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Claude Perier

Claude-Nicolas Perier (28 May 1742 – 6 February 1801) was assured an important place in French history when he opened his Château de Vizille near Grenoble to the famous meeting of the estates of the Province of Dauphiné (21 July 1788) heralding the coming of the French Revolution. He is notable also as the founder of the remarkable Perier family "bourgeois dynasty" that rose to economic and political influence and prominence in France during the 19th century. Claude's descendants became leading Paris bankers, regents of the Bank of France and owner-directors of Anzin, the major coal mining company of France in the Department of Nord. They were mayors of towns, prefects of departments and members of municipal tribunals and chambers of commerce. Many were elected representatives of departments to the Chamber of Deputies in Paris and appointed to France's Chamber of Peers. Most notably, Casimir Pierre Perier (1777–1832), the fourth of Claude's eight sons, became Prime Minister of France in 1831–32 during the Orleanist monarchy of Louis-Philippe I. Casimir's grandson, Jean Casimir-Perier (1847–1907), was elected president of the Third Republic in 1894. Claude Perier was sufficiently wealthy before 1789 to be known as "Perier-Milord" in Grenoble and surroundings, but it was mainly during the decade of revolution 1789–99 that he created the financial underpinning of the Perier dynasty. His eight sons and two daughters would share his legacy of around 5,800,000 francs.[1]

Claude-Nicolas Perier
Portrait of Claude Perier by Jean-Baptiste-François Desoria, Museum of the French Revolution, Vizille
Personal details
Born(1742-05-28)28 May 1742
Grenoble, France
Died6 February 1801(1801-02-06) (aged 58)
Paris
Spouse
(m. 1767⁠–⁠1801)
ChildrenJacques-Prosper
Elisabeth-Josephine
Euphrosine-Marie
Augustin-Charles
Alexander-Jacques
Antoine-Scipion
Casimir-Pierre
Adelaide-Hélène
Camille-Joseph
Alphonse
Amédée-Auguste
André-Jean-Joseph
ProfessionBanker, merchant

Children of Claude Perier edit

Jacques-Prosper (1768) Died at birth

Elisabeth-Josephine (1770–1850) m. Jacques-Fortunat Savoye de Rollin; Member of the Tribunat; Deputy (Isère); Prefect (Eure, Seine-Maritime, Deux-Nèthes, Côte-d'Or); Legion of Honor

Euphrosine-Marie (1771–1779) Died young

Augustin-Charles (1773–1833) m. Henriette de Berkheim. École Polytechnique; Banker, Manufacturer (Grenoble/Vizille); Deputy (Isère); Peer of France; Legion of Honor

Alexander-Jacques (1774–1846) Manufacturer and mayor, Montargis; Deputy (Loiret); Legion of Honor

Antoine-Scipion (1776–1821) m. Louise de Dietrich. Perier Bank (Paris); Regent Bank of France; Anzin owner-director; Chaillot machine shops, Paris Chamber of Commerce

Casimir-Pierre (1777–1832) m. Pauline Loyer. Perier Bank (Paris); Regent Bank of France; Anzin owner-director; Chaillot machine shops; Paris Chamber of Commerce; Deputy (Seine, Aube); Prime Minister; Legion of Honor

Adelaide-Hélène (Marine) 1779–1851) m. Camille Teisseire (Sub-Prefect, Ardèche; Deputy, Isère; Legion of Honor)

Camille-Joseph (1781–1844) m. Pelagie Lecouteulx de Canteleu. École Polytechnique; Auditor Conseil d'État; Mayor (Chatou); Prefect (Corrèze, Meuse); Deputy (Corrèze, Sarthe); Peer of France; Legion of Honor

Alphonse (1782–1866) m. Antoinette-Bonne de Tournadre. École Polytechnique; Manufacturer, Banker, Tribunal of Commerce (Grenoble/Vizille); Mayor (Eybens); Deputy (Isère); Auditor Conseil d'État, Legion of Honor

