History of the Municipality of Rivière-Pilote
A Free Town!
Lumina Sophie, Lubin, and Telgard are iconic names for the people of Martinique! But let's start at the beginning before we get to this chapter.
Rivière-Pilote was initially inhabited by the Caribs. It was their chief, Pilote, who gave the name to the municipality!
When the colonists arrived in 1635, Pilote sympathized with them, allowing them to occupy the south of the island while they took the north.
But in 1665, following the arrival of the Jesuits in the region, the Caribs were expelled from their own land!
The Jesuits built a church not far from the former Carib settlement, which would later become Sainte-Luce. The other part of the municipality would form that of Marin.
It was only in 1837 that the boundaries were redrawn, giving birth to the current municipality of Rivière-Pilote.
The town has always been known as a refuge for people refusing to submit to any external authority.
Many Nèg Mawon (Maroon) slaves fleeing their plantations would seek refuge here.
In 1870, 22 years after the end of slavery, a memorable conflict erupted in Rivière-Pilote between former slaves and white planters (békés). This event would affect the entire south.
It all started with an injustice:
Léopold Lubin, a former slave, was working along a road when two white planters on horseback, including Augier de Maintenon, called on him to move aside to let them pass.
Lubin, seeing plenty of space for the two men, refused to move further. Augier de Maintenon, dissatisfied, struck him in the face with a riding crop!
Lubin decided to file a complaint with the police, but justice was not served. Worse, his complaint was ignored!
Sometime later, Lubin decided to take justice into his own hands. He encountered his assailant one day and attacked him in return.
Injured, De Maintenon filed a complaint with the police. This time, Léopold Lubin was fined and sentenced to 5 years in prison for his actions.
The population was outraged and cried out against the injustice.
This time, it was one time too many!
A wave of anger swept through the people of the south of Martinique. On the night of September 22, they marched through every street of the municipality, rallying the neighboring towns to their cause as they burned down all the homes and plantations in their path!
They marched for several days until they reached Trinité, led in part by Lumina Sophie, who was 22 years old and pregnant. She gave birth to the first free baby since the end of slavery.
After more than 5 days of riots, 200 people were arrested and tried. Ten were sentenced to death, and 90 were sent to penal colonies in New Caledonia and French Guiana.
Lumina Sophie was sentenced to be sent to the penal colony in Saint-Laurent du Maroni, French Guiana, where she would die shortly thereafter.
Since that day, Rivière-Pilote has never stopped asserting its independence.