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Title: Economic Growth and Westward Expansion


1
Economic Growth and Westward Expansion
  • Unit 4

2
SSUSH7 Students will explain the process of
economic growth, its regional and national impact
in the first half of the 19th century, and the
different responses to it. a. Explain the impact
of the Industrial Revolution as seen in Eli
Whitneys invention of the cotton gin and his
development of interchangeable parts for muskets.
b. Describe the westward growth of the United
States include the emerging concept of Manifest
Destiny. c. Describe reform movements,
specifically temperance, abolitionism, and public
school. d. Explain womens efforts to gain
suffrage include Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the
Seneca Falls Conference. e. Explain Jacksonian
Democracy, expanding suffrage, the rise of
popular political culture, and the development of
American nationalism. SSUSH8 The student will
explain the relationship between growing
north-south divisions and westward expansion. a.
Explain how slavery became a significant issue in
American politics include the slave rebellion of
Nat Turner and the rise of abolitionism (William
Lloyd Garrison, Frederick Douglass, and the
Grimke sisters). b. Explain the Missouri
Compromise and the issue of slavery in western
states and territories. c. Describe the
Nullification Crisis and the emergence of states
rights ideology include the role of John C.
Calhoun and development of sectionalism. d.
Describe the war with Mexico and the Wilmot
Proviso. e. Explain how the Compromise of 1850
arose out of territorial expansion and population
growth.
3
Industrialization and the Industrial Revolution
  • During the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
    centuries, the western world experienced the
    Industrial Revolution.
  • Industrialization the transitioning from manual
    to power-driven factory labor.
  • This was a time when advances in technology led
    to massive economic changes.
  • Before this, national economies relied on
    artisans, merchants, and farmers.
  • The industrial revolution had begun in Europe and
    spread to the United States.

4
Eli Whitney and Interchangeable Parts
  • Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin, which
    allowed people to process cotton much faster.
  • In the South this causes cotton farms to expand
    rapidly, gaining the name cotton kingdom. This
    also led to a dependency on slave labor.
  • Whitney also developed the idea of
    interchangeable parts while building muskets.
  • Each part of the musket was made so detailed that
    it could be used on any musket. This led many
    industries to do the same.

5
Effects of Industrial Revolution
  • Factories relied on mechanization (the use of
    machinery).
  • Manual labor is going to be replaced, allowing
    for mass production of resources and goods.
  • Many new inventions also developed out of this
    time period.
  • Samuel Slater Use only machines in factories.
  • Robert Fulton Steam Powered Boat.
  • Samuel Morse Telegraph
  • John Deere Steel Plow
  • Cyrus McCormick Reaper

6
Effects Cont.
  • Another effect from the Industrial Revolution was
    Sectionalism.
  • Sectionalism refers to the economic, social,
    cultural, and political differences that exist
    between different parts of the country.
  • In the North, business rely on factories and
    cheap immigrant labor(Irish Immigrants).
  • In the South the begin to rely on the plantation
    system and slavery.
  • This leads to bitter disputes because of the
    strains placed on the nation.
  • The industrial revolution helped set the nation
    on a course of westward expansion and civil war.

7
Samuel Slater
  • 1793 - Samuel Slater opened a textile mill in
    Pawtucket Rhode Island
  • power)- Start of the Industrial Revolution in
    America
  • - Factories were built along rivers and streams
    (water

8
Industrial Revolution
  • Steam Power - factories began using steam engines
  • - Robert Fulton - built the 1st
    steamboat (Clermont)
  • Railroads provided transportation where water
    travel was impossible
  • - 1830s Inventors began building steam
    locomotives
  • - 1850 - railroads began passing canals as the
    main form of transportation

9
Impact on Communication
  • 1837- Samuel F. B. Morse developed
    electromagnetic telegraph
  • - Messages tapped in code carried by copper
    wire
  • - Businesses railroads transmitted information

10
Midwest Farming
  • Cyrus McCormick invented mechanical reaper
  • - Enabled 1 farmer to the work of 5
  • Farmers shifted from subsistence farming to
    growing cash crops

11
Midwest Farming
  • John Deere invented steel plow that took less
    power to pull
  • - Farmers replaced oxen with horses