Amédée-Auguste (1785–1851) Auditor Conseil d'État

André-Jean-Joseph (1786–1868) m. Marie-Aglae Clavel de Kergonan. Perier Bank (Paris); regent Bank of France; Anzin owner-director; Deputy (Marne); Legion of Honor

Claude Perier at Grenoble and Vizille before 1789 edit

Early life edit

Grenoble, the capital city of the Province of Dauphiny in southeastern France, was where the Periers began their rise to prominence. Claude's father, Jacques Perier (1702–1782), moved there about 1720 from the hamlet of Perier, located near the small town of Mens some 50 kilometers south of Grenoble.[2] He was an aspiring merchant of linen and canvas cloth, and Grenoble at the time was becoming a main commercial center with links to important markets at Arles, Avignon, Lyons, Marseilles and the great annual fair at Beaucaire. He prospered at Grenoble and in 1741 married Marie Dupuy, the daughter of a merchant and one-time municipal consul. Claude Perier, born in 1742, was the first of their seven children. In 1749, Jacques purchased an imposing, multi-story home for the family on the Grande Rue.

Business career edit

Jacques' business developed as a family affair over the years. His daughter Elisabeth, for example, married Pierre Jordan, a wealthy merchant in Lyon. Commerce with Voiron near Grenoble was added by François Perier-Lagrange, who was a nephew. In 1764, Madeleine Perier, a niece, married a leading merchant in Voiron, François Tivolier.[3] Claude Perier cemented these connections when he came of age by marrying Marie-Charlotte Pascal (1749–1821), the daughter of a leading Voiron merchant. Her dowry in 1767 amounted to 60,000 livres. By that date Claude was already an active member of the family enterprise. In 1764 the business was named "Jacques Perier, Father, Son, Nephew & Company." Claude Perier and Perier-Lagrange were the minor partners. When this association was renewed in 1773, the shares of Jacques and his son, Claude, were 344,266 livres and 72,493 livres, respectively.[4]

The trade in linens was a mainstay, but the Periers also acted as credit bankers for area businesses, made land investments, and ventured into manufacturing at Grenoble on their own account (muslins, 1777; hardware, 1779).[5] Most importantly, Claude and his father responded to the increasing demand in France for printed cotton cloths (toiles peints) and wallpapers (papiers peints). Printed cottons were mainly imported from India and were known as indiennes,[6] but they began to be fabricated in France in 1760 by the famous industrialist Christophe-Philippe Oberkampf (1738–1815). His factory for cotton prints at Jouy near Paris, which employed 900 workers by 1774, was named a "royal manufacturer" in 1783 by Louis XVI. Oberkampf invented the first machine for printing wallpaper in 1785.[7] Jacques and Claude Perier began the production of these printed stuffs in 1775–1777 at Vizille, a small village just south of Grenoble.[8]

 
Chateau de Vizille

Purchase of the Château de Vizille edit

Famously, in a bold entrepreneurial move in 1780, Claude purchased the historic 17th century Château de Vizille with its large rooms and spacious main hall, extensive grounds, numerous out-buildings, streams and water park, as well as nearby lands in Oisans and La Mure. All told, here were ideal conditions for the manufacture of indiennes. Claude paid Gabriel Louis de Neufville, duc de Villeroy, approximately 1,254,000 livres for the buildings and properties. By 1785, about 100 workers (400 by 1789) were employed at the château producing printed cottons.[9]

As became typical of his business style, Claude Perier was involved in other money-making projects even as production of printed cottons at the Vizille factory began to get underway. In fact, the factory was rented out to Swiss experts from Geneva, Jean-Louis Fazy and his son, who ran the operation until January, 1794, at which time other specialists from Geneva and Mulhouse were brought in. Only beginning in 1798 would Claude's eldest son, Augustin-Charles, assume direction of the family enterprise.[10]

