Sunday, March 29, 2026

The Gold Country (Mother Lode/ Sierra Nevada Foothills/ Highway 49)

  The Gold Country (Mother Lode/ Sierra Nevada Foothills/ Highway 49)

Discovering Italian Gold Country

A Travel Guide to Highway 49 & the Italian Legacy of California’s Mother Lode


When people think of California’s Gold Country, they picture dusty mining towns, wooden storefronts, and the Wild West. But there is another story here—one that stretches quietly across the Sierra foothills.

Along Highway 49, from Mariposa to Grass Valley, Italians and Italian Americans are not concentrated in one “Little Italy.” Instead, they are scattered throughout the region—in mining camps, stone buildings, vineyards, restaurants, cemeteries, and historic societies.

This is not an urban Italian district like San Francisco or San Diego.

This is Italian California in its most rugged, original form—miners, masons, farmers, and families who helped build the Mother Lode.


🏛️ History of Italians in the Gold Country

The Gold Country (Mother Lode) was born after the discovery of gold in 1848, drawing immigrants from around the world. California Gold Rush transformed the Sierra foothills into a chain of boomtowns.

Among those immigrants were Italians—especially from Liguria and northern Italy—who arrived first as miners and laborers, and later became:

  • Stone masons
  • Ranchers and farmers
  • Shopkeepers and merchants
  • Winemakers

Italian stonemasons became particularly important. They built fire-resistant stone buildings, many of which still stand today.

The Butte Store (Italian-built landmark)

The Butte Store (California Historical Landmark No. 39) No photo description available. An Italian stone mason constructed the building in 1857 to serve settlers and miners as both their post office and general store. The Gnocchio family operated the store for 50 years, closing its doors in the early 1900s. The roofless building is the last structure still standing where 100 miner’s cabins once stood during the height of the Gold Rush era


  • Location: Butte City (Amador County, off Highway 49)
  • Built in 1857 by Italian mason Enrico Bruni
  • Served as a general store, bakery, and post office
  • The only remaining structure of the original mining town

This single building represents an entire lost Italian-influenced mining community.


Italian Mining Legacy

Italian miners were deeply tied to some of the region’s most famous mines:

Argonaut & Kenndy Mines (Jackson)



  • Location: Jackson, CA
  • Active: 1850–1942
  • Site of the 1922 Argonaut Mine Disaster, one of California’s worst mining tragedies
  • Many victims were Italian immigrants buried nearby

Italian Mine & Italian Place Names

Throughout Gold Country, you’ll find:

  • Italian Mine
  • Italian Bar
  • Italian Diggings
  • Italian Camp

These names reflect just how widespread Italian miners were in the region.


Catholic Cemetery (Jackson)



  • Final resting place for many miners, including Italians from the Argonaut tragedy
  • A powerful historical site connecting faith, immigration, and labor


Italian Benevolent Society (Founded 1881)

Founded to support families of Italian miners, it remains:

  • One of the oldest Italian organizations in the U.S.
  • Still active today
  • Organizer of the region’s major Italian festival

 Why Visit Italian Gold Country

Gold Country offers something completely different from California’s coastal Italian hubs:

What makes it unique:

  • No single Little Italy — instead, a historic Italian corridor
  • Deep ties to mining, not just food culture
  • Authentic immigrant history still visible in:
    • Cemeteries
    • Old buildings
    • Family-owned businesses
  • Strong connection between Italian identity and labor history

📍 Best Italian & Italian-American Attractions

__________________________________
This map highlights the Italian and Italian-American heritage sites, restaurants, wineries, museums, and historic stops mentioned in this Gold Country guide.


Sutter Creek (Italian Hub of Gold Country)


Italian Benevolent Society Grounds

  • 581 CA-49, Sutter Creek
  • Hosts events and gatherings
  • Core of Italian identity in the region

Monteverde Store Museum

  • 11 Randolph St, Sutter Creek
  • Historic Italian-owned general store
  • Preserved Gold Rush-era business

Jackson (Mining & Italian History)






  • Argonaut & Kennedy Mines site




  • Catholic Cemetery (miners buried here)




  • Historic Italian-American presence tied to mining

Butte Store (Amador County)



  • Built by Italian stonemasons
  • California Historical Landmark
  • Symbol of Italian craftsmanship

Mokelumne Hill (Calaveras County)

  • Historic Italian agricultural settlement
  • Italian Gardens” community
  • Early vineyard and farming traditions

Plymouth & Shenandoah Valley (Wine Country)

  • Italian-style vineyards
  • Mediterranean climate similar to Italy

🎉 Italian Festivals & Events

Sutter Creek Italian Picnic & Parade

Features:

  • Parade through downtown
  • Italian food & music
  • Community celebration

👉 This is the main Italian event in Gold Country


🏛️ Italian Organizations & Groups

Italian Benevolent Society of Amador County


Italian Catholic Federation (ICF)

  • Active throughout California
  • Promotes Catholic Italian heritage
  • Local participation in nearby foothill parishes

Order Sons and Daughters of Italy in America (OSDIA)

  • National organization with California lodges
  • Members and influence extend into Gold Country communities

Local Historical Societies

Calaveras County Historical Society

Focuses heavily on:

  • Italian immigrant families
  • Mining and agricultural history

🍝 Italian Restaurants & Businesses

Teresa’s Place (Jackson)



Historic Italian restaurant dating back decades.








Giannini’s Italian Restaurant (Pine Grove)

  • 19845 CA-88, Pine Grove, CA
  • (209) 296-7222

Known for:

  • Traditional Italian meals
  • Family-style dining

Tofanelli’s Bistro (Grass Valley)

Historic Italian family name tied to Gold Country commerce.


🍷 Italian Wineries (Amador Wine Country)

Bella Grace Vineyards


Villa Toscano Winery


Gianelli Vineyards (Jamestown)


🏨 Where to Stay (Hotels & Lodging)

Best Hotels

  • Hotel Sutter – Sutter Creek
  • Hanford House Inn – Sutter Creek
  • Rest Hotel Plymouth – Plymouth

Budget-Friendly

  • Best Western Amador Inn – Jackson
  • Shenandoah Inn – Plymouth
  • Local inns, motels, and B&Bs throughout Highway 49

🚗 Transportation & Getting Around

Location

  • Highway 49 runs through the Sierra foothills
  • Accessible from:
    • Sacramento (1–2 hours)
    • Stockton / Central Valley

Driving

  • Best way to explore
  • Scenic but winding roads
  • Watch for:
    • Narrow lanes
    • Steep grades

Parking

  • Easy in most towns
  • Street parking in:
    • Sutter Creek
    • Jackson
    • Plymouth

Public Transportation

  • Amador Transit (limited service)
  • Not practical for full exploration

🌤️ Weather & Best Time to Visit

Climate

  • Mediterranean (similar to Italy)
  • Hot summers, mild winters

Best Times

  • Spring (March–May) – green hills, wildflowers
  • Fall (Sept–Nov) – wine harvest
  • Early June – Italian Picnic Festival

🗺️ Suggested Italian Gold Country Itinerary

1-Day Trip

  • Morning: Jackson (Argonaut Mine + Cemetery)
  • Midday: Sutter Creek (museum + lunch)
  • Afternoon: Plymouth wineries

2-Day Trip

Day 1

  • Jackson → Sutter Creek → Italian Picnic grounds
  • Dinner at Teresa’s Place

Day 2

  • Plymouth wineries
  • Mokelumne Hill (Italian Gardens history)
  • Optional: Jamestown (Gianelli Vineyards)

❓ Gold Country / Mother Lode – Expanded FAQs

Is there a Little Italy in Gold Country?

No. Unlike San Francisco or San Diego, Gold Country never had a single Italian neighborhood.
Instead, Italian immigrants settled throughout mining towns, farms, and vineyards across the Sierra foothills. Their influence is regional, not centralized, dating back to the Gold Rush era when Italians arrived for mining and agriculture.


Where is the strongest Italian presence?

The strongest Italian heritage is found in:

  • Amador County (Jackson, Sutter Creek, Plymouth)
  • Calaveras County
  • El Dorado County (Placerville area)
  • Tuolumne County (Sonora area)

Amador County is especially important — Italians were among the largest immigrant groups in the Mother Lode and helped develop mining, vineyards, construction, and local businesses.


What is the most important Italian event?

The most well-known Italian heritage celebration is:

Sutter Creek Italian Picnic & Parade

  • Traditional Italian food
  • Bocce tournaments
  • Family reunions
  • Historic Italian community celebration

It reflects the deep Italian roots of Amador County.


