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SS Anselm (1935)

SS Anselm was a British turbine steamship of the Booth Steamship Company. She was built as a cargo and passenger liner in 1935 and requisitioned and converted into a troop ship in 1940. A German submarine sank her in 1941, killing 254 of those aboard.

Anselm under way
History
United Kingdom
NameAnselm
NamesakeAnselm of Canterbury
OwnerBooth Steamship Co
Operator Booth Steamship Co
Port of registryLiverpool[1]
RouteLiverpool – Brazil
BuilderWm Denny & Bros, Dumbarton
Cost£158,876[2]
Yard number1276[3]
Launched15 October 1935[2][3]
Completed17 December 1935[2]
Identification
FateSunk by torpedo, 5 July 1941[4]
General characteristics
Type
Tonnage5,954 GRT, 3,601 NRT[1]
Length412.3 ft (125.7 m)[1]
Beam55.7 ft (17.0 m)[1]
Draught25 ft 6+34 in (7.79 m)[1]
Depth25.8 ft (7.9 m)[1]
Installed power696 NHP[1]
Propulsion
Speed12 knots (22 km/h)[2][3]
Boats & landing
craft carried
at least 6 lifeboats
Capacity
  • Civilian service: 40 1st & 106 3rd class passengers;[2]
  • Wartime service: 500 troops[3]
Crew80[2]
Sensors and
processing systems
ArmamentDEMS

Building and civilian service edit

The Booth Steamship Company ordered Anselm for its passenger and cargo liner services between Liverpool and Brazil. William Denny and Brothers built her in its shipyard at Dumbarton on the Firth of Clyde in Scotland.

By the 1930s most British shipping companies specified oil fuel for new steamships because it was more economical. Booth, however, still specified coal because it was cheaper, and as the company's ships carried little cargo on outward voyages to South America and it considered it could afford larger coal bunkers. Anselm's bunkers had capacity for 980 long tons of coal.[2][3]

Anselm had nine corrugated furnaces with a combined grate area of 176 square feet (16.4 m2) heating three single-ended Howden-Johnson water-tube boilers[2][3] with a combined heating surface of 7,704 square feet (715.7 m2) that supplied steam at 250 lbf/in2.[1]

Booth proposed a multiple-expansion steam reciprocating engine, with steam exhausted from the low-pressure cylinder then driving a low-pressure steam turbine for greater efficiency,[2] as installed on its recent ships Boniface (1928), Hilary (1931), Clement (1934) and Crispin (1935).[5] However, Denny persuaded Booth that it would be more economical to use pure turbine propulsion. Sources disagree as to whether she had three separate turbines or one three-stage Parsons turbine.[2][3] Either way, her power was rated at 696 NHP and drove the shaft of her single propeller via single-reduction gearing.[1]

Anselm was the last new ship ever built for Booth Line.[6]

War service edit

In November 1939 Anselm was in Liverpool and was due to sail to Pará via for Lisbon. Because of war conditions she was to leave with Convoy OB 32, which would then join Convoy OB 6. However, her sailing was cancelled and OB 32 left without her.[7] Instead Anselm was requisitioned and quickly converted to carry about 500 troops.[3] Her civilian passenger accommodation was assigned for officers; her holds were converted to accommodation for other ranks.

On 13 January 1940 she sailed from Freetown, Sierra Leone in Convoy SLF 16, which joined Convoy SL 16 and reached Liverpool on 27 January.[8] On 25 June 1940 she left Freetown in Convoy SL 37, which reached Liverpool on 12 July.[9] On 21 July 1940 she left Liverpool carrying 82 child evacuees to Halifax, Nova Scotia for the Children's Overseas Reception Board.[10] In October 1940 she left Freetown in either Convoy SL 52 or Convoy SLF 52; the two combined at sea and on 10 November reached Liverpool.[11]

On 18 December 1940 Anselm left Britain with Military Convoy WS 5A bound for Suez. On Christmas Day 1940 the German cruiser Admiral Hipper attacked Anselm, but Royal Navy escort cruisers drove Hipper off and the convoy dispersed.[12] The convoy reformed on 27 December 1940 at Freetown and reached Suez on 16 February 1941. On her return voyage Anselm joined Convoy SL 74, which left Freetown on 10 May and reached Liverpool on 4 June.[13] On 30 June Anselm left Liverpool again bound for Suez, sailing with Convoy WS 9B, which dispersed on 18 July.[14]

