Washington DC's Cherry Trees Peace Garden on the Potomac  by Carol Wallwork, photos by Molly 
For dear friends Dr. Kaz & Yukie Umetsu 
First posted March 24, 2012
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| photo: Molly W. | 
For one hundred years, Washington DC has delighted in the most famous 
display of Japanese cherry trees in the United States. Each year 
Washingtonians and visitors alike are abuzz with the cherry trees' 
progress from bud to glorious bloom, times thousands of trees.  In 
Japan this blossom euphoria is called Hanami, a party-like blossom 
viewing excursion.  In Washington this spring the peak blossom day was 
Sunday March 18th.  The Tidal Basin was awash in pale pink & white 
blossoms and waves of Hanami-inspired tourists. 
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| photo: Molly W. | 
How the Tidal 
Basin's was transformed from a miasmic  morass to one of the beautiful 
cityscapes is as captivating as its most  inspiring aspect is 
overlooked, that of Peace Garden.   
What is now known as the Tidal Basin was originally a channel of the Potomac River.  Long Bridge was
 built in the early 1800s from the District to Virginia. Over the years 
it silted up around the bridge pylons, known as Potomac Flats, a 
mosquito infested swamp prone to flooding.  After severe flooding in 
1875 the National Park Service requested the Army Corps of Engineers 
create a flood and sanitary plan for the Potomac River.  This project 
involved a massive dredging operation.  District engineer Major General 
Peter C. Hains used
 the methods the Corps used in the levee work on the Mississippi River. 
 The dredged river channel became the Tidal Basin, the dredged dirt 
created 600 additional acres of solid ground.
Looking
 at the map below you can see how the former river bottom added to the 
modern boundary of the National Mall, sites of most of the pre-21st 
century memorials including the Lincoln, Jefferson and F. D. Roosevelt 
Memorials.
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| Pencil drawing by Carol W. based on Army Corps of Engineers map | 
 What to do with the bare, 
uncultivated land once the project was complete became an issue.  In 
1897 Congress dedicated the reclaimed land to be held and used as a park
 for recreation and pleasure of the people, called West and East Potomac
 Parks. 
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| photo: Molly W. | 
Back stepping a few years:  Ever since travel writer, D.C.-born Eliza Scidmore
 returned from Japan in 1885 she advocated planting Japanese Cherry 
trees on the reclaimed land.  By 1909 her proposal gained momentum, 
aided by new First Lady Helen Taft.  Also the successful cultivation of 
Japanese cherry trees in Maryland by U.S. Department of Agriculture 
plant explorer David Fairchild helped build a latticework of support for
 the idea.   
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| photo: Claire W. | 
 The keystone however, was a war in the east, the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-06.  Like
 too many wars it was a lose-lose proposition, for both the troubled 
reign of tzar Nicholas II and for cash-strapped Japan.  U.S. President 
Theodore Roosevelt was the chief mediator at the peace conference, held 
in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, resulting in the Treaty of Portsmouth, in 
September 1905.  His successful results garnered Roosevelt the Nobel 
Peace Prize in 1906.  (The Nobel Prize Award was established by Alfred 
Nobel after his death in 1896.  The first prize year was 1901. From my 
limited research Theodore Roosevelt appears to have been the first 
American awarded the prize.)
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| photo: Molly W. | 
Amid
 extensive back-and-forth over many years between Washington and Japan, 
the brokering of the peace with Russia was the inspiration for the city 
of Tokyo and Japanese chemist Dr. Jokichi Takamine, to donate 2,000 
cherry trees to Washington.  Alas, by the time they arrived they were 
diseased and had to be destroyed.  Undaunted by this setback another 
3,000 trees were dispatched successfully.  On March 27, 1912 Eliza 
Skidmore, First Lady Helen Taft and Japanese Ambassador Sutemi Chinda 
and his wife, Iwa, planted the first trees.
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| photo: Molly W. | 
Over
 the course of one hundred years, our two countries have endured 
the bleakest days of human warfare, and profound, inspiring peace.  Just 
last year the United States helped with the harrowing battle to save 
severely damaged nuclear reactors in Japan after an 8.9 magnitude 
earthquake struck the north east coast causing a devastating tsunami.  
In 2005, after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans, Japan donated power generators, special equipment, several 
million dollars and emergency supplies, tents, etc. 
| .jpg) | 
| photo: Claire W. | 
 Called
 Sakura in Japan, these graceful cherry trees are important in Japanese 
art and culture.  Cherry trees are celebrated in ancient Japartwork as the embodiment of joy and beauty.  We can add to their colorful genealogy that 
of graceful diplomats. 
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| photo: Claire W. | 
Thank you Molly & Claire for your lovely photos, inspiring me to share them with others. 
March 26, 2012
Postscript:
 Today's Wall Street Journal has a full page ad for a Japanese 
pharmaceutical company who's first president was Dr. Takamine Jokichi, 
the co-benefactor of Washington DC's Japanese cherry trees.  Among his 
accomplishments was his discovery of the hormone adrenaline.
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| My mom, Washington DC 1952  photo taken by mystery photographer, possibly...me for mom's looking down | 
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| Friend Naomi visiting from North Dakota  2007 | 
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| Carol, Washington DC 1952 photo by Julia K. 
 
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| Molly & Abel's Wedding photo by Claire W. | 
 
 
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