
Schoelcher Library

Road to Morne Rouge
Bay of Saint-Pierre in the North
Considering Caribbean tourism, there are abundant sightseeing opportunities in Martinique. To learn about them, it is best to begin with a visit to the Martinique Tourist Office CMT (Comité Martiniquais du Tourisme) located in the city of Schoelcher at Immeuble Beaupré Pointe de Jaham 97233 Tel: (596) 596 61 61 77
This office is open 8 a.m. to 4.30 p.m., Monday through Friday.
In addition, the Tourist Office Information Desk at International Airport Aimé Césaire in Fort-de-France stays open daily until the last flight comes in. Read more...
Complimentary maps, Caribbean magazines and information bulletins are available at the Tourist Office. The English-speaking staff is very helpful with suggestions about what to see and do, including Caribbean shore excursions, Caribbean scuba diving, Caribbean yachting, visiting beautiful Caribbean gardens, golfing in the Caribbean, and of course pointing you to the great Caribbean beaches, as well as many more wonderful recreational activities.
Among the Tourist Office’s free publications in French and English is the digest-size Choubouloute, a listings guide of happenings on the island. A series of seven Caribbean driving tours on Martinique has been designed by the Tourist Office and all are described (along with many details of interest for visitors) in the free guide Martinique Tourist Info, which is published in English. Similar sightseeing tours can be done by taxi or motorcoach. Information on organized Caribbean island excursions offered by tour operators can be obtained at the Tourist Office and from hotel desks.
Fort-de-France, the capital, is fascinating to explore on foot. Among the sightseeing attractions is the city's architectural masterpiece, the Bibliothèque Schoelcher (or Schoelcher Library), a Romanesque-Byzantine gem built more than 100 years ago for the Paris Exposition of 1889, then dismantled and shipped to Martinique, mosaic by mosaic. Named for Victor Schoelcher, the French abolitionist whose work helped end slavery on the island in 1848, it sits just off La Savane, the central park.
La Savane's Caribbean gardens make for pleasant strolling and picture-taking. The park boasts two impressive statues: one of Pierre Belain d'Esnambuc, the French nobleman who claimed the island for France in 1635, and one of Marie Josèphe Rose Tascher de la Pagerie, who was born in Trois Ilets across the bay, and made history as Napoléon's Empress Joséphine. Each of the capital's narrow, balconied streets, which are lined with shops and restaurants, leads to a pleasant discovery: the Cathedral of Saint-Louis, the Palais de Justice with its statue of Victor Schoelcher, the Musée Départemental with archeological finds from prehistoric Martinique, and the Rivière Madame with its busy fish markets.
Azimut - Tel: (596) 596 70 07 00 offers four fine, nicely priced, guided walking tours of Fort-de-France.
The classic tour of Martinique travels north along the Caribbean coast to St-Pierre, the "Paris of the West Indies" until 1902 when Mont Pelée Volcano erupted and turned the city into a New World Pompeii.
A museum on the spot vividly portrays the tragedy. A convenient way to reach this historic site is on a little train, the Cyparis Express.
One-hour tours on weekdays and half-hour tours during weekends cost about 6€ for adults, 3€ for children.
The fee includes train fare and the tour.
In l990, St. Pierre was designated a Ville d'Art et d'Histoire.
The drive from Fort-de-France takes less than an hour, but several sightseeing stops along the way are highly recommended, including the fishing villages of Case-Pilote and Bellefontaine, as well as Carbet, where Columbus landed in 1502 and where Gauguin lived and painted in 1887. The Gauguin Museum is well worth a visit.
Inland is Morne Rouge, a pretty town with a cool climate and the site of MacIntosh Plantation, named for the renowned cultivator of Martinique's best-known flower, the anthurium. Nearby is La Trace, a dazzling route through the rain forest. This mountainous region in the northern half of the island is lush with banana and pineapple plantations, avocado groves, cane fields, and lovely old island inns such as Leyritz and Habitation Lagrange.
Other noteworthy communities in the north include Le Prêcheur, the last village along the northern Caribbean coast, known for hot springs of volcanic origin and the Tomb of the Carib Indians; Ajoupa-Bouillon, an enchanting flower-lined town with a nature trail called Les Ombrages and nearby the Gorges de la Falaise, mini canyons along the Falaise River that lead to a waterfall; Grand Rivière, a picturesque fishing village constantly braving the fierce Atlantic Ocean; Trinité and the Caravelle Peninsula, where at the very tip of land stand ruins of the Château Dubuc, a spot that evokes memories of the intriguing people who have lived here - such as Louis-François Dubuc, the man instrumental in preventing the spread of the French Revolution to Martinique, and Aimée Dubuc de Rivery who, like Joséphine, was destined for history. Returning home to Martinique after her schooling in Nantes, she was captured by pirates, sold into slavery, then given as a present to the Sultan of Constantinople. Aimée became Sultana Validé, mother of Sultan Mahmoud II.
Basket Weaving Workshop
Part of the heritage of the Carib Indians, the materials and techniques still used today for dying and weaving straw are identical to those practiced by early inhabitants of Martinique. A wide variety of objects (baskets, hats, waste paper baskets, pottery decorations) are made by skilled young women at this traditional craft workshop. Read more...
Morne-des-Esses 97230 SAINTE-MARIE
Tel: (596) 596 69 83 74
Open Monday to Friday from 8.30 a.m. to 12.30 p.m., 1.30 p.m. to 5.30 p.m.
Saturday from 8.30 a.m. to 12.30 p.m.
Free
Pottery
Being able to identify clay-rich soil, defining and understanding the potential of colors, changing the shape of raw materials placed on the wheel, these are all part of the potter's trade. Today, the potter's work--as was the case in the pre-Columbian era--goes well beyond the simple utilitarian purpose of each object and takes on a deep cultural dimension.
97229 TROIS-ILETS
Tel: (596) 596 68 17 12
Open Monday to Saturday from 8.30 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.
Free
As rich as the island's history is Martinique's earth, which nurtures the growth of sugar cane that gives birth to rums considered among the best in the world. These excellent rums have been awarded the prestigious French label "appellation d'origine contrôlée," previously reserved only for French cheeses and wines. Read more...
Martinique's Museums
Vividly Portray the Island's History and Heritage
The French West Indies island, Martinique, is proud of its museums.
There are more than a dozen of them, though they may not rival the great museums of Paris, each is distinctively different with intriguing stories to tell of the island's past, its way of life and art. Since they must vie with the lure of sun, sea and sand, the museums of Martinique are purposely small and easily toured -- planned so visitors can "do" them in a rather short time, yet depart satisfied and enriched. Read more...

With its advanced para-seismic architectural concept and a site positioning that faces Mount Pelée, this highly original structure offers interactive exhibits and scientific shows all-year round. Read more...
Martinique is called the "Isle of Flowers" so stops at some of its best Caribbean floral gardens can be very memorable experiences.
In the north are MacIntosh Plantation with its incredible variety of anthuriums and Les Ombrages, a botanical path that makes a fine introduction to tropical flora.
Near Trois Ilets is the Parc des Floralies, six acres of peaceful and pretty park land with frequent special horticultural exhibits. In the suburbs north of Fort-de-France is one of Martinique's most beautiful flower gardens, Jardin de Balata. Jean-Philippe Thoze nestled his showcase of more than one thousand species of plants, trees and flowers on the magnificent heights of the capital at the foot of dramatic Pitons du Carbet.
Copyright © Martinique Promotion Bureau/CMT USA 1996 - 2006 All rights reserved
Copyright pictures by Jean-Marc Lecerf, David Sanger, Michel Bocandé