Final voyage and loss edit

 
HMS Lavender was one of Anselm's escorts, and with HMS Petunia depth charged and damaged U-96

Toward the end of June 1941 Anselm left Britain for Freetown again. She was heavily overloaded with about 1,200 British Army,[15] Royal Marines[16] and Royal Air Force personnel: more than twice the 500 she had been converted to carry. There were 175 RAF personnel,[17] posted to serve in the North African Campaign.[16]

Some accounts say she sailed from Gourock[2][15] on the Firth of Clyde; another that she left Loch Ewe in northwest Scotland on 26 June;[16] another that she left Liverpool in England on 28 June.[18] Sources agree that she was escorted by the survey vessel HMS Challenger and Flower-class corvettes Lavender, Petunia and Starwort. Some suggest that her escort also included the armed merchant cruiser Cathay.[4]

In the early hours of 5 July 1941 Anselm and her escorts were in mid-Atlantic, proceeding south through fog about 300 nautical miles (560 km) north of the Azores. Challenger was leading the troop ship in line ahead; Starwort was stationed in line astern because her ASDIC was out of order. Lavender and Petunia were in screening positions ahead, either side of Challenger's bow. At about 0350 hours the fog cleared, and the convoy began to zigzag as evasive action against possible attack.

However, a Luftwaffe Focke-Wulf Fw 200 Condor patrol had reported the convoy's position[19] and at 0426 hours the German Type VIIC submarine U-96, commanded by Kptlt Heinrich Lehmann-Willenbrock, fired a spread of four torpedoes at Challenger and Anselm.[4] None hit Challenger but one struck Anselm's port side amidships, causing extensive damage and momentarily lifting the troop ship in the water. U-96 dived and the corvettes counter-attacked, Lavender firing six depth charges and Petunia firing 20. When the attack drew too close to the survivors it was broken off, but the submarine was seriously damaged and broke off her patrol to return to Saint-Nazaire submarine base in occupied France for repairs.[4]

Anselm launched all her lifeboats except no. 6, which had been damaged by the explosion.[15] Challenger had been 12 nautical mile (930 m) ahead but manoeuvred close to Anselm's port quarter and took off 60[15] or more[4] survivors as the troop ship's bow settled in the water.

Officers from the passenger accommodation were able to reach the boat deck, but the impact caused extensive damage below decks, where collapsed overheads and wrecked ladders injured or trapped many of the men in one of the converted holds.[20] One survivor states that officers got away in boats from Anselm's stern without waiting to help their men.[20]

Cecil Pugh, GC edit

 
Inscription in the chapel of Mansfield College, Oxford in memory of alumni including Cecil Pugh

One officer who stayed aboard to the end was an Air Force chaplain lately of RAF Bridgnorth, Squadron Leader Cecil Pugh, who

"seemed to be everywhere at once, doing his best to comfort the injured, helping with the boats and rafts... and visiting the different lower sections where men were quartered. When he learned that a number of injured airmen were trapped in the damaged hold, he insisted on being lowered into it with a rope. Everyone demurred because the hold was below the water line and already the decks were awash and to go down was to go to certain death. He simply explained that he must be where his men were."[21]

The ship sank 22 minutes after being hit, and four crew and about 250 troops were killed.[4] Pugh went down with the ship, and in 1947 was posthumously awarded the George Cross.[21]

Survivors edit

 
The armed merchant cruiser HMS Cathay took survivors from Anselm's overloaded escorts and landed them at Freetown

Most men aboard, including the majority of other ranks, did survive. Anselm's Master, Andrew Elliot, 92 of her crew, three DEMS gunners and 965 troops were rescued.[4] Many were at first in the water, but were picked up by Challenger, Starwort or the ship's own lifeboats and rafts.

