Thanks "mack", That's the poster I was talking about. I took a picture of mine and asked my good friend "fdny1075k" if he would post it on the site for me. Of course he said he would. He's a good guy. I think he's taking a few fire department tests soon. I sure wish him the best of luck.

  Joe, thank you. And by the way, this thread you started is GREAT.
 

mack

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FDNY Department Order Number 73, July 11, 1996, discontinued use of scaling ladders.


 

mack

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Engine 56/Squad 6  firehouse  120 West 83rd Street  Upper West Side, Manhattan
    Current quarters for Engine 74   
    Also prior quarters for Ambulance 3, Ladder 25

    Engine 56 organized 120 West 83rd Street                              1899
    Engine 56 disbanded                                                              1960

    Ambulance 3  located 120 West 83rd Street at Engine 56          1947

    Squad 6 organized 205 West 77th Street at Engine 74              1959
    Squad 6 moved 120 West 83rd Street                                    1960
    Squad 6 disbanded                                                                1972

    Note:  Squad 6 went in service in 1959 with a converted 1940 WLF Mack hose wagon.  In 1961, they received an International van.


120 West 83rd Street firehouse:




Engine 56 steamer:


Engine 56 1927 ALF pumper:



Engine 56 LODDs:

    http://www.nyc.gov/html/fdny/html/events/2013/101813a.shtml

    FF Samuel McMahon, Engine 56, injured August 10, 1889 - run over by hose wagon while exercising horses, died from injuries August 13, 1889

    FF William Moran, Engine 56, June 29, 1926 - injured traffic accident responding to Box 1227, died June 30, 1926

    FF James O?Dwyer, Engine 56, June 29, 1926 - injured traffic accident responding to Box 1227, died June 30, 1926

    Never forget.
 

Engine 56 was busy FDNY engine company in 1959 prior to being disbanded in 1960.  Ranked 25th in engine runs and 19th in engine workers in 1959:



Engine 56 and Engine 213 were discontinued in 1960.  Squad 6 moved into Engine 56's quarters:

 

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Engine 74  firehouse  120 West 77th Street  Upper West Side, Manhattan
    Former quarters Engine 56 (disbanded), Squad 6 (disbanded), Ambulance 3

    Engine 74 organized 207 West 77th Street w/Ladder 25                            1901
    Engine 74 moved 120 West 83rd Street former quarters Squad 6                1972
    Engine 74 moved 207 West 77th Street at Ladder 25                                1992
    Engine 74 moved 120 West 83rd Street                                                    1992

207 West 77th Street original quarters Engine 74:                           







120 West 83rd Street firehouse:























Engine 74 steamer:




Engine 74 WLF hose wagon:


Engine 74 1938 Ahrens Fox 1000 GPM pumper:





Engine 74:



















Engine 74 responding:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jAzmnmN5ENM

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R2zVnqNfI0Q

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIzALAR-urM


Engine 74 mascot:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8mqY2eQGLV0


Engine 74 LODD:

    FF Ruben Correa, Engine 74, World Trade Center, September 11, 2001

   


Upper West Side neighborhood:

    http://www.ny.com/articles/upperwest.html

    http://www.ny.com/articles/upperwest.html

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Museum_of_Natural_History



Engine 74 "The Lost World":





 

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Dr Harry Archer - responded from 120 West 77th Street firehouse close to his home.  Dr Archer was a legendary FDNY Honorary Medical Officer, Second Deputy Commissioner, buff, firefighter supporter and 1924 James Gordon Bennett Medal winner


Dr Archer responding from 120 West 77th Street firehouse: 



"Dr. Archer was born on April 23, 1868 to a prominent New York family. He attended Columbia University and received an M.D. degree from Bellevue Medical College in 1894. Since his childhood he loved the FDNY, not unlike many youngsters in the City. But after becoming a physician, Dr. Archer dedicated himself to New York's Bravest. Perhaps to the disappointment of his family, rather than becoming a private physician to New York's high society, he accepted a salaried position with Aetna Life Affiliated Companies with the proviso that he could, and would, leave his office to attend greater alarm fires. On March 7, 1907, Dr. Archer was appointed to the Department with the rank of honorary Battalion Chief and was designated a Medical Officer. Though never receiving compensation for his medical services to the FDNY, there is no doubt that this was his full-time job.

