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Le Clairon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Le Clairon
TypeDaily newspaper
Editor-in-chiefJules Cornély
FoundedMarch 1881 (March 1881)
LanguageFrench language
Ceased publication1882
HeadquartersParis

Le Clairon was a short-lived French newspaper, published daily, that was pro-royalist and pro-Catholic. It was founded in March 1881 with support from the Duchesse d'Uzès, from Alfred Edwards and from France's Catholic bank Union Générale, which owned one hundred shares. Paul Eugène Bontoux (1820–1904), chief executive of the Union Générale, controlled the financial articles of Le Clairon, by means of a "Société de Publicité Universelle", which he had created and which funded the financial advertising pages.[1]

Louis de Fourcaud (1851-1914), John Singer Sargent, 1884

The editor-in-chief Jules Cornély (1845–1907), recruited staff from another daily newspaper Le Gaulois. They consisted of eleven journalists, including Louis de Fourcaud, Raoul Toché, Gabriel Terrail, called "Mermeix" (1859–1930), Arsène Houssaye (1815–1896) and Émile Blavet (1838–1924).[2]

The shareholders of Le Clairon sold the newspaper to Arthur Meyer, who also acquired the Le Gaulois in 1882 and then the Paris-Journal and merged the three newspaper franchises. The merged newspaper was published under the title Le Gaulois from August 1884.[3] Jules Cornély had meanwhile resigned and joined the daily newspaper Le Matin but in 1888 returned to Le Gaulois (which merged with Le Figaro in 1929).

References

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  1. ^ La presse devant le krach d'une banque catholique : L'Union Générale (1882), page 132, par Jeannine Verdes, Archives de sciences sociales des religions, 1965.
  2. ^ "Arthur Meyer, directeur du Gaulois : un patron de presse juif, royaliste et antidreyfusard", par Odette Carasso, page 67, Imago, 2002
  3. ^ "Histoire générale de la presse française: De 1871 à 1940", par Claude Bellanger - 1969