Why were Italians here?

Primarily for:

  • Gold mining
  • Hard-rock mining
  • Stone masonry
  • Agriculture & vineyards
  • Ranching & farming
  • Construction and railroads

Italian immigrants began arriving in large numbers in the 1850s during the Gold Rush, especially from Liguria (Genoa area).


Did Italians actually work in the mines?

Yes. Many Italian immigrants worked in major Mother Lode mines including:

  • Argonaut Mine (Jackson)
  • Kennedy Mine (Jackson)
  • Central Eureka Mine (Sutter Creek)

In fact, the 1922 Argonaut Mine disaster trapped 47 miners — many Italian immigrants, highlighting how large the Italian mining workforce was.


What towns should Italian heritage travelers visit?

Top stops:

  • Sutter Creek
  • Jackson
  • Amador City
  • Plymouth
  • Volcano
  • Placerville
  • Sonora
  • Murphys

These towns still contain Italian surnames, vineyards, cemeteries, and historic buildings.


Is Gold Country worth visiting for Italian American heritage?

Yes — especially if you enjoy:

  • Italian mining history
  • Italian ranching & wine heritage
  • Old cemeteries with Italian surnames
  • Historic Italian family wineries
  • Small-town Italian culture

This is rural Italian California, not urban Little Italy.


When is the best time to visit?

Best seasons:

Spring (March–May)

  • Wildflowers
  • Green hills
  • Mild weather

Fall (September–November)

  • Wine harvest season
  • Festivals
  • Cooler temperatures

Summer is hot.
Winter can bring rain and occasional snow in higher elevations.


How many Italians lived in Gold Country historically?

By the late 1800s, Italians made up one of the largest immigrant groups in the Mother Lode, especially in mining counties. Many came through chain migration from Northern Italy.


Is Gold Country only about gold mining?

No. Today the region is known for:

  • Wineries
  • Italian agriculture heritage
  • Historic downtowns
  • Museums
  • Scenic Highway 49 drives
  • Ghost towns
  • Italian family vineyards

The region now spans multiple counties along the Sierra foothills and is a major tourism area.


Are there Italian wineries in Gold Country?

Yes — many.

Italian families helped establish:

  • Amador County wine region
  • Plymouth wineries
  • Sierra foothill vineyards

Many specialize in:

  • Zinfandel
  • Barbera
  • Sangiovese
  • Italian varietals

Are there Italian restaurants in Gold Country?

Yes, though scattered:

You’ll find:

  • Family Italian restaurants
  • Italian-owned wineries with food
  • Old mining-town cafes with Italian influence

Most are in:

  • Jackson
  • Sutter Creek
  • Plymouth
  • Placerville

Can you visit historic mines?

Yes — some of the most famous:

  • Kennedy Mine (Jackson)
  • Argonaut Mine (Jackson)
  • Central Eureka Mine (Sutter Creek)
  • Italian Mine (various locations)

These reflect the region’s Italian mining heritage.


What happened in the 1922 mine disaster?

In 1922, a fire trapped dozens of miners deep underground at the Argonaut Mine.
Many were immigrants — including Italians — and the tragedy became California’s worst gold-mining disaster.


Is Gold Country good for a weekend trip?

Yes — perfect for:

Day trip
Weekend getaway
Wine tasting trip
History travel
Italian heritage tour

From Sacramento: 1–2 hours
From Bay Area: 2–3 hours


How do you get there?

Main route:

Highway 49 (Golden Chain Highway)

Key access points:

From Sacramento → Jackson
From Stockton → Sonora
From Lake Tahoe → Placerville


Is there public transportation?

Limited.

Best option:

Drive your own car

Some towns are walkable once you arrive.


Where should I stay?

Best towns for lodging:

Jackson
Sutter Creek
Plymouth
Placerville
Sonora

Options include:

  • Historic hotels
  • Bed & breakfasts
  • Inns
  • Wine country resorts

Is Gold Country family friendly?

Yes. Activities include:

Museums
Gold panning
Historic downtowns
Train rides
Mine tours
Scenic drives


What is the Mother Lode?

The Mother Lode is the gold-rich belt running along the Sierra foothills that sparked the California Gold Rush in 1848 and created hundreds of mining towns.


