On Fri, 15 May 2026 21:54:57 -0400, Cryptoengineer
<
petertrei@gmail.com> wrote:
There's the Peace Arch Park in Douglas Washington, which spans the
border, and has to remain unfenced due to complex reasons involving
the Treaty of Ghent.
The Peace Arch park is mostly notable for being where the 49th
parallel (which is the Canada US border for everything west of Ontario
other than AK and HI) hits salt water on the west coast has existed
for more than 100 years - and the Arch was built as a commemoration of
100 years of peace following the War of 1812.
Got a citation on the gates having to be open? I remember during the
Vietnam war there was a MAJOR hubbub when protesters closed the gate
for a short time.
Probably the most famous story about that park involves Paul Robeson
who in 1952 during the McCarthy era was banned from entering Canada
(he was a Communist party member) which meant he couldn't play his
concert in Vancouver (which is about 20-25 miles north of there).
What they did was bring two pickup trucks (which were brought to about
10 feet south of the border) and he sang from the back of one truck
while the other truck was used for sound equipment
https://www.historylink.org/File/8163
(The article was obviously written by an American since Blaine, WA is
the border town on the US side of the line while White Rock, BC is the
border town - now an outer suburb of Vancouver - on the Canadian side)
There's also Derby Line, vt, where a small town straddles the border
- the line runs right through the library. Since 9/11 crossings there
have become much less casual.
I've heard about that one.
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