Arthur Dessoye

French journalist, writer, industrialist and politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Arthur Charles Dessoye (23 August 1854 in Auberive, Haute-Marne – 30 April 1927 in Breuvannes-en-Bassigny, Haute-Marne) was a French journalist, writer, industrialist, and politician.

Preceded byCharles Bourlon de Rouvre
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
ConstituencyHaute-Marne
Quick facts French Deputy, Preceded by ...
Arthur Dessoye
Arthur Charles Dessoye, Deputy and Minister (1914).
French Deputy
In office
1 June 1906  7 December 1919
Preceded byCharles Bourlon de Rouvre
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
Parliamentary groupRadical Left
ConstituencyHaute-Marne
General Councillor of Haute-Marne
In office
1904–1919
Preceded byAlfred Lamarche
Succeeded byEmile Telliez
ConstituencyCanton of Bourmont
Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts
In office
9 June 1914  13 June 1914
Preceded byRené Viviani
Succeeded byJean-Victor Augagneur
Personal details
BornArthur Charles Sébastien Dessoye
(1854-08-23)23 August 1854
Died30 April 1927(1927-04-30) (aged 72)
PartyRadical Socialist
ProfessionJournalist
Close

Biography

Journalism career

Born to a tax collector father, originally from Breuvannes-en-Bassigny, where his family owned a file manufacturing business established in 1827,[1] Arthur Dessoye was one of the founders and editor-in-chief of La Dépêche de Brest et de l'Ouest from 19 November 1886 to 12 April 1897.

  • Editor of L'Électeur libre de Chaumont until 1884;
  • Editor-in-chief of L'Union Républicaine du Finistère, a tri-weekly four-page newspaper, from 1 April 1884[2] until 18 November 1886;
  • Editor-in-chief of La Dépêche de Brest et de l'Ouest from its creation in 1886 until 1897, succeeding L'Union Républicaine du Finistère.

He married Marie Eugènie Renard in Breuvannes-en-Bassigny on 2 August 1884.[3] One of his witnesses was his friend Jean Macé.[1]

Political career

Honours

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI