Treaty house
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In New Zealand, the Treaty House refers to the house of the British resident in New Zealand, Thomas Busby. The Treaty of Waitangi, the document that established the British Colony of New Zealand was signed in the grounds of the Treaty House, 6 February, 1840. Subsequently it was used for agricultural purposes, storing hay, and then became derelict. However it was extensively restored in 1940 for the centenary of the original signing and is now a part of the Waitangi National Monument.
In Japan a specially built treaty house in Yokohama was the site of the negotiation and signing of the Treaty of Kanagawa (or The Treaty of Amity and Friendship) signed on March 31, 1854, which established "a perfect, permanent, and universal peace" between the United States of America and the Empire of Japan. The treaty, secured largely on the strength of plenipotentiary Commodore Perry's gunships, led to the Harris treaty which opened commercial trade between the two nations.
It seems probable there are other "Treaty Houses" about the world, probably equally significant.