Cane sugar investments edit

Meantime, in 1782, Jacques Perier died leaving a fortune of 600,000 livres to be divided among his three sons, Claude, Jacques-Augustin and Antoine. As the eldest son, Claude's share of the estate was 400,000 livres.[11] These were funds that helped Claude establish a new commercial house at Voiron in 1783. The purpose was to make money importing cane sugar from the Caribbean. The business was called "Perier, Father and Son ,Berlioz, Rey & Company." Berlioz and Joseph Rey, who were business associates at Grenoble, each invested 48,000 livres (4 shares) in the company; Claude also invested 48,000 livres, plus 240,000 as working capital; and one share (12,000 livres) was listed in the name of Augustin Perier, Claude's then 10-year-old son. In 1784 Claude took a half-interest in another sugar import company at Marseilles, "Pierre Chazel & Company." These companies were very profitable until 1793.[12]

Involvement in Hospital General edit

In the 1770s the directors in charge of the Hospital General of Grenoble (a facility meant to incarcerate paupers and beggars) abandoned the hospital. A group of new men became the directors and among them was Claude. In fact, out of all the directors, Claude Perier was the wealthiest. Claude was wealthy and powerful enough to bring along his business associates onto the board of directors for the Hospital as well: Monsieur Dupy, Monsieur Pascal, and his cousin Périer-Lagrange.[13]

Claude Perier from Grenoble/Vizille to Paris, 1789–1801 edit

Involvement in the French Revolution edit

Claude Perier played an important role in the onset of the French Revolution by supporting resistance in Grenoble (Assembly of Vizille) by the Parlement of Dauphiny against the centralizing and fiscal abuses of the monarchy of Louis XVI. His eldest son Augustin would write later: "His travels in England had given him a proper idea of the benefits of a free government. Associating himself readily with all the opinions and all of the hopes of that period, he made hurriedly all the preparations necessary for such a large gathering, and his eagerness, which was not without danger, was worthy of the tokens of public gratitude."[14] Almost 500 persons gathered at the Château de Vizille (21 July 1788) where Claude provided a large banquet for the deputies of the province. Mostly, although also with popular support, it was an assemblage of well-to-do "notables": churchmen, landed nobility, lawyers, notaries, municipal officials, businessmen and doctors. Their famous demand was for the convocation in Paris of an Estates-General wherein the Third Estate would have double-representation and votes would be by head rather than by order.[15] Thus was precipitated a revolutionary movement in France more inclusive, complex and disruptive than anyone could have anticipated.

Claude Perier dealt opportunistically with the escalating political postures of France's decade of revolution, 1789-99. He became a valuable member of the new municipal council of Grenoble (Department of Isère), but did not aspire to political leadership or fame. He remained at heart and acted basically as a merchant-banker and inveterate "money-manager" (manieur d'argent).[16]

He kept abreast of opportunity in matters of investment and enterprise. Early on (1789–90), when it was considered patriotic, he purchased nationalized properties of the church and emigrated nobles, paying in assignats, the paper money issued by the National Assembly in Paris. In 1790, he acquired a mechanized cotton-spinning factory at Anilly, near Montargis. In 1791, he invested heavily in a sugar refining company in Marseilles, "Seren & Company."[17]

In 1793, when France was at war and Jacobins of the National Convention held sway in Paris (Marie Antoinette was guillotined on October 31, 1793), he organized a company to manufacture rifles for the French Army in Savoy; and with the chemist-geologist Alexandre Giroud, he petitioned Paris for permission to establish the production of commercial soda at the cantons of Vizille and Mure near Grenoble.[18] These initiatives enhanced his reputation as a patriot and good citizen (bon citoyen) at an opportune time, for in October 1793 Claude found himself denounced as an enemy of the Revolution by Pierre Chépy, who was president of Grenoble's Société Populaire. He was accused of cupidity, for liquidating his sugar importing company (Perier, Berlioz & Rey) by paying investors in depreciated assignats, and more seriously, of supporting an anti-Jacobin revolt in southern France at Lyons. There was some substance to these charges - Claude Perier's opportunism was not always circumspect. But ultimately, his 'indiscretions' came to be excused, probably most importantly because he had befriended Camille Teisseire, a very popular Jacobin member of Grenoble's municipal council and the city's chief of police. In 1794, Teisseire married Marine Perier, Claude's youngest daughter.[19]