12
Two Economic Systems Develop
  • Farmers put all their efforts into growing cotton
    due to its value (1830 Cotton made up 50 of the
    U.S. exports)
  • Poor non-slave holding farmers went west to
    cultivate cotton
  • Plantation system established in Louisiana,
    Mississippi
  • Cotton was hugely profitable
  • By 1820s - demand for slaves increased
  • Increase in cotton production paralleled increase
    in slave population
  • Slavery became entrenched

13
Westward Growth and Manifest Destiny
14
Manifest Destiny
  • Manifest Destiny is the concept that Americas
    westward expansion was providential, or from a
    divine inspiration.
  • Manifest destiny and the belief that European
    settlers had the right to own whatever land they
    claimed, would erode Native American cultures
    east and west of the Mississippi River.

15
Annexation of Texas
  • In 1821 Mexico gained independence, as well as
    Texas.
  • The only problem was that US settlers had moved
    into Texas.
  • In 1834 General Santa Anna assumed power and
    tightened Mexicos grip on Texas.
  • Texans under the leadership of Sam Houston rebel
    against Santa Anna, and on March 2, 1836 they
    declared independence from Mexico.
  • Santa Anna answered with military force.

16
The Alamo
  • On March 6, 1836, a small group of Texans took a
    stand against Santa Anna at an old
    mission(church) called The Alamo.
  • Despite their resistance Santa Annas forces were
    to strong.
  • Every Texan was killed during the resistance, or
    executed after.
  • Davie Crockett of Tennessee was one.

17
Result of Texas Annexation
  • After a series of battles, Texans eventually
    defeated Santa Anna and took him hostage.
  • The Mexican leader promised to recognize Texas
    independence in return for his freedom.
  • President Andrew Jackson wanted to admit Texas,
    but had opposition in the North.
  • Northerners feared the state would become a slave
    state in the south. They also feared it would be
    divided into several small states, all being
    slave states.
  • Texas would remain independent until 1845 when it
    was admitted by James K. Polk.

18
Oregon Territory
  • With Texas taken care of, James K. Polk turned
    his attention to Oregon.
  • In 1827 Great Britain had reaffirmed their
    agreement to occupy this territory jointly.
  • With many moving into Oregon, Polk claimed the US
    had rights up to the 5440N.
  • This led many to promote the slogan 54,40, or
    fight!.

19
The Oregon Trail
  • People traveled along the Oregon Trail - trail
    from Independence, MO to Portland, OR
  • - Started at Independence, Missouri crossed the
    Platte River and continued through the South Past
    into modern-day northeast Utah
  • - Pioneers used Conestoga wagons pushed
    handcarts (trip took months)
  • Trail Split in Utah
  • - Branch of the trail went across desert to
    California
  • - Oregon Trail continued northwest to the
    Colombia River

20
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21
Result of Oregon Territory
  • Great Britain was irritated with Polks stance.
  • Britain had also gotten what they needed from the
    territory, and felt trade was more important.
  • A treaty would be signed drawing the official
    boundary at the 49th parallel.
  • In 1846 Oregon became a US territory.

22
Gadsden Purchase
  • Mexico was angry with the US for annexing Texas.
  • President Polk still believed in Manifest
    Destiny, so he sends General Zachary Taylor to
    the Texas border.
  • Polk also sends John Slidell to Mexico to settle
    disputes over the border between Mexico and US,
    and the purchase of California and New Mexico.
  • The Mexican president refused to meet with
    Slidell, so Polk sent Taylor into the disputed
    territory between the Nueces and Rio Grande
    rivers.
  • Mexican troops crossed the Rio Grande in
    response, and Polk immediately asked congress to
    declare war on Mexico.

23
Gadsden Cont.
  • On February 2, 1848 the war officially was ended
    with the Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo.
  • This required Mexico to surrender the New Mexico
    and California territories to the United States
    in exchange for financial compensation.
  • In 1853 a dispute still remained over the border
    so President Franklin Pierce sent James Gadsden
    to negotiate land for the Southern
    Transcontinental Railroad.
  • The United States gained parts of present-day New
    Mexico and Arizona in exchange for 10 Million.
  • This completed the vision many had for westward
    expansion and Manifest Destiny.

