MUSEUM OF THE FALLEN
Dominance is not eternal.

The Wall/ Vanished Worlds/ Saint-Pierre
The roofless stone ruins of the prison at Saint-Pierre, Martinique, destroyed by Mont Pelée in 1902.

Thérèse Gaigé, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons · CC0

Vanished Worlds

Saint-Pierre

The Paris of the Caribbean
1635 CE 1902 CE

Martinique's cultural capital — theatres, cafés, 28,000 people — erased in under two minutes by a pyroclastic surge at 8:02 a.m. on 8 May 1902.

Born
1635 CE
Died
1902 CE
Lived
267 years
Dead for
124 yrs
Forgottenness
0.29
Cause of death
Disaster
Replaced by
Partly rebuilt as a smaller town of ~4,500; the 1902 ruins are preserved as a heritage and tourist site
The Obituary

Saint-Pierre, founded in 1635, was for nearly three centuries the principal city of French Martinique and the cultural capital of the Lesser Antilles. By 1902 it had about 28,000 residents, an opera house, several newspapers, a cathedral and rum distilleries, and a port busy with sugar and rum. Visitors called it ‘the Paris of the Caribbean.’ It occupied a narrow coastal strip below Mont Pelée, dormant in living memory.

From April 1902 Pelée emitted ash and gas; a lahar on 5 May killed 23 people. The administration, worried about an upcoming election, discouraged evacuation. At 8:02 a.m. on 8 May 1902 a lateral pyroclastic surge — a superheated avalanche of gas and ash — swept down the volcano and engulfed the city in under two minutes, killing some 28,000–30,000 people. Two confirmed survivors emerged: a prisoner in a thick-walled cell and a shoemaker at the city’s edge. The word ‘pelean’ now denotes this kind of eruption.

Worth remembering

  • Saint-Pierre had theatres (including a replica of Bordeaux's opera house), several newspapers, a cathedral, a botanical garden, rum distilleries and a busy port — Martinique's commercial nerve centre.
  • In the weeks before the eruption Pelée gave clear warnings — ashfall, fumes, a lahar that killed 23 people on 5 May — but the governor and press discouraged evacuation, partly to keep voters in town before an 11 May election.

The people

  • Louis-Auguste Cyparis — One of only two known survivors, c. 1875–1929

    He survived inside a thick-walled underground prison cell; badly burned, he was found days later and later toured with Barnum & Bailey as 'the prisoner of Saint-Pierre'.

Further reading

Sources

  1. On 8 May 1902 Mont Pelée's pyroclastic surge destroyed Saint-Pierre, killing about 30,000 people — roughly 15% of Martinique's population; the 'pelean' eruption type is named after it. Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. Saint-Pierre was Martinique's leading city, 'the Paris of the Caribbean'; only two survivors are confirmed, a prisoner and a shoemaker. Wikipedia
  3. The 1902 eruption of Mont Pelée was the deadliest volcanic disaster of the 20th century. USGS

A graveyard tradition: leave a stone to show you came, and remembered.

Buried nearby