• Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Péronne: Destroyed between 1914 and 1918, then slightly damaged in 1944, the west front, is built in "gothique flamboyant" style. • In front of the church stands the statue of Marie Fouré, a local heroine. • Danicourt Museum (named for former mayor Charles Alfred Danicourt), founded in the
Hôtel-de-ville in 1877, is the only museum of the Somme to have been pillaged and destroyed by the Germans between 1916 and 1918. It lost 98% of its collection. A few archeological treasures were saved by the museum curator, who hid them from the Germans when they took the town in 1914. These treasures were again subject to German interest in 1941. Overlooked by the first reconstruction in 1955, it was not until the second reconstruction of the building that the museum was back in use. Its founder, the former mayor Charles Alfred Danicourt, created the museum as a cultural beacon of the Somme ca. 1900. Nowadays, one can find one of the finest collections of early Gallic coins, antique gold jewelry,
Merovingian funeral artefacts, a panorama of sand production during prehistoric times and some local examples of 19th- and 20th-century paintings. • The city of Péronne is equally known for its "Monument to the Dead", the work of the architect
Louis Faille, representing a Picardy woman with clenched fist raised above the body of her son or husband killed by the war. • Monument of the Sailor Delpas, recalling the defence of the city and its fall at the time of the
Franco-Prussian War in the winter 1870–1871. • The Australian Monument recalls the heroic actions in a neighbourhood of the town by Australian soldiers in 1918. • The Brittany Gate, with its strengthened stonework, is reminiscent of the defensive aspect of Péronne • The
Château de Péronne is a largely ruined castle, classified as a
monument historique by the
French Ministry of Culture. • Within the walls of the ancient château, nowadays run by the Somme département, the "Historial de la Grande Guerre" museum is a ‘must visit’ for those interested in the Great War. Created in 1992, by architect
Henri Ciriani, it illustrates the development of the conflict. The building is characterised by the stark whiteness of the cement, inset with small cylinders, symbolic of military graves. •
Mont Saint-Quentin ==Notable people==