24
California
  • In 1848, settlers discovered gold in California.
  • The following year, gold seekers from all over
    the world came to be known as 49ers.
  • This led to the Gold Rush of 1849.
  • This led to a need for a stable government in
    California.
  • When congress didnt make a decision on how to
    admit the state (free or slave), California
    adopted its own constitution.
  • Finally with the Compromise of 1850, Congress
    admitted California as a free state on September
    9, 1850.

25
Indian Removal Act
  • In 1830, Congress passed the Indian Removal Act.
  • With this the federal government also established
    the Indian Territory (Oklahoma), planned for the
    removal of Native Americans living east of the
    Mississippi, and set aside funds for housing,
    supplies, and farming tools.

26
The Cherokee Fight Back
  • Worcester v. Georgiastate cannot rule Cherokee
    or invade their land
  • President Jackson ignored ruling
  • - John Marshall made his decision now let him
    enforce it
  • - Only time in U.S. history that President
    openly defied a Supreme Court ruling
  • Some Cherokee tried to continue court fight
  • Minority favor relocation
  • - Federal agents sign treaty with minority
    relocation began
  • By 1838, 20,000 remained

27
Trail of Tears
  • By 1837 Andrew Jackson had orchestrated the
    forced relocation of some 45,000 Native Americans
    to the west of the Mississippi.
  • Thousands of Cherokee Indians died along the way
    in a journey that became known as the Trail of
    Tears.
  • This relocation opened up lands in Georgia and
    Alabama for white settlers.

28
Homestead Act
  • In 1862 President Abraham Lincoln signed the
    Homestead Act.
  • This opened about 270 million acres west of the
    Mississippi River for unprecedented settlement by
    offering 160 acres of land to anyone willing to
    farm it for five years, or purchase it for 1.25
    per acre after six months.
  • In 1976, the US ended the Homestead Act in the
    entire nation, except Alaska. It stayed in
    effect until 1986.

29
Reform Movements in the United States
  • Temperance, Abolition, and Education

30
Temperance Movement
  • People in the United States began to look to the
    government for guidance.
  • One area they looked to was temperance, or the
    belief that people should limit or eliminate the
    use of alcoholic beverages.
  • This idea was especially popular with women.
    They felt that excessive use of alcohol was
    partly the blame for family violence, crime, and
    poverty.
  • Many states pass laws that ban alcohol, but the
    United states doesnt do so until 1919 with the
    Volstead Act and 18th Amendment.

31
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32
Abolition Movement
  • Slavery had been an issue since the creation of
    the United States.
  • It caused division, especially between the
    Northern and Southern states.
  • George Washington and Marquis de Lafayette had
    debated this topic during Washingtons
    presidency. Lafayette questioned how a man of
    Washingtons integrity could yet own slaves.
  • The Second Great Awakening occurred in the 1820s
    and helped spark an abolitionist movement.

33
Abolition Cont.
  • In 1831, William Lloyd Garrison began to publish
    the Liberator, a pro-abolition newspaper.
  • More abolition papers would be sent out
    throughout the North.
  • The American Anti-Slavery Society denounced
    slavery as a sin and was instrumental in the
    movement to abolish slavery.
  • Speakers such as Frederick Douglass, Wendell
    Philips, and Lucy Stone helped further the case
    of the North.
  • Abolitionist also helped those enslaved escape to
    the North.
  • Slavery would be abolished after the Civil War
    with the 13th Amendment.

34
Public Schools
  • Horace Mann was a 19th century reformer who
    believed in temperance, abolition, womens
    rights, and the reform of mental institutions.
  • He wanted to focus however on public school
    education.
  • Mann created public schools that were state
    funded and mandatory.
  • He felt that too much local control of the
    schools meant unsatisfactory education,
    especially in rural areas.
  • Horace Mann also helped establish the first
    state-run teacher training program.

35
Womens Rights Movements
36
Womens Rights
  • Until 1920, most women in the United States did
    not have suffrage (the right to vote).
  • Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott
    organized a large assembly in Seneca Falls, New
    York, in 1848.
  • Stanton and Mott were inspired to organize when
    Mott was denied a seat at an antislavery meeting
    in London.
  • Over 200 people attended the confrence, including
    Frederick Douglass.
  • The voted on and approved the Declaration of
    Sentiments, calling for equal rights in
    education, property rights, and voting.
  • Susan B. Anthony was also a supporter of both
    Temperance and Womens Suffrage.

