Jamaica honours Eventide Home fire victims on first national day of remembrance
Jamaica on May 20 observed the first officially proclaimed National Day of Remembrance for victims of the Eventide Home fire, with a floral tribute ceremony in Kingston for the elderly women who died in the 1980 disaster.
The observance brought together government representatives, families, survivors, first responders and residents from the Vineyard Town and Denham Town Golden Age homes. The proclamation, issued by Governor General Sir Patrick Allen and dated May 14, 2026, declared that May 20 should be marked each year in memory of those who died and those who survived. It is not a public holiday.
The fire broke out at the Eventide Home for the Aged on May 20, 1980, at the Myers Ward. Speakers described it as one of the gravest tragedies in Jamaica's social-care history. The ceremony noted differing recorded death tolls, with references to more than 150 elderly women, 157 victims, and a reflection stating that 144 died at the scene and others later succumbed, bringing that count to 153.
Local Government and Community Development Minister Desmond McKenzie said the blaze began about 1 a.m. and destroyed three female wards, including Myers Ward. He said the wooden buildings, which dated back to 1870, collapsed quickly after firefighters arrived, and that investigations left the cause classified as unknown.
McKenzie said conditions at the home before the fire exposed serious weaknesses in care for elderly, poor and mentally ill residents. He linked the tragedy to later reforms, including the opening of the Vineyard Town Golden Age Home in 1985 and the Denham Town Golden Age Home.
Floral tributes were laid by several officials and representatives, including Olivia Grange, Desmond McKenzie, Pearnel Charles Jr., Senate President Tom Tavares-Finson, Jamaica Fire Brigade Commissioner Stewart Beckford, survivor Keith Parker, Kingston High School principal Germaine Luton, and Professor Denise Eldemire-Shearer. The ceremony also included prayers, performances, a guard of honour by women of the Jamaica Fire Brigade, the national pledge and a closing reflection calling for stronger protection of vulnerable Jamaicans.
Syndicated from PBC Jamaica (Video) · originally published .
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