The International Peace Garden is a 3.65 mile² (9.46 km²) park located on the border between Canada and the United States, in the state of North Dakota and the province of Manitoba. Established on July 14, 1932, the park plants over 150,000 flowers each year. Main features of the garden include an 18 foot (5.5 m) floral clock display, fountains, a chime, and twin 120 foot (37 m) concrete towers straddling the border with a peace chapel at their base. The chapel walls are inscribed with notable quotes about peace.
The International Peace Garden is part of an esoteric grid system that connects together geographic features of the Earth, the pyramids in Egypt, monuments in Washington DC, the Peace Pyramid of Astana Kazakhstan, 911 terrorist attacks, the Freemasons, and more. The garden is built on the top of the Turtle mountains and there is evidence that this spot has been valued by people long before the garden was built.
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International Peace Garden was created in 1932.
The quotes in the Peace Chapel at International Peace Garden include "Peace Garden: A Place to Gather in Peace" and "Dedicated to God in His Glory and in the Cause of Peace." These quotes reflect the theme of peace and unity that the garden embodies.
The International Peace Garden.
The US state of North Dakota is home to the International Peace Garden along with the Canadian Province of Manitoba.
North Dakota is known as the Peace Garden State because the International Peace Garden is located on the border of North Dakota, USA and Manitoba, Canada.
North Dakota
The official nickname of North Dakota, as adopted by the North Dakota State Legislature in 1957, is the Peace Garden State. The nick name was chosen because the International Peace Garden is located on the border of North Dakota with Canada.
North Dakota is not named the Peace Golden State. North Dakota's official nickname is the "Peace Garden State" because the International Peace Garden is partially located in the US in North Dakota and partially in the province of Manitoba, Canada.
North Dakota's official state nickname, "The Peace Garden State", means that the International Peace Garden straddles the border between North Dakota in the US and Manitoba in Canada.
Since 1932, nestled on the U.S. and Canadian borders of North Dakota and Manitoba in a symbol of friendship, lies a "One of a Kind" International Peace Garden. Reflecting pools and dazzling colorful floral displays of over 150,000 flowers splash across the grounds of the Formal Garden's terraced walkways. Therefore, ND is nicknamed the Peace Garden State.
North Dakota is the Peace Garden State.
North Dakota's nick name is the Peace Garden State because the International Peace Garden is located on the border between North Dakota, US and Manitoba, Canada. The North Dakota Motor Vehicle Department decided to put the words "Peace Garden State" on the license plates in 1956. The name was so popular that the North Dakota state legislature formally adopted it as the state nick name in 1957.