37
Public Roles For WomenA Womens Rights Movement
  • In 1840, many American abolitionists attended the
    first World Anti-Slavery Convention in London
  • Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton both
    attended the convention and resented their
    exclusion from it
  • Eight years later, the women organized a
    convention on womens rights.

38
Turning Point Seneca Falls Convention
  • The Seneca Falls Convention was the first womens
    rights convention in the United States History.
  • Stanton wrote and presented a historic set of
    resolutions called a Declaration of Sentiments
  • The Convention passed 12 resolutions - The most
    controversial - - WOMENS SUFFRAGE
  • Signed by 68 women and 32 men
  • They protested the lack of legal and political
    rights for women.
  • It also urged women to demand these rights

39
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40
Jacksonian Democracy
  • Expanding Suffrage, Popular Political Culture,
    American Nationalism

41
Andrew Jackson
  • Jackson was born into a poor, uneducated family.
    He worked his way up achieving success.
  • Jackson was also a hero during the War of 1812 at
    the Battle of New Orleans.
  • During his political career Jackson was seen as a
    supporter for the common man.
  • Jackson was also very popular with wester
    frontier settlers.
  • Jackson decided to use his popularity to run for
    President in 1824.

42
A Corrupt Bargain
  • The election of 1824 proved the sectional
    differences in the United States.
  • The presidential election was divided up among
    candidates from the North (John Q. Adams), the
    South (William Crawford), and the West (Andrew
    Jackson and Henry Clay).
  • The final election came down between John Q.
    Adams and Andrew Jackson.
  • The vote went to the House of Representatives
    were Henry Clay used his vote to elect Adams.
  • Jackson along with his followers soon protested,
    however, when it was learned that Clay would soon
    be named Secretary of State.
  • Jackson denounced this and called it a corrupt
    bargain made to give Adams the presidency.
  • Four years later Jackson would be elected
    President, and he would change the structure of
    politics in the United States.

43
Members of Corrupt Bargain
versus
Andrew Jackson
John Q. Adams
44
Jacksons Presidency
  • Jacksons politics lead to a new brand of
    politics called Jacksonian Democracy.
  • He believed strongly in western expansion and the
    rights of white frontier settlers.
  • Jackson hated the fact that eastern elites and
    politicians who favored the wealthy, passed laws
    to help the wealthy over small land owners.
  • Jackson favored Universal Suffrage he believed
    that all white men should be free to vote, not
    just those who owned land.

45
Jackson Presidency Cont.
  • With Jacksons support many states begin to drop
    the property requirement for vote, opening voting
    to many in the Untied States.
  • This also allows common men like Jackson to win
    public office.
  • Jackson did not offer to extend to right to vote
    to women, blacks, or Native Americans.
  • Jackson also expanded the power of the President
    while in office.
  • He defied the Supreme Court by removing the
    Cherokee from their lands in Georgia (Worchester
    v. Georgia).
  • When south Carolina threatened to secede over
    tariffs and states rights, Jackson passed the
    Force Bill (allowed Jackson to use the military
    to enforce laws)
  • Jackson felt the president should have ore power
    and say than congress.
  • Jackson was a strict interpreter of the
    constitution and felt the federal government
    should be restricted to those powers only given
    to them.
  • Jackson used his power to close the second
    national bank.

46
Spoils System
  • Once in office Jackson instituted a policy of
    rewarding his political supporters with
    government positions.
  • This policy became known as the spoils system.
  • This set precedent for rewarding faithful
    supporters with government jobs.
  • Jackson felt that this was a great way to
    encourage common people to become politically
    involved and ensure the wealthy did not dominate
    government.

47
The Two-Party System
  • Differences between politicians would eventually
    lead to the development of different political
    parties.
  • Jackson took on the name Democrat, while his
    opponents took on the name National
    Republicans.
  • Many of the National Republicans would later form
    the Whig Party (Opposed King George during the
    Revolution).
  • After the era of good feelings, the two-party
    system returned with a vengeance.