One leading aircraftman, Wilfrid Marten, recalled being in the sea for a few hours and being "near death's door" before he was rescued by a lifeboat. An officer in the boat then ordered him to row, but was silenced by a Naval rating or petty officer who threatened to throw the officer over the side.[15]

Most of the survivors in the boats and rafts were transferred to the escort ships, ascending the sides by scramble nets. This left Challenger and the corvettes badly overloaded, so the survivors were transferred again to HMS Cathay which landed them at Freetown.[4] The escorts may have missed one lifeboat, as one survivor reports that after the sinking he spent 18 days in a boat with neither food nor water.[15]

See also edit

References edit

 
 
class=notpageimage|
Approximate position of Anselm's wreck
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Lloyd's Register, 1937
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Booth Line's S.S. "Anselm" 3". Booth Line Limited. Blue Star on the Web. 3 February 2012. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Anselm". Scottish Built Ships. Caledonian Maritime Research Trust. Retrieved 9 May 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Helgason, Guðmundur (1995–2013). "Anselm". uboat.net. Guðmundur Helgason. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  5. ^ "Crispin". Shipping and Shipbuilding. Shipping and Shipbuilding Research Trust. Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  6. ^ John 1959, pp. 139, 190.
  7. ^ Hague, Arnold. "Convoy OB.32". OB Convoy Series. Don Kindell, ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  8. ^ Hague, Arnold. "Convoy SLF.16". SL/MKS Convoy Series. Don Kindell, ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  9. ^ Hague, Arnold. "Convoy SL.37". SL/MKS Convoy Series. Don Kindell, ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  10. ^ Fethney 1990, p. 60.
  11. ^ Hague, Arnold. "Convoy SL.52 + SLF.52". SL/MKS Convoy Series. Don Kindell, ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  12. ^ Hague, Arnold. "Military Convoy WS.5". WS Convoy Series. Don Kindell, ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  13. ^ Hague, Arnold. "Convoy SL.74". SL/MKS Convoy Series. Don Kindell, ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  14. ^ Hague, Arnold. "Military Convoy WS.9". WS Convoy Series. Don Kindell, ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  15. ^ a b c d e f . The Second War. The Wartime Memories Project. 1989–2012. Archived from the original on 13 November 2011. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  16. ^ a b c "Maurice "Crusoe" Butler". Veteran Stories. The Memory Project. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  17. ^ Stratford, Stephen. . British Military & Criminal History 1900 to 1999. Archived from the original on 13 December 2013. Retrieved 10 December 2013.
  18. ^ Darling 2009, p. 97.
  19. ^ Blair 1996 cited in Watt, Bill. "Re: Troopship Anselm – from old forum". Warsailors. Siri Holm Lawson. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  20. ^ a b Wightwick, Abbie (30 November 2009). "Ex-RAF man Thomas Rogers recalls Rev Cecil Pugh's last moments aboard the torpedoed SS Anselm". South Wales Echo. Cardiff: Trinity Mirror. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  21. ^ a b "Central Chancery of the Orders of Knighthood". The London Gazette (2nd supplement). No. 37920. 28 March 1947. p. 1489.

Sources edit

  • Blair, Clay (1996). Hitler's U-Boat War. Vol. 1: The Hunters, 1939–1942. New York: Random House. ISBN 0394588398.[page needed]
  • Darling, Ian (2009). "8: The Corporal's Ring". Amazing Airmen: Canadian Flyers in the Second World War. Toronto: Dundurn Press. pp. 97–105. ISBN 978-1-55488-424-7.
  • Fethney, Michael (1990). The Absurd and the Brave: CORB, The True Account of the British Government's World War II Evacuation of Children Overseas. Lewes: The Book Guild. p. 60. ISBN 0863324479.
  • John, AH (1959). A Liverpool Merchant House. London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd.
  • "Steamers and Motorships". Lloyd's Register (PDF). Vol. II. London: Lloyd's Register. 1937. Retrieved 9 December 2013 – via Southampton City Council.

