Explore the Famous Puces de Saint-Ouen

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Explore the Famous Puces de Saint-Ouen
This is the 42nd in a series of walking tours highlighting the sites and stories of diverse districts of the Paris region. I’d heard that when heading for the markets of Saint-Ouen, it’s best to take the metro to Garibaldi on Line 13 and walk through the park behind the church to Rue des Rosiers. That way I’d avoid a hectic main road and overpass complex and miss out the street vendors lurking to persuade me to buy cheap tat from them rather than saving my euros for something classier from one of Saint-Ouen’s multitudinous antique or bric-a-brac stalls. And so it was that I discovered Notre Dame du Rosaire, whose spire rose up to greet me as soon as I exited the station.  The plain, clean lines of its façade made sense when I discovered that the building  was completed in 1903. It had the arches, niches and towering spire so familiar from earlier eras, but all done simply and almost devoid of artifice. Inside, the stained-glass windows were also curiously modern and vivid. Large clear scenes unfolded, telling the story of the life of Jesus in vibrant colors, blues and yellows for the annunciation, splashes of red and gold for the visit of the three kings. The altar was a mix of the unusual, being covered in rectangular tiles in all the colors of a child’s paintbox, and the classic, sitting directly underneath a golden crucifix.  The church, I learned from an information board outside, was jointly financed by rich industrialists and public donations, destined to be a center of worship for the factory workers flooding to this area in the newly minted 20th century. The park behind the church owes its existence to a legacy left by Paul Marmottan, art historian and founder of the Musée Marmottan Monet. He would surely have loved to see the family party taking place as I passed, balloons strung between the trees and a noisy picnic underway. It made a poignant contrast to the nearby deportation memorial, listing the names of over 400 local Jews who did not survive the war. Did they too gather here, families like the Cicals, Smul, Haïa and their children, Achille, 14, Jean, 7 and Monique, 4? I read their names, listed in one of the columns of gold lettering on a black marble background. 
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Lead photo credit : Marché Paul Bert. Photo: Marian Jones

More in Flâneries in Paris, Marché aux Puces de Saint-Ouen, Marché Biron, Marché Malassis, Marché Paul Bert, Puces de Saint-Ouen

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After a career teaching Modern Languages (French and German), Marian turned to freelance writing and is now a member of the British Guild of Travel Writers, specializing in all things French and – especially! – Parisian. She’s in Paris as often as possible, visiting places old and new, finding out their stories and writing it all up as soon as she gets home. She also runs the podcast series City Breaks, offering in-depth coverage of popular city break destinations, with lots of background history and cultural information. The Paris series currently has 22 episodes, but more will surely follow when time allows!

Comments

  • Jana Troester
    2025-10-16 08:29:54
    Jana Troester
    The stories that I'm able to read, as a member of Bonjour Paris, are incredibly interesting and full of so much information that I would never run across on my own. Thank you for all the articles, webinars, and information. I can't tell you how much I enjoy everything you dol

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    • Marian Jones
      2025-11-02 06:59:54
      Marian Jones
      Ah, but you have told us! And we are delighted to hear it. Thank you.

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