48
Effect of Two-Party System
  • With the end of Jacksons term and the election
    of 1836, modern politics began to take form.
  • Martin Van Burens presidential campaign gave
    birth to the common expression O.K., which
    stood for Old Kinderhook.
  • Enemies in the Whig party said it stood for the
    Democrat way of approving government documents
    with the initials O.K., meaning oll korrect.
    This was Jacksons way of spelling all correct.
  • You begin to see candidate bashing and slander
    used in political campaigns.

49
Creating a National Identity
  • After the War of 1812, America has a new sense of
    National Identity.
  • We have stood up to the British twice, and we are
    becoming a major economic power.
  • With the Monroe Doctrine, we have announced our
    views on foreign policy in the West.
  • America will soon become a world power in foreign
    policy. Many countries will turn to the United
    States for input on decisions.

50
Rise of Nationalism
  • People began to take pride in America
  • Belief that Americans were unique and did not
    have to follow the lead of other countries
  • 1806 Noah Webster published a dictionary
  • - Helped create an American version of the
    English language
  • 1816 Republican James Monroe became president
  • - Began Era of good Feelings
  • Federalist Party dissolved as a result of its
    poor showing

51
Changes in Education
  • Workers wanted to educate their children
  • Americans had long valued education
  • - Believed it was necessary for democracy
  • - Few Children were able to obtain an education
  • 1830s Americans demanded change
  • 1834 - Pennsylvania established tax-supported
    public school system
  • Massachusetts established a state board of
    education
  • Horace Mann called for free public education
    (great equalizer)
  • - Established teacher training, curriculum
    reforms
  • 1850 Many northern states had elementary
    schools paid for by public taxes
  • - More young people gained the chance to attend
    high school and college

52
Slavery and the rise of Abolitionism
  • Nat Turner, William Lloyd Garrison, Fredrick
    Douglas, and Grimke Sisters

53
Abolitionists Speak Out
  • Many Americans began feeling that slavery was
    wrong
  • - Believed it went against Christianity and the
    principles the nation was founded upon on
  • Abolitionist Group of reformers who wanted to
    abolish slavery
  • - 1820s - over 100 antislavery societies
    advocated resettlement in Africa
  • - Most free blacks considered themselves
    American only a few emigrated

54
Abolitionists Speak Out
  • Whites joined blacks calling for abolition-
    outlawing of slavery
  • William Lloyd Garrison Started his own paper to
    urge the abolition of slavery (The Liberator)
  • - The Liberator called for immediate
    emancipation freeing of slaves

55
Abolitionists Speak Out
  • Fredrick Douglass Former slave who escaped to
    Massachusetts
  • - Lectured about his experience as a slave
  • - started newspaper North Star
  • - Later served as a U.S. representative to Haiti
  • Abolitionist movement was strongest in the North
  • GRIMKE SISTERS - - -

56
Nat Turners Rebellion
  • 1831 -Nat Turner was a slave who led a rebellion
    in Virginia
  • They attacked several plantations and killed
    about 60 whites
  • Turner was tried and hung
  • Followers and innocent slaves were captured 200
    killed in retaliation
  • Rebellion caused state legislatures to pass harsh
    laws
  • - Slaves were required to have a pass to run
    errands
  • - Whites were forbidden to teach slaves to read
    or write
  • - Slaves were prevented from holding religious
    meetings
  • Rebellion ended any hope that the south would end
    slavery
  • - Virginia legislature had thought of ending
    slavery before the rebellion

57
Missouri Compromise of 1820
  • When territorys population reaches 60,000 may
    apply for statehood
  • Missouri applied for statehood as a slave state
  • - Would tilt the balance of power in Congress
  • - Slave and free states each had 11
  • James Tallmadge of New York proposed that slavery
    be banned in Missouri
  • Angered Southerners
  • - Asked if Constitution gave Congress the power
    to ban slavery
  • Maine declared itself ready fro statehood while
    the Missouri debate went on

58
Missouri Compromise of 1820
  • Speaker of the House Henry Clay suggested a
    compromise
  • - Missouri admitted as slave state
  • - Maine admitted as a free state
  • - Banned slavery from the Louisiana Territory
    north of the parallel 36 30
  • (Missouris southern border)

