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PORTSMOUTH PEACE TREATY DAY - September 05, 2010

Annual commemoration of the date the Portsmouth Peace Treaty was signed. At 2 pm, Green Acre Bahai School in Eliot, Maine re-enacts the raising of the world's first peace flag (1894) and the peace flag and visit by the Japanese delegation in 1905. A Portsmouth Peace Treaty Concert eith Randy Armstrong and Marty Quinn follows at 2:30 pm  Free. Public welcome. 938 Main Street in Eliot ME 207-439-7200 x 7006 

The Portsmouth Naval Shipyard offers a whistle salute at 3:47 pm -- the time the Treaty signing was completed -- and the church bells of Portsmouth and surrounding areas answer. Best heard in Market Square in downtown Portsmouth.

Exhibit "An Uncommon Commitment to Peace: Portsmouth Peace Treaty 1905" open free from 3-5 pm at the John Paul Jones House Museum, 43 Middle Street, Portsmouth. 603-436-8420.


Sep 09, 2010
DAILY "An Uncommon Commitment to Peace" Exhibit

Sep 11, 2010
The Fells:"Partners in Diplomacy: TR & John Hay"

Sep 12, 2010
DAILY"An Uncommon Commitment to Peace" Exhibit



The Portsmouth Peace Treaty Forums are the first formal meetings between Japanese, Russian and American scholars and diplomats in Portsmouth, NH, since the negotiation of the Treaty of Portsmouth Treaty in 1905.  The Treaty is considered one of the most powerful symbols of peace in the Northern Pacific region and the most significant, shared peace history for Japan, Russia, and the United States.

The Forums are sponsored by the Japan-America Society of New Hampshire, together with the Russia Society of New Hampshire, to explore, through Japanese, Russian and American perspectives, the history of the Treaty of Portsmouth and its relevance to current issues involving the Northern Pacific region.  The Forums provide modern scholarship on international problems in the "spirit of the Portsmouth Peace Treaty" and study the Treaty as an example of multi-track or two-track diplomacy.

The Portsmouth Peace Treaty provides an example to the world of the enlightened foreign policy for peace by Japan, Russia, and the United States. The Treaty also exemplifies the ability of local citizens to mediate informally international disputes. As hosts for thirty days in August 1905, the State of New Hampshire, the people of Portsmouth and the United States Navy fostered goodwill between Russian and Japanese Delegates during the critical peace negotiations that ended the Russo-Japanese War, then the largest war being fought in the world.  In 1905 in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, an uncommon commitment to peace became a common virtue. The Portsmouth Peace Treaty Forums commemorate and continue that tradition.

Follow these links for the proceedings from each Forum:
Forum I, June 1994
Forum II, October 1994

Forum III, September 1995
Forum IV, March 2000
Forum V, December 2006
Forum VI, December 2007
Forum VII, December 2008
Forum VIII, December 2009



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