All schools in Upshur County will close at 1 p.m. today. All B-UHS sporting events today are canceled.

Former West Virginia delegate visited Notre Dame moments before it caught fire

Former W.Va. delegate and Lewis County resident Peggy Donaldson Smith inside Notre Dame Cathedral Monday -- the day it tragically caught fire.

BUCKHANNON – Two West Virginians touring Paris during a European vacation visited the historic Notre Dame Cathedral the same day a catastrophic fire nearly destroyed the 800-year-old church.

Peggy Donaldson Smith, the former representative of District 46 (Lewis and Upshur counties) in the West Virginia House of Delegates, and her granddaughter, Tori Riley, were seeing famous sites in Paris, including the Louvre and the Eiffel Tower. They also took tour on the Seine River, but their last stop was Notre Dame.

“We spent a lot of time looking at each piece of beautiful art and statues and came all the way back around before we left, and we had been there for a while and I turned to Tori and said ‘I can’t believe I am in Notre Dame,”’ Smith told My Buckhannon via telephone Wednesday. “It was so emotional to be there. It was so beautiful.”

Smith and Riley said they took their time appreciating the art and history of the cathedral and took pictures inside and outside, and right as they were about to leave, a nun approached them.

“We were leaving when this little French nun started talking to me and I don’t know what to say because I don’t speak French and then I realized she wanted some money for some projects. We went back inside to give her some money and then we left for the station,” Smith said.

Moments later, the iconic house of worship would be engulfed in flames, although Smith and her granddaughter wouldn’t learn of fire until they had left the area.

After visiting the cathedral, Smith and Riley headed to the train station to go back to London when Riley received a text from her mom, who was home in Weston and told her Notre Dame was on fire.

Former W.Va. delegate Peggy Donaldson Smith and her granddaughter, Tori Riley, outside the Louvre Monday, April 15, prior to visiting the Notre Dame Cathedral.

Riley described the scene as people learned the landmark was on fire.

“She sent me a BBC article and I immediately started Googling it, and everyone else in the station was getting notifications, too,” Riley said. “It was the Eurostar train station, so it was packed and everyone went quiet at first and then people started crying.”

Smith and Riley said they were unsure if they should leave the train station, because they didn’t know what caused the fire. Eventually, their train was cleared to leave. As they sat on the train to London, passengers watched a livestream of Notre Dame as it burned.

“It was very surreal, it almost seemed impossible because we had just been there, and it was so beautiful and so perfect,” Smith said. “We kept saying ‘It’s gone.’ The flames were way up in the sky, and we didn’t think anything could be saved. It made me want to burst into tears.”

Riley said it was likely the fire had already started when they were in the building.

“If you saw the huge flames that shot up, that fire had to start small,” Riley said. “In order for it to get as big as it did, it had to have started while my grandmother and I were inside of it. There were no alarms, there was no smoke smell, it wasn’t hot, and we didn’t hear an explosion or anything.”

According to news reports, one fire alarm went off shortly after 6 p.m. and a second sounded just before 7 p.m., about the time Smith and Riley had left the cathedral. Although the damage was extensive, crews are working to secure parts of the iconic structure that were not destroyed.

Officials suspect an electrical short circuit was connected to the fire, but a cause has yet to be confirmed. Terrorism and arson are unlikely, according to the Associated Press.

Riley described watching the live stream of the cathedral as it burned as surreal.

“Surreal is the only word that can describe it,” Riley said. “Witnessing something so international and being from Weston and being blessed enough to get to see it one last time before the fire was just unbelievable.”

Share this story:

Local Businesses

RECENT Stories

Football Bucs show promise despite setback to Bridgeport in season opener

Buckhannon-Upshur fell 62-14 to defending champion Bridgeport in the season opener, with Bridgeport rushing for 454 yards while the young Bucs, despite −47 rushing, showed flashes on two long touchdown passes.

Pittsburgh Jazz Orchestra returns to West Virginia Wesleyan College for highly anticipated homecoming concert

West Virginia Wesleyan College will host the Pittsburgh Jazz Orchestra for a much-anticipated Homecoming concert Sept. 25, 2025, featuring college president Dr. James Moore and tickets available for $20.

Appalachian Impact moving into a new home on Main Street in Buckhannon

Appalachian Impact is relocating from the Hampton Community Building to 64 East Main (the former H&R Block), a downtown space that officials say will support program growth after AmeriCorps funding returned.

Buckhannon Colonial Arts Center Board Agenda: September 2, 2025

The City of Buckhannon Colonial Arts Center Board will convene Sept. 2, 2025; this article publishes the meeting agenda.

City council hears traffic report on congestion at school dismissal time near Buckhannon Academy

Police told city council that congestion at Buckhannon Academy Elementary during dismissal — evidenced by an 87-car queue and three traffic pauses — would be eased by a larger pickup area.

Meteorologist Dillon Gaudet comes home to West Virginia

Meteorologist Dillon Gaudet has returned to West Virginia as WSAZ’s morning weather anchor, leaving Lexington to replace longtime forecaster Brandon Butcher.

Carpenter Crunch Time Week 1: Does Wesleyan get to Post a win this weekend?

In Carpenter Crunch Time Week 1, West Virginia Wesleyan, mired in a 24-game losing streak, visits struggling Post University — which has lost nine straight — while My Buckhannon staff launches its weekly seven-game picks contest.

Football Bucs embrace underdog role against Bridgeport in opener Friday night

Buckhannon-Upshur, acknowledging heavy underdog status against defending Class AAA champion Bridgeport Friday, will lean on home-field advantage, senior QB Dawson Tenney and focused clock management as they aim to keep the opener competitive.

First Community Bank takes fourth-quarter lead in men’s golf

First Community Bank took the fourth-quarter lead with a 26-14 win over Highland Landscaping; Chris Brady shot 33 to win Low Actual and share Low Net honors.