Claude Perier in Paris edit

When the Thermidorian Reaction cooled down revolutionary fervor in France, Claude shifted his business activity to Paris, where he took up residence (28 November 1794) at No.341-43 rue Saint-Honoré. His eldest son, Augustin, was primed to take over family affairs at Grenoble/Vizille. In Paris, Claude made contacts with leading merchant-manufacturers and money-managers, such as Jean Lecouteulx de Canteleu, William Sabatier, Médard Desprez and Jean Perregaux, and also the noted legal advisor, Pierre-Nicolas Berryer. His first financial coup came in 1795 when he participated in a major loan of 2,418,505 livres to the owners of the Anzin Coal Company in the department of Nord. The loan allowed the company to buy back shares in the enterprise that had been nationalized/confiscated by the government of the Convention. Claude's investment in the loan was 393,425 livres, payable in assignats. In return, he received a large number of the company's coveted shares and (in 1798) a directorship. Anzin would be a major client of the Paris bank founded in 1801 by two of Claude's sons, Casimir and Scipion.[20]

Claude Perier's most notable achievement as a money-manager came in 1799–1800 when he was a founder and became one of the first regents of the Bank of France. Claude had associated in 1796 with a group of twenty or so bankers and businessmen to establish a private bank called the Caisse des Comptes Courants. This bank, with offices in Paris on the Place des Victoires, was capitalized modestly at 5 million francs and specialized in short-term business loans at 6 per cent interest, but the group aspired to grow the capital base and expand into long-term investments and government finance. In brief, these were the financiers who, shortly after the coup d'état of 18 Brumaire (November 9, 1799) established the government of the Consulate, met with the new First Consul, Napoleon Bonaparte, and convinced him to enlarge and transform the Caisse des Comptes Courants into the Bank of France, to be capitalized at 30 million francs. They agreed to loan the new government 12 million francs to get the bank started. Claude Perier, aided by the lawyer Berryer, drafted the statutes of the bank. He was appointed as one of its first fifteen regents. Subsequently, he was named a member of Napoleon's Corps Législatif. The Bank of France began its operations on February 29, 1800, in the former offices of the Caisse des Comptes Courants at the Hôtel Massiac, Place des Victoires. Jean-Frédéric Perregaux was named president of its directing Council of Regents.[21]

Late life edit

Claude Perier died at his mansion in Paris on February 6, 1801. He was 59 years old. He had brought the Periers successfully through the difficult years of the Revolution, leaving an enormous fortune and invaluable social and business connections that would help the family on its way to prominence. For the Perier family, he had "opened the doors to the two powers entrusted to Notables, politics and high finance."[22] Paris now became the major arena of Perier business activity. Claude had positioned his family members well to play significant roles in the industrialization of France during the early 19th century.

Addendum regarding the death of Claude Perier:

Writers sometimes report Stendhal's assertion that Claude Perier died of the cold in the night because he was too miserly to pay for wood to heat his mansion.[23] However, as Madeleine Bourset warns in her biography of Casimir Perier, the novelist Stendhal exercised a certain personal bitterness toward Claude Perier, claiming even that his sons, Casimir and Scipion, were left to starve and share clothing for lack of money. Claude was in fact very careful about money and did not pamper his sons. They were not raised with a sense of entitlement. But he loved them and saw to it that they had allowances. He ceded them income-providing properties. As for Claude's death, Bourset references the matter-of-fact report in the Duc d'Audiffret-Pasquier's Notices historiques sur la famille Perier (Paris, 1844), that "he died for having spent an hour in his unheated study wearing a mere dressing-gown."[24]

