The eruption of Mont Pelée, 1902

Y307E_1 S.S. Roraima and Mount Pelée

­­The Royal Commonwealth Society Library has just published an item level catalogue of a photograph collection, Y307E, which strikingly records one of the great natural disasters in human history: the eruption of Mont Pelée on Martinique during April and May 1902. The volcano, approximately 4,500 feet in height, is located on the northern end of the island, and was known to its original Carib inhabitants as ‘the fire mountain’. The main eruption occurred on the morning of 8 May, and the coastal city of Saint-Pierre, which was located about 6 miles to the south, was annihilated by a pyroclastic flow of superheated steam, volcanic gases and dust. Virtually all of Saint Pierre’s 30,000 inhabitants perished and the death toll was increased by numbers of refugees who had fled to the city during the earlier stages of the eruption. The blast and subsequent fires left little of the city standing and devastated an area of roughly 8 square miles.

Y307A_063 Martinique

Y307E_04 The city from the bay

The importance of this collection is highlighted by complementary material held by the RCS. Another collection of West Indian photographs from the late nineteenth century, Y307A, preserves a rare visual record of Saint Pierre before the catastrophe. The bustling commercial centre had been Martinique’s most populous city, and was noted for the beauty of its seventeenth-century architecture. Juxtaposing the two collections graphically emphasises the extent of the destruction and the tragic loss of human life.

 

Y307E_20 principal cross street

The RCS also hold the papers of Sir Henry Hesketh Bell, who was Administrator of Dominica at the time. Bell visited Saint Pierre soon after the eruption and left a haunting description of the stricken city which:

‘… used to be one of the finest in the West Indies and was more than two centuries old … And now it is nothing but a scene of awful desolation. A festering heap of ash-coloured ruins covering the corpses of more than 30,000 souls hurried into eternity. We could see no sign of colour anywhere; nothing but sad grey stones under a doleful, threatening sky … We had great difficulty in making our way along even the broadest of streets; the buildings bordering them have fallen like houses of cards. The debris, in fact, lay so thick in the roadway that we scrambled about almost level with the first floors of the houses. A thick coat of dark grey mud covered everything and increased the impression of utter desolation, Hesketh Bell, ‘Glimpses of a governor’s life’ (London, 1946), pp. 62-63.

 

Y307E_19 Rue Victor Hugo looking north

The provenance of Y307E is unknown, but it is possible that the photographs were taken by a member of the American National Geographic Society Expedition which visited Martinique soon after the event. The desire to understand the causes of this eruption and to predict future events inspired the birth of volcanology as a modern science.

For background reading on the eruption please see:

Scarth, Alwyn, La catastrophe: Mount Pelée and the destruction of Saint-Pierre, Martinique (2002)

Zebrowski, Ernest, The last days of St. Pierre: the volcanic disaster that claimed 30,000 lives (2002)

5 comments

  • Thank you for uploading these photographs. It is humbling to know people have not forgotten the tragedy of what happened to this city.

  • Dr John G Gahan FGS

    Thank you for displaying these fascinating photographs. I have just returned from Martinique, and as a geologist was most interested in the Mt Pelee event. I will be giving a lecture next week (8th Jan 2013) about this catastrophic eruption and thank you for the additional information and pictures.

  • Pingback: Mount Pelée - The Killer Volcano From Martinique - Explore like a Gipsy, Study like a Ninja

  • Thank God indeed for these Pictures that we can go back in time and see what happened, if you have anymore photos Please upload….Thanks…..This is an Amazing story that happened in The Caribbean…Do you know by chance if a movie or complete Documentary was ever made on what happened to St. Pierre with Mount Pelee because i would sure Love to see it.

    • Hello! I am a descendant of some of the victims who perished in the disaster and (fortunately) of some who escaped prior to the eruption. I have been in contact with award winning writer David Earle, who has written a mini-series and we are hoping it will be filmed someday. You can learn more about it here https://filmfreeway.com/876758.

      Thank you for the pictures!
      Tamara Alsace
      Buffalo, NY

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