Monument to Eugène Motte - Roubaix
On 14 October 1914 the German Army entered Roubaix and remained there until 17 October 1918. The war memorial on boulevard Leclerc pays tribute to the citizens of Roubaix who suffered terribly during that four year occupation.
An industrial city, Roubaix depended on external sources to feed its population but the occupation had cut it off from the rest of the world. The city council took charge of the problem and distributed the scarce resources among the population. Famine was averted thanks to the intervention of Dutch and American philanthropic institutions.
To make matters worse, the occupying army commandeered any materials it could find and emptied the 250 factories in Roubaix of all their equipment, destroying what it could not carry off. The Germans also tried to coerce the people of Roubaix into replacing the German workers who had been called up to the front.
The martyred city of Roubaix during the Great War
In 1915 Jean Lebas, the mayor, refused to cooperate and was sent to prison in Germany. The following year, in April, the Germans began deporting civilians and more than 8,000 citizens of Roubaix were taken from their homes to become 'volunteer workers' in the service of the occupying forces.
The hardship and suffering imposed on the townsfolk engendered a determined resistance movement. From the very early days of the occupation the Resistance produced and distributed, initially every week and then daily, a newsletter called L'Oiseau de France which contained news from France and Britain. Their adventure was brought to a close at the end of 1916 in a flurry of arrests.
Eugène Motte was also a key figure in the Roubaix resistance movement. Industrialist, heir to the Motte-Bossut dynasty and former mayor of the city between 1902 and 1912, Motte was ordered to manufacture cloth which would be turned into sandbags for the German trenches but he refused, 'We cannot accept the role of collaborator to the enemy. You can commandeer our goods but you cannot commandeer our selves'. His refusal resulted in his arrest and deportation to Germany where he was held with 150 other prominent Roubaix citizens.
Practical information
Map:
Find out about access, tourist offices and a selection of quality accommodation and restaurants around the site.
Contact details
Address: Boulevard du Général Leclerc - 59100 ROUBAIX
Contact: OFFICE DE TOURISME DE ROUBAIX
Call: +33 (0)3 20 65 31 90
Website: www.roubaixtourisme.com

























































































































































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