Why is it called Gold Country?

Because thousands of mines and camps formed here after gold was discovered, drawing immigrants from around the world — including many Italians.


Is this a good destination for Italian American travelers?

Absolutely. Gold Country offers:

Early Italian immigrant history
Italian mining legacy
Italian family vineyards
Italian surnames in cemeteries
Italian heritage festivals
Small-town Italian California culture

This is one of the oldest Italian regions in California.

______________________________

 Final Take

Gold Country is one of the most overlooked Italian American regions in California.

It doesn’t announce itself.

It doesn’t have arches or piazzas.

But if you look closely—
in the mines, the cemeteries, the stone buildings, the vineyards, and the family names—

Italy is everywhere along Highway 49.

Business: How Italy & The USA Are Supporting Italian & Italian American Businesses & Entrepeneurs

 


🤝 Building the Italian American Business Bridge

How Governments and Italian American Organizations Are Expanding Opportunity in 2026

In 2026, something important is happening quietly but significantly:
Italian and Italian American businesses are receiving growing support from both governments and major Italian American organizations.

This isn’t one single program. It’s a network of initiatives — trade missions, grants, networking conferences, export programs, heritage tourism, and business incubators — all designed to strengthen the Italy–United States economic relationship and help entrepreneurs on both sides of the Atlantic.

Here’s what’s happening right now.


 Italian Government Initiatives (2026)

Italy has made international business expansion a major priority — especially in the United States.

Key 2026 Italian Government Programs

These initiatives are focused on:

  • Italian food & wine companies entering U.S. markets
  • Italian fashion and design exports
  • Tourism partnerships
  • Italian manufacturing expansion in America
  • Italian startups entering U.S. venture capital networks

The Italian government is actively encouraging Italian companies to open U.S. offices, partner with Italian Americans, and invest in local communities.

This directly benefits:

  • Italian restaurants
  • Import businesses
  • Wine distributors
  • Travel companies
  • Cultural tourism operators
  • Italian heritage businesses

In other words — Italian American entrepreneurs become the natural bridge.


 U.S. Government Support (2026)

The United States is also promoting Italian investment and partnerships.

U.S. initiatives supporting Italian-American business ties

  • SelectUSA foreign investment program
  • U.S.–Italy trade missions
  • U.S. Commercial Service Italy business matching
  • Small Business Administration export assistance
  • State-level Italy trade partnerships (California, New York, Florida)
  • Sister-city economic programs

These efforts help:

  • Italian companies invest in U.S. cities
  • Italian American businesses import goods from Italy
  • Joint U.S.–Italy startups
  • Tourism collaborations
  • Manufacturing partnerships

The U.S. government sees Italy as:

  • A major ally
  • A premium goods producer
  • A tourism partner
  • A small business culture similar to America

That makes Italian American businesses natural connectors.


 What NIAF Is Doing in 2026

The National Italian American Foundation has increasingly moved into economic development — not just culture.

NIAF business initiatives

  • Italian American business membership program
  • Italy–USA leadership forums
  • Entrepreneur networking conferences
  • Business scholarships & fellowships
  • Corporate partnerships with Italian brands
  • “Italy–America 250” economic collaboration programs

NIAF now actively promotes:

  • Italian American entrepreneurs
  • Italian product importers
  • Heritage tourism businesses
  • Italian American professionals
  • Italy-U.S. corporate partnerships

Their conferences increasingly include:

  • Venture capital panels
  • Startup networking
  • Food & wine distribution partnerships
  • Tourism investment
  • Technology collaboration

This is a major shift — from cultural organization to economic connector.


 Sons of Italy & ISDA Economic Efforts

The modern Order of the Sons and Daughters of Italy in America and the
Italian Sons and Daughters of America — are also becoming more business-focused.

2026 Sons of Italy & ISDA business initiatives

  • Italy–USA business networking events
  • Import/export connections
  • Italian brand promotion in U.S. markets
  • Italian American entrepreneur spotlights
  • Regional economic partnerships

These events often connect:

  • Italian manufacturers
  • Italian American distributors
  • Restaurant owners
  • Import companies
  • Tourism operators

These organizations are increasingly acting as business networking hubs, especially in cities with strong Italian American populations.