44°30′N 28°30′W / 44.5°N 28.5°W / 44.5; -28.5

anselm, 1935, other, ships, with, same, name, list, ships, named, anselm, anselm, british, turbine, steamship, booth, steamship, company, built, cargo, passenger, liner, 1935, requisitioned, converted, into, troop, ship, 1940, german, submarine, sank, 1941, ki. For other ships with the same name see List of ships named Anselm SS Anselm was a British turbine steamship of the Booth Steamship Company She was built as a cargo and passenger liner in 1935 and requisitioned and converted into a troop ship in 1940 A German submarine sank her in 1941 killing 254 of those aboard Anselm under wayHistoryUnited KingdomNameAnselmNamesakeAnselm of CanterburyOwnerBooth Steamship CoOperatorBooth Steamship CoPort of registryLiverpool 1 RouteLiverpool BrazilBuilderWm Denny amp Bros DumbartonCost 158 876 2 Yard number1276 3 Launched15 October 1935 2 3 Completed17 December 1935 2 IdentificationUK official number 164275 1 call sign GYPF 1 FateSunk by torpedo 5 July 1941 4 General characteristicsTypecargo amp passenger liner 1935 40 troop ship 1940 42 Tonnage5 954 GRT 3 601 NRT 1 Length412 3 ft 125 7 m 1 Beam55 7 ft 17 0 m 1 Draught25 ft 6 3 4 in 7 79 m 1 Depth25 8 ft 7 9 m 1 Installed power696 NHP 1 Propulsion1 2 3 or 3 1 steam turbines single screwSpeed12 knots 22 km h 2 3 Boats amp landing craft carriedat least 6 lifeboatsCapacityCivilian service 40 1st amp 106 3rd class passengers 2 Wartime service 500 troops 3 Crew80 2 Sensors and processing systemswireless direction finding 1 echo sounding device 1 ArmamentDEMS Contents 1 Building and civilian service 2 War service 3 Final voyage and loss 3 1 Cecil Pugh GC 3 2 Survivors 4 See also 5 References 6 SourcesBuilding and civilian service editThe Booth Steamship Company ordered Anselm for its passenger and cargo liner services between Liverpool and Brazil William Denny and Brothers built her in its shipyard at Dumbarton on the Firth of Clyde in Scotland By the 1930s most British shipping companies specified oil fuel for new steamships because it was more economical Booth however still specified coal because it was cheaper and as the company s ships carried little cargo on outward voyages to South America and it considered it could afford larger coal bunkers Anselm s bunkers had capacity for 980 long tons of coal 2 3 Anselm had nine corrugated furnaces with a combined grate area of 176 square feet 16 4 m2 heating three single ended Howden Johnson water tube boilers 2 3 with a combined heating surface of 7 704 square feet 715 7 m2 that supplied steam at 250 lbf in2 1 Booth proposed a multiple expansion steam reciprocating engine with steam exhausted from the low pressure cylinder then driving a low pressure steam turbine for greater efficiency 2 as installed on its recent ships Boniface 1928 Hilary 1931 Clement 1934 and Crispin 1935 5 However Denny persuaded Booth that it would be more economical to use pure turbine propulsion Sources disagree as to whether she had three separate turbines or one three stage Parsons turbine 2 3 Either way her power was rated at 696 NHP and drove the shaft of her single propeller via single reduction gearing 1 Anselm was the last new ship ever built for Booth Line 6 War service editIn November 1939 Anselm was in Liverpool and was due to sail to Para via for Lisbon Because of war conditions she was to leave with Convoy OB 32 which would then join Convoy OB 6 However her sailing was cancelled and OB 32 left without her 7 Instead Anselm was requisitioned and quickly converted to carry about 500 troops 3 Her civilian passenger accommodation was assigned for officers her holds were converted to accommodation for other ranks On 13 January 1940 she sailed from Freetown Sierra Leone in Convoy SLF 16 which joined Convoy SL 16 and reached Liverpool on 27 January 8 On 25 June 1940 she left Freetown in Convoy SL 37 which reached Liverpool on 12 July 9 On 21 July 1940 she left Liverpool carrying 82 child evacuees to Halifax Nova Scotia for the Children s Overseas Reception Board 10 In October 1940 she left Freetown in either Convoy SL 52 or Convoy SLF 52 the two combined at sea and on 10 November reached Liverpool 11 On 18 