59
South Carolinas Threat
  • Congress agreed to lower the tariff after Andrew
    Jackson suggested it
  • South Carolina felt the tariff was still too high
  • - It voted to nullify the law
  • - Said it would secede from the Union if the
    Federal Government tried to enforce it
  • - Said that since it had chosen to join the
    Union it could choose to leave the Union

60
South Carolinas Threat
  • South Carolinas actions angered Andrew Jackson
  • - To say that any state may at pleasure
    secede from the Union is to say that the
  • United States is not a nation
    Jackson threatened in INVADE South Carolina and
    HANG Calhoun.
  • Congress passed Force Bill- Gave Federal
    government power to use army navy against S.
    Carolina
  • - Jackson prepared to send Federal troops to
    South Carolina
  • - South Carolina readied its troops
  • Henry Clay proposed a compromise
  • - Tariffs would be lowered over a ten-year
    period
  • - South Carolina stayed in the Union
  • Increased tensions between North and South

61
ABOLITIONISTS HAD NUMEROUS MEETINGS AND
ANTI-SLAVERY FAIRS
62
Differences by mid 1800s
  • North
  • - More industries
  • - Larger cities
  • - Better Transportation and communication (Railro
    ads telegraph)
  • - More wealth
  • - Immigrants became industrial workers feared
    expansion of slavery
  • - Larger population (gave north control of
    House of Representatives)
  • South
  • - Remained rural (Plantations Small farms)
  • - Economy relied on cash crops (Cotton)
  • - manufactured under 10 of U.S. goods
  • - Few immigrants (enslaved African Americans met
    labor needs0
  • - In 3 states, Blacks were majority in 3 states
    half in 2 others
  • - Whites fear restriction of slavery would
    change society economy

63
Mexican War Impact
  • Debate over whether new states should be free or
    slave
  • Wilmot Proviso - Proposed by Pennsylvanian
    Democrat David Wilmot in 1846 as an amendment to
    a military appropriations bill
  • Stated that no slavery would be allowed in
    territory acquired from Mexico

64
Mexican War Impact Wilmot Proviso
  • North supported it
  • - Were afraid slave would mean no jobs for free
    workers
  • - Northerners wanted all of the land obtained
    from Mexico to be free states
  • South opposed it
  • - Argued that slaves were property under
    Constitution feared more free states
  • -South worried it would lose control of the
    government
  • - Needed the free and slave states to be equal

65
COMPROMISE OF 1850
THE U.S. GAINED NEW TERRITORY AFTER THE WAR WITH
MEXICO WHICH REIGNITED THE BATTLE OVER THE NUMBER
OF SLAVE AND FREE STATES. CALIFORNIA WAS ALLOWED
TO ENTER INTO THE UNION AS A FREE STATE WHICH
UPSET THE BALANCE OF FREE AND SLAVE STATES SINCE
THERE HAD PREVIOUSLY BEEN AN EQUAL NUMBER OF
BOTH. IN EXCHANGE THE SOUTH GOT THE FUGITIVE
SLAVE ACT WHICH REQUIRED RUNAWAY SLAVES TO BE
RETURNED TO THEIR MASTERS IN THE SOUTH.
CALHOUN
WEBSTER
CLAY
SCOTT
FILLMORE
DRAWING OF THE MAJOR FIGURES INVOLVED WITH THE
COMPROMISE OF 1850. THIS EVENT DEMONSTRATED HOW
CLOSE THE UNION WAS TO SEPARATION.
66
Compromise of 1850
  • Henry Clay presented the plan
  • California entered the Union as free state
  • Rest of the Mexican Cession was divided into the
    territories of Utah and New Mexico
  • - Popular sovereignty policy people in
    territories would decide for themselves
  • Slave trade was abolished in Washington D.C. but
    slavery permitted.

67
Compromise of 1850
  • Fugitive Slave Law passed people in free states
    had to help catch and return runaway slave
  • - Alleged fugitives denied jury trial, right to
    testify on own behalf
  • - Federal commissioners paid more for returning
    than freeing accused
  • - People convicted of helping a fugitive were
    fined, imprisoned, or both
  • Neither the north or south liked the compromise
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