CLICK TO CONTACT US

THE HON. PRIME MINISTER, DAME MARY EUGENIA CHARLES, OCC, DBE
May 15, 1919 - September 6, 2005

For her championing of the US invasion of Grenada after the assassination of its Prime Minister, and her strongly opinionated, uncompromising leadership style, Dame Mary Eugenia Charles was called The Iron Lady of the Caribbean. She was a remarkable woman who held her own on the world stage with distinction.

Eugenia Charles was born on May 15, 1919 in the village of Pointe Michel, Dominica. Her father was John Baptiste “JB” Charles. He was of humble background, but through hard work and perseverance, became a prominent and wealthy landowner and banker. Her mother, Josephine, ran the family grocery in Roseau and a bakery in Pointe Michel. Eugenia was the last of four children. She attended the Convent High School in Dominica and St. Joseph’s Convent in Grenada, becoming interested in law while working at the magistrate's court in Roseau.

Eugenia read law at the University of Toronto and the London School of Economics, and was called to the Bar at London’s Inner Temple in 1949. She passed the bar in 1950, and returned to Dominica as the island's first female lawyer, specializing in property law. In 1968 she helped form, and was elected leader of the Dominica Freedom Party (DFP). She was elected to the House of Assembly in 1970, becoming Opposition Leader in 1975. She was serving in the legislature when Dominica gained independence from Britain in 1978; and with her legal background, was an important delegate at the 1977 London constitutional conference leading up to independence.

On May 29, 1979, troops under the control Prime Minister Patrick John shot at citizens outside Parliament demonstrating against a recent Seditious Acts law, killing one demonstrator. In the aftermath, Eugenia became a leading member of the Committee of National Salvation which brokered the resignation of Prime Minister John and ruled the country until elections the following year. Her DFP swept these elections and she became Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs. She was the first female Prime Minister in the Western Hemisphere to be elected in her own right. In 1981 she foiled two coup attempts – one by disgruntled soldiers from the Dominica Defence Force which she had disbanded; and the other by ousted Prime Minister John aided by mercenaries of the US Nazi Party and the Ku Klux Klan; John was sentenced to prison.

Charles was an ardent proponent of Caribbean unity, and served as chair of the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS). It was during this tenure that she became internationally known for her role in the United States invasion of Grenada. In the wake of the murder of Grenadian Prime Minister Bishop in 1983, Charles, as OECS Chair, appealed to the United States to intervene. On the morning of October 25, 1983 she stood next to US president Ronald Reagan at the White House as he announced the invasion of Grenada.

While Charles and her party were considered conservative by Caribbean standards, she instituted various social programs, including extensive rural electrification; she clamped down on drug trafficking, and was a strong supporter of anti-corruption measures and individual freedoms. In the wake of Hurricane David in 1979, she saw to the rebuilding of housing, roads and other infrastructure which had been almost totally destroyed. Her personal modesty, integrity, and thrifty management of the island’s finances were legendary; and she was never accused of corruption. After 15 years in office she retired and did not contest the 1995 election, which her party lost. But thanks to her hard work, Dominica’s roads had improved considerably and living standards rose.

Charles was highly respected internationally. She had a quick, sharp intellect, with a sometimes humorous edge. She was awarded several honorary doctorates, and was inducted into the Hall of Fame of the prestigious International Women’s Forum. Upon retirement she helped set up Harvard’s Center for Women’s Studies, and lectured in international relations. In 1991 she was made Dame Commander of the British Empire (DBE) by Queen Elizabeth II, and in 2003, CARICOM conferred on her the Order of the Caribbean Community (OCC), fitting tributes to her distinguished career as lawyer, politician and Caribbean leader. In her memory, the Roseau bay front thoroughfare, the old Bay Street, was renamed Dame Eugenia Charles Boulevard.

Charles never married. Dominicans affectionately called her Mamo, a local term of endearment for mother. On August 30, 2005 she went to Martinique for hip replacement surgery, and died there from a pulmonary embolism on September 6, aged 86.

For her extraordinary leadership during a period of exceptional political and economic turmoil, and for her dignity and integrity, DAAS honors Prime Minister Dame Mary Eugenia Charles.

Contributed by
Gabriel Christian
February 2010

See also:
Biography of Dame Mary Eugenia Charles, DBE

Return to List of Honorees