From the quarrying of rocks to transportation and construction, the toil of the imprisoned was ingrained in every facet. Enormous blocks of stone, weighing tons, sapped the strength and crushed the bodies of many prisoners. The endeavor to build the bridge persisted until approximately 1930, and the number 914 became indelibly etched in the memories of those confined. This numerical symbol serves as a poignant reminder of the lives sacrificed amid the arduous task of bridge construction.
Prisoners met their end through various means: crushed by stones, felled by trees, compelled to work beyond their physical limits amidst hunger and thirst, subjected to beatings and coercion by the custodians of order.
Over the span of 113 years, France and the United States successively dispatched tens of thousands of prisoners to Con Dao. As prisoners trod upon Pier 914, they endured harsh blows to the head from prison guards wielding whips, sticks, accompanied by taunts and degradation.
Historical Pier 914 bore witness to the exuberance of over 2,000 political prisoners liberated in September 1945. Thirty years later, the bridge once again bore witness as it welcomed over 4,000 political prisoners being released and returning to the mainland in May 1975.
Numerous souls set foot on this bridge only to find eternal repose here. The verses expressing the prisoners’ resentment still reverberate in each stone slab:
“Con Lon, oh, the stone claims lives…
Or “Here lies the stone burying the bridge.
With each block of stone dug, so too much blood.”
On April 29, 1979, the Pier 914 historical relic was officially recognized as a nationally significant special relic by the Ministry of Culture and Information, under Decision No. 54-VHTT.QD. On May 10, 2012, the Prime Minister signed Decision No. 548/QD-TTg, ranking it as a Special National Relic.