December 1940 Anselm left Britain with Military Convoy WS 5A bound for Suez On Christmas Day 1940 the German cruiser Admiral Hipper attacked Anselm but Royal Navy escort cruisers drove Hipper off and the convoy dispersed 12 The convoy reformed on 27 December 1940 at Freetown and reached Suez on 16 February 1941 On her return voyage Anselm joined Convoy SL 74 which left Freetown on 10 May and reached Liverpool on 4 June 13 On 30 June Anselm left Liverpool again bound for Suez sailing with Convoy WS 9B which dispersed on 18 July 14 Final voyage and loss edit nbsp HMS Lavender was one of Anselm s escorts and with HMS Petunia depth charged and damaged U 96Toward the end of June 1941 Anselm left Britain for Freetown again She was heavily overloaded with about 1 200 British Army 15 Royal Marines 16 and Royal Air Force personnel more than twice the 500 she had been converted to carry There were 175 RAF personnel 17 posted to serve in the North African Campaign 16 Some accounts say she sailed from Gourock 2 15 on the Firth of Clyde another that she left Loch Ewe in northwest Scotland on 26 June 16 another that she left Liverpool in England on 28 June 18 Sources agree that she was escorted by the survey vessel HMS Challenger and Flower class corvettes Lavender Petunia and Starwort Some suggest that her escort also included the armed merchant cruiser Cathay 4 In the early hours of 5 July 1941 Anselm and her escorts were in mid Atlantic proceeding south through fog about 300 nautical miles 560 km north of the Azores Challenger was leading the troop ship in line ahead Starwort was stationed in line astern because her ASDIC was out of order Lavender and Petunia were in screening positions ahead either side of Challenger s bow At about 0350 hours the fog cleared and the convoy began to zigzag as evasive action against possible attack However a Luftwaffe Focke Wulf Fw 200 Condor patrol had reported the convoy s position 19 and at 0426 hours the German Type VIIC submarine U 96 commanded by Kptlt Heinrich Lehmann Willenbrock fired a spread of four torpedoes at Challenger and Anselm 4 None hit Challenger but one struck Anselm s port side amidships causing extensive damage and momentarily lifting the troop ship in the water U 96 dived and the corvettes counter attacked Lavender firing six depth charges and Petunia firing 20 When the attack drew too close to the survivors it was broken off but the submarine was seriously damaged and broke off her patrol to return to Saint Nazaire submarine base in occupied France for repairs 4 Anselm launched all her lifeboats except no 6 which had been damaged by the explosion 15 Challenger had been 1 2 nautical mile 930 m ahead but manoeuvred close to Anselm s port quarter and took off 60 15 or more 4 survivors as the troop ship s bow settled in the water Officers from the passenger accommodation were able to reach the boat deck but the impact caused extensive damage below decks where collapsed overheads and wrecked ladders injured or trapped many of the men in one of the converted holds 20 One survivor states that officers got away in boats from Anselm s stern without waiting to help their men 20 Cecil Pugh GC edit nbsp Inscription in the chapel of Mansfield College Oxford in memory of alumni including Cecil PughMain article Cecil Pugh One officer who stayed aboard to the end was an Air Force chaplain lately of RAF Bridgnorth Squadron Leader Cecil Pugh who seemed to be everywhere at once doing his best to comfort the injured helping with the boats and rafts and visiting the different lower sections where men were quartered When he learned that a number of injured airmen were trapped in the damaged hold he insisted on being lowered into it with a rope Everyone demurred because the hold was below the water line and already the decks were awash and to go down was to go to certain death He simply explained that he must be where his men were 21 The ship sank 22 minutes after being hit and four crew and about 250 troops were killed 4 Pugh went down with the ship and in 1947 was posthumously awarded the George Cross 21 Survivors edit nbsp The armed merchant cruiser HMS Cathay took survivors from Anselm s