UNICO National and Business Support

UNICO National is not primarily a business group, but in 2026 it still plays an indirect role.

They support:

  • Scholarships for Italian American entrepreneurs
  • Professional networking
  • Business mentorship
  • Community-based business promotion
  • Italian cultural brand support

Many Italian American businesses form through relationships built inside organizations like UNICO.


Italy-America Chambers of Commerce

Some of the most direct business support actually comes from:

These groups provide:

  • Market entry support
  • Distributor matching
  • Import/export help
  • Business visas guidance
  • Trade events
  • Networking receptions

These are essentially Italian American business accelerators.


Major Areas Being Targeted in 2026

Across governments and organizations, the focus is on:

🍝 Food & Restaurant Expansion

  • Italian imports
  • Regional Italian brands
  • Italian delis and markets
  • Wine distribution

✈️ Heritage & Roots Tourism

  • Italian American travel to ancestral towns
  • Tour companies
  • Cultural tourism businesses
  • Italian American heritage districts

🍷 Wine & Agriculture

  • California–Italy vineyard partnerships
  • Import/export wineries
  • Italian varietal promotion

🏛️ Cultural District Development

💼 Small Business Collaboration

  • Italian manufacturers + U.S. distributors
  • Italian American importers
  • Boutique Italian brands entering America

Why This Matters for Italian Americans

For decades, Italian American organizations focused mostly on:

  • Culture
  • heritage
  • scholarships
  • Columbus Day
  • anti-defamation

Now in 2026, the emphasis is shifting toward:

➡️ Business
➡️ entrepreneurship
➡️ trade
➡️ investment
➡️ economic growth

This is a major evolution.

Italian American organizations are beginning to act like:

  • business chambers
  • trade groups
  • networking associations
  • economic development organizations

The Big Picture

In 2026, support for Italian and Italian American business is coming from:

 Italian Government — export and investment programs
🇺🇸 U.S. Government — trade and investment support
🤝 NIAF — business leadership networking
Sons of Italy — entrepreneur connections
🎓 UNICO — professional networking
💼 Italy-America Chambers — direct business matchmaking

Together, they are creating something new:

A transatlantic Italian business ecosystem.


What This Means for Italian American Entrepreneurs

If you're Italian American and running:

  • restaurant
  • deli
  • travel business
  • blog or media brand (like yours)
  • import company
  • cultural organization
  • festival
  • tourism program

You are exactly the type of business these initiatives are meant to support.

This is especially true in places like:

  • California
  • New York
  • Florida
  • Chicago
  • Boston
  • Las Vegas

Where Italian American heritage and tourism intersect.


The Future

The direction is clear:

Italian American organizations are slowly evolving from
heritage preservation → economic development

And governments on both sides are encouraging it.

That means the next decade may see:

  • More Italian American business networks
  • Italian investment in U.S. Little Italies
  • Italy-USA startup collaborations
  • Italian American tourism companies
  • Italian cultural business districts

The bridge between Italy and Italian America is no longer just cultural.

It’s becoming economic.

Italian & Italian American Business Support — Contacts & Resources (2026)

Major Italian American Organizations Supporting Business

National Italian American Foundation (NIAF)

Website:
https://www.niaf.org

Contact Page:
https://www.niaf.org/about/contacts/

Address:
1860 19th St NW
Washington, DC 20009

Phone:
202-387-0600

Email:
information@niaf.org

NIAF promotes Italian American entrepreneurship, business networking, leadership programs, and U.S.–Italy economic collaboration.


 Order Sons and Daughters of Italy in America (OSDIA)

Website:
https://www.osdia.org

Contact Page:
https://www.osdia.org/about/national-headquarters/contact/

Address:
219 E Street NE
Washington, DC 20002

Phone:
202-547-2900

Email:
nationaloffice@osia.org

OSDIA promotes Italian American business networking, heritage partnerships, and U.S.–Italy cultural and economic ties.


 UNICO National

Website:
https://www.unico.org

Contact:
uniconational@unico.org

Phone:
973-808-0035

Address:
271 US Highway 46 West, Suite F-103
Fairfield, NJ 07004

UNICO provides networking, scholarships, and professional connections that often support Italian American entrepreneurs.


 Italy-America Business Organizations

Italy-America Chamber of Commerce (New York)

Website:
https://italchamber.org

Phone:
(212) 459-0044

Contact Page:
https://italchamber.org/contact/

Provides business matchmaking, trade missions, and import/export support.


