[Portraits of envoys at the Portsmouth Peace Conference, Baron Komura and Kogoro Takahira (left), M. Witte and Baron Rosen (right), and President Theodore Roosevelt (center). Written at bottom of card "We are fighters for peace"]

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[Portraits of envoys at the Portsmouth Peace Conference, Baron Komura and Kogoro Takahira (left), M. Witte and Baron Rosen (right), and President Theodore Roosevelt (center). Written at bottom of card "We are fighters for peace"]

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Copyrighted 1905 by Nellie B. Van Slingerland.
Postcard sent by newspaper correspondent Edmund Noble to his wife, Lydia. Text reads: Hotel Wentworth, Portsmouth, Aug. 15, 1905. Dear Ma - These are excellent likenesses. Here is a good photograph of the peace envoys in session which I shall have eaten(?). With love, Edmund.

The Siege and Battle of Port Arthur marked the commencement of the Russo-Japanese War. Porth Artur was the deep-water port and Russian naval base at the tip of the Liaodong Peninsula in Manchuria. Port Arthur was widely regarded as one of the most strongly fortified positions in the world at the time. It was the longest and most violent land battle of the Russo-Japanese War. Russian land forces in the course of the siege suffered 31,000 casualties, of whom 15,000 were killed, wounded, and missing.

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Date

01/01/1905
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Contributors

Noble, Edmund, 1853-1937, correspondent
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Source

Library of Congress
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