overloaded escorts and landed them at FreetownMost men aboard including the majority of other ranks did survive Anselm s Master Andrew Elliot 92 of her crew three DEMS gunners and 965 troops were rescued 4 Many were at first in the water but were picked up by Challenger Starwort or the ship s own lifeboats and rafts One leading aircraftman Wilfrid Marten recalled being in the sea for a few hours and being near death s door before he was rescued by a lifeboat An officer in the boat then ordered him to row but was silenced by a Naval rating or petty officer who threatened to throw the officer over the side 15 Most of the survivors in the boats and rafts were transferred to the escort ships ascending the sides by scramble nets This left Challenger and the corvettes badly overloaded so the survivors were transferred again to HMS Cathay which landed them at Freetown 4 The escorts may have missed one lifeboat as one survivor reports that after the sinking he spent 18 days in a boat with neither food nor water 15 See also editList of ships built by William Denny and BrothersReferences edit nbsp nbsp class notpageimage Approximate position of Anselm s wreck a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Lloyd s Register 1937 a b c d e f g h i j k l Booth Line s S S Anselm 3 Booth Line Limited Blue Star on the Web 3 February 2012 Retrieved 9 December 2013 a b c d e f g h i Anselm Scottish Built Ships Caledonian Maritime Research Trust Retrieved 9 May 2018 a b c d e f g h Helgason Gudmundur 1995 2013 Anselm uboat net Gudmundur Helgason Retrieved 9 December 2013 Crispin Shipping and Shipbuilding Shipping and Shipbuilding Research Trust Retrieved 17 February 2021 John 1959 pp 139 190 Hague Arnold Convoy OB 32 OB Convoy Series Don Kindell ConvoyWeb Retrieved 9 December 2013 Hague Arnold Convoy SLF 16 SL MKS Convoy Series Don Kindell ConvoyWeb Retrieved 9 December 2013 Hague Arnold Convoy SL 37 SL MKS Convoy Series Don Kindell ConvoyWeb Retrieved 9 December 2013 Fethney 1990 p 60 Hague Arnold Convoy SL 52 SLF 52 SL MKS Convoy Series Don Kindell ConvoyWeb Retrieved 9 December 2013 Hague Arnold Military Convoy WS 5 WS Convoy Series Don Kindell ConvoyWeb Retrieved 9 December 2013 Hague Arnold Convoy SL 74 SL MKS Convoy Series Don Kindell ConvoyWeb Retrieved 9 December 2013 Hague Arnold Military Convoy WS 9 WS Convoy Series Don Kindell ConvoyWeb Retrieved 9 December 2013 a b c d e f SS Anselm The Second War The Wartime Memories Project 1989 2012 Archived from the original on 13 November 2011 Retrieved 9 December 2013 a b c Maurice Crusoe Butler Veteran Stories The Memory Project Retrieved 9 December 2013 Stratford Stephen Chaplain Squadron Leader The Reverend Herbert Cecil Pugh British Military amp Criminal History 1900 to 1999 Archived from the original on 13 December 2013 Retrieved 10 December 2013 Darling 2009 p 97 Blair 1996 cited in Watt Bill Re Troopship Anselm from old forum Warsailors Siri Holm Lawson Retrieved 9 December 2013 a b Wightwick Abbie 30 November 2009 Ex RAF man Thomas Rogers recalls Rev Cecil Pugh s last moments aboard the torpedoed SS Anselm South Wales Echo Cardiff Trinity Mirror Retrieved 9 December 2013 a b Central Chancery of the Orders of Knighthood The London Gazette 2nd supplement No 37920 28 March 1947 p 1489 Sources editBlair Clay 1996 Hitler s U Boat War Vol 1 The Hunters 1939 1942 New York Random House ISBN 0394588398 page needed Darling Ian 2009 8 The Corporal s Ring Amazing Airmen Canadian Flyers in the Second World War Toronto Dundurn Press pp 97 105 ISBN 978 1 55488 424 7 Fethney Michael 1990 The Absurd and the Brave CORB The True Account of the British Government s World War II Evacuation of Children Overseas Lewes The Book Guild p 60 ISBN 0863324479 John AH 1959 A Liverpool Merchant House London George Allen amp Unwin Ltd Steamers and Motorships Lloyd s Register PDF Vol II London Lloyd s Register 1937 Retrieved 9 December 2013 via Southampton City Council 44 30 N 28 30 W 44 5 N 28 5 W 44 5 28 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title SS Anselm 1935 amp oldid 1190410286, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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