Whether by horse, bicycle, his Locomobile outfitted with bell and Maltese cross, or by "bus" - the 1914 FDNY Ambulance he designed - Dr. Archer's appearance at second and greater alarms was a matter of routine. But once at the scene, he was not satisfied with merely tending to the wounds, major or minor, of the firefighters. On multiple occasions, Dr. Archer entered burning or collapsed buildings to treat firefighters and civilians alike. At the Equitable Building fire in 1912, he made his way into the basement vaults of the building to administer aid to trapped firemen. For this action, he received his first medal of valor. He was cited a total of four times during his career including the Department's highest award, the James Gordon Bennett Medal, for his participation in the rescue of two workmen trapped in a building collapse at 39 to 41 Eldridge Street in Manhattan. Dr. Archer himself became trapped briefly when a second collapse shook the building as he was making his exit. Twenty-four years later, at the age of 78, Dr. Archer was still at it, this time crawling through the rubble and debris to spend over ten hours on a freezing New Year's Eve to try to keep two firefighters, Battalion Chief William Hogan and Fireman Winfield Walsh, alive. They were trapped in the collapse of a loft building at 749 Broadway. Dr. Archer administered plasma to them, perhaps the first time this was done outside of a hospital in other than a combat setting, as well as broth through feeding tubes. Unfortunately, both men succumbed to their injuries but not until several days after their ordeal.

In 1939, Mayor LaGuardia asked him to serve as Second Deputy Commissioner which he did until 1940. To do so, he had to resign his honorary position and rank.

Dr. Archer's activities earned him the respect of his professional colleagues as well as the firefighters he treated. Perhaps the first Fire Surgeon to truly embody that title, he became nationally known for his expertise in treating toxic gas poisoning, having developed ground-breaking treatment modalities. Some times his methods were "low-tech." He was known to stock woolen Navy watch caps in his ambulance that he would make injured men wear on cold, wet nights.

Though the firefighters who benefited from Dr. Archer's intense concern and caring are of a generation long since passed, his memory lives on. In 1947, a medal was endowed in his name. It is awarded every third year to one of the three previous Bennett Medal recipients. In 1956, Commissioner Cavanaugh unveiled a plaque in Headquarters honoring Dr. Archer's sixty years of devotion and service to the members of the Department. In 1958, a fireboat was commissioned in his name. It was retired in 1994.

Dr. Archer was given a full Departmental funeral at St. Patrick's Cathedral. He is buried in the family crypt at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Tarrytown, New York."
    - from Findagrave.com


Popular Science Monthly:

   



March 30, 1923 - Manhattan Box 214, 39 Eldridge Street collapse:  Dr Archer crawls into voids to administer morphine to trapped workers - awarded 1924 James Gordon Bennett Medal:

   

   

   

   


May 24, 1924 - Manhattan Box 821, 127 West 46th Street construction site collapse:  Dr Archer treats injured worker:

   

October 12, 1939 - 2nd Alarm - Dr Archer treating injured:

   


Unknown date - Dr Archer treating members of Engine 14:

   


October 17, 1940, 3rd alarm, 380 E 136th Street - Dr Archer treating injured member Ladder 14:

   


Unknown date - Dr Archer treating injured members:
   
   

   


Dr Archer working on FDNY members at fire:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_JVUULu96Ao


Fireboat Harry M Archer,1958-1994:

   
   

   


   

 
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mack said:
    Squad 6 organized 205 West 77th Street at Engine 74              1959
    Squad 6 moved 120 West 83rd Street                                    1960
    Squad 6 disbanded                                                                1972

    Note:  Squad 6 went in service in 1959 with a converted 1940 WLF Mack hose wagon.  In 1961, they received an International van.

Engine 12 disbanded 10-1-1959 and Squad 6 organized 11-1-1959 with Engine 74
Engine 213 disbanded 12-1-1959 and Squad 7 organized 12-19-1959 with Engine 212
Engine 56 disbanded 5-1-1960 and Squad 8 organized 5-1-1960
Squad 8 went to 243 Lafayette St, vacated by Rescue 1 on that date, while Squad 6 moved into Engine 56 house
 
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SQ*7 was organized in the qtrs. of ENG*212 then as the "War Years" began they  were moved to ENG*237 (whose area was called Williamsburg back then not Bushwick as today)....then after much Fire Duty in Williamsburg SQ*7 became  ENG*232 in Brownsville on Watkins St then about a year later when the "Tinhouse" was opened they moved there & remained there for several years of heavy Fire duty ...then in 1988 they were unceremoniously disbanded....232 RIP ....BMA ON THE WAY....ALL THE WAY. 
 
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