A heritage serving the collective memory
On the occasion of the 2025 European Heritage Days, the Frank Perret Museum opened its doors to the public. Located in the heart of Saint-Pierre, this unique site bears witness to the eruption of Mount Pelée on May 8, 1902, an event that led to the almost total destruction of the city and the death of some 28,000 people.
Founded in 1933 by American volcanologist Frank Alvord Perret, the museum is the oldest in Martinique. Its mission is clear: to pass on the history of a vanished city, once dubbed the Petit Paris of the Antilles. The Frank Perret Museum does more than simply display relics: it embodies the memory of a population struck by a sudden and universally known tragedy.
A renovation that links architecture and history
After several decades of existence, the Frank Perret Museum has been extensively renovated. In 2018, a public service contract was awarded to the Fondation Clément, the only successful candidate for the project. The building reopened its doors on May 8, 2019, a symbolic date, following work carried out by architect Olivier Compère.
The building features a sober, evocative aesthetic: the burnt-wood façade, designed using the Japanese shou-sugi-ban technique, echoes the town of Saint-Pierre, burnt and covered in ash after the eruption. The interior, now air-conditioned and structured, offers a clear, modern museography. The former single space has been transformed into three thematic rooms, allowing a more fluid reading of history: the city before the disaster, the moment of the eruption and reconstruction after 1902.
The deliberately dark architecture, reminiscent of the stigmata left by the volcano, lends the site an atmosphere of contemplation and transmission. The Frank Perret Museum is at once a scientific, educational and memorial site.
The memorial, symbolic heart of the route
At the center of the tour, the memorial to the victims occupies an essential place. This room contains over 7,000 identified names, engraved to perpetuate the memory of those who disappeared on May 8, 1902. Although the exact number of victims is estimated at 28,000, the inscription of their names gives a human dimension to the catastrophe.
The Frank Perret Frank Perret Museum also houses a collection of some 432 objects: burnt remains, ceramics, fused glass, historical documents and old photographs. These items, often found in the ruins, illustrate the brutality of the eruption and the daily life of Saint-Pierre before its disappearance.
Heritage Days: a time for sharing
The European Heritage Days are a not-to-be-missed event for the museum team. According to those in charge, this year’s event attracted a wide range of visitors, from those who had never seen the museum before to those who came back with friends and family. The number of visitors was boosted by the favorable weather on the second day, contrasting with the showers on the first.
The message is clear: the Frank Perret Museum belongs as much to the people of Martinique as it does to visitors. It is a shared heritage, which calls on everyone to remember and understand.
Labels and official recognition
Since 2004, the museum has benefited from the “Musée de France” designation, which guarantees the scientific quality of its collections and their proper conservation. Today, it is one of Martinique’s museums with this status, alongside the Musée du Père Pinchon and the Maison de la Canne.
The town of Saint-Pierre, meanwhile, has held the “Ville d’art et d’histoire” label since 1990, reinforcing the museum’s role as a reference institution for heritage. These labels testify to the importance of the site on a national level and its role in the transmission of Martinique’s heritage.
A place that combines past and future
As part of the European Heritage Days, the Frank Perret Museum is a reminder of the importance of linking history and modernity. Its contemporary architecture, rigorous scientific content and museographic layout make it an exemplary museum.
Its collections and memorial are not just about remembering: they are also about reflecting on the fragility of societies in the face of natural disasters, and the need to pass on this memory.
The Frank Perret Museum remains an essential part of Martinique: a place of history, remembrance and education which, more than a century after the disaster, continues to speak to present and future generations.