Italy-America Chamber of Commerce West (California & Western U.S.)

Website:
https://www.iaccw.net

Helps Italian and American companies expand across the western United States and Italy.


 Italian Government Business Support

Italian Trade Agency (ITA)

Website:
https://www.ice.it

U.S. Offices:
https://www.ice.it/en/markets/usa

Supports:

  • Italian exports
  • business matchmaking
  • trade shows
  • partnerships with U.S. companies

Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs — Business Promotion

Website:
https://www.esteri.it

Export Promotion:
https://www.esteri.it/en/diplomazia-economica/

Supports:

  • Italy-USA business forums
  • export assistance
  • Italian SME expansion
  • trade missions

SIMEST (Italian Government Business Financing)

Website:
https://www.simest.it

Supports:

  • financing for Italian companies entering U.S. markets
  • joint ventures
  • international expansion

 United States Government Support

SelectUSA (U.S. Investment Promotion)

Website:
https://www.selectusa.gov

Email:
SelectUSA@trade.gov

Supports:

  • Italian companies investing in U.S.
  • partnerships with U.S. businesses
  • investment matchmaking

U.S. Commercial Service Italy

Website:
https://www.trade.gov/italy

Rome Office:
https://www.trade.gov/office-rome-italy

Milan Office:
https://www.trade.gov/office-milan-italy

Supports:

  • U.S.–Italy business partnerships
  • export assistance
  • market research
  • business matchmaking

 Additional Italian American Business Networking Groups

Italian American Leadership Forum (NIAF)

https://www.niaf.org/programs/leadership/

Supports:

  • young entrepreneurs
  • leadership training
  • Italy-USA business connections

Conference of Presidents of Major Italian American Organizations

Website:
https://copomiao.org

Coalition supporting:

  • Italian American business visibility
  • advocacy
  • economic initiatives

Italian American Future Leaders

Website:
https://iafuture.org

Focus:

  • young Italian American entrepreneurs
  • business leadership
  • networking

California Italian Business & Economic Organizations

Little Italy San Diego Association

Website: https://www.littleitalysd.com

Supports:

  • Italian businesses
  • tourism
  • festivals
  • economic development

Little Italy San Jose

Website: https://www.littleitalysj.com

Supports:

  • Italian businesses
  • cultural tourism
  • economic development

San Pedro Little Italy (Los Angeles)

Website: https://lilaa.org/

Supports:

  • waterfront Italian district
  • restaurants
  • tourism
  • events

San Diego Italian American Business Networking

Italian American Business Professionals of San Diego (Facebook Group)

Group Name: Italian American Business Professionals of San Diego
Platform: Facebook
Link: (3) Italian American Business Professionals of San Diego | Facebook

This is a local networking group connecting:

  • Italian American business owners
  • entrepreneurs
  • professionals
  • nonprofit leaders
  • community organizations
  • Italian import businesses
  • restaurant owners

The group is used for:

  • business promotion
  • networking
  • partnerships
  • Italian events
  • job opportunities
  • collaboration

This type of grassroots networking is increasingly important for Italian American entrepreneurs, especially in cities like San Diego where Italian businesses are spread across neighborhoods.


🍝 What These Organizations Support

They collectively help:

Italian restaurants
Italian delis & markets
Italian import businesses
tourism companies
travel blogs
Italian American media
wine importers
Italian retailers
Little Italy districts
Italian festivals
startup companies
Italian entrepreneurs


 The 2026 Opportunity

For Italian American entrepreneurs, these programs create opportunities to:

  • Import products from Italy
  • Partner with Italian companies
  • Launch Italian themed businesses
  • Expand Little Italy districts
  • Start tourism companies
  • Join Italy-USA startup networks

The result is a growing transatlantic Italian business ecosystem.

Italian American organizations are evolving from heritage groups → economic development networks — and both governments are encouraging it.


🤝 How to Get Involved

You can:

  • Join NIAF business membership
  • Join Sons of Italy lodge
  • Join UNICO chapter
  • Attend Italy-America Chamber events
  • Participate in SelectUSA programs
  • Connect with Italian Trade Agency

These organizations are actively trying to grow Italian and Italian American business networks.

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