References edit

  1. ^ There is no biography in English. Two important early studies are: François Vermale, Le père de Casimir Perier (Grenoble, 1935) and Eugène Choulet, La famille Casimir-Perier: Étude généalogique, biographique et historique, d'après des documents des archives de Grenoble, de Vizille et de l'Isère (Grenoble, 1894). More recent accounts are: Robert Chagny, Une dynastie bourgeoise dans la Révolution: Les Perier (Grenoble, Conseil Général de L'Isère, 1984) and Madeleine Bourset Casimir Perier: un prince financier au temps du romantisme (Paris, 1994).
  2. ^ Jacques Perier was one of 13 children of Claude's great-grandfather, who was also named Jacques Perier (1669-1758). Earlier ancestors in this family line were Pierre Perier (1596-1654) and Claude Perier (1638-1674). See the chart, "The Ancestors of Casimir Perier," in Bourset's biography of Casimir Perier, p.22, cited above.
  3. ^ Perier-Lagrange and Madeleine Perier belonged to a second branch of the Perier family in Dauphiny headed by Jean Perier (1699-1759). See also Google online for "Les négociants voironnais et le réseau Perier" (University of Lyon thesis, 2007).
  4. ^ See Bibliothèque de Grenoble, R 90564, "Liquidation de la succession de M. Claude Perier."
  5. ^ Pierre Léon, La naissance de la grande industrie en Dauphiné, fin du XVIIIe siècle - 1869 (Paris, 2 vols, 1954), I, pp. 274-80, 305.
  6. ^ In 1773, Claude Perier's younger brother, Jacques-Augustin Perier (d.1794), established himself at Lorient, the main port in northwestern France for the trade in cotton goods from India. He became an administrator at Lorient for the new French East India Company organized in 1785. See N.J.Conan, La dernière compagnie française des Indes, 1785-1875 (Paris, 1939).
  7. ^ H. Clouzot, Histoire de la manufacture de Jouy et de la toile imprimée en France (Paris, 2 vols, 1928).
  8. ^ See Françoise Ours, "Aux origines de l'industrie manufacturiere vizilloise: la manufacture des Perier de 1772-1825," in Bourgeoisie de province et révolution (Actes du Colloque de Vizille) (Grenoble, 1984).
  9. ^ Vermale, Le père de Casimir Perier, pp.8-9; Clouzot, Histoire de la manufacture de Jouy,vol I, pp.124-25; Charles Ballot, L'introduction du machinisme dans l'industrie française (Paris, 1923),pp.281-82.
  10. ^ Vermale, Le pére de Casimir Perier, pp.9. 49. See also his "Augustin Perier sous la Révolution et sous l'Empire," Le Dauphiné (February 22 and March 15, 1947) and Philippe Mieg, "Les relations de la famille Perier avec Mulhouse et l'Alsace," Bulletin de la société industrielle de Mulhouse, No.III (1953).
  11. ^ Choulet, La famille Casimir-Perier, p.54.
  12. ^ See Vermale, Le père de Casimir Perier, pp. 9-10; Mounier, Casimir Perier, p. 25; Léon, La naissance de la grande industrie en Dauphiné, vol 1, p.274.
  13. ^ Norberg, Kathryn (1985). Rich and Poor in Grenoble 1600-1814. University of California Press. pp. 172–173.
  14. ^ Augustin Perier, Histoire abrégée du Dauphiné de 1626 à 1826 (Grenoble, 1881), p.78.
  15. ^ Augustin Perier, Histoire abrégée, pp.83-84; Jean Egret, Le Parlement de Dauphiné et les affaires publiques dans le deuxième moitié du XVIIIe siècle (Grenoble, 2 vols, 1942),II, pp.256-58.
  16. ^ See Jean Bouchary, Les manieurs d'argent à Paris à la fin du XVIIIe siècle (Paris, 3 vols, 1940-43).
  17. ^ For these investments, see the studies by Vermale and Choulet.
  18. ^ See Vermale ,pp.47-50; Archives Nationales, F12 236 (Giroud-Perier petition of June 1793).The family of Alexandre Giroud became wealthy during the Empire and Restoration as owners of coal mines at Mure. In 1831, the director of the mines, Henri-François Giroud, married a daughter of Claude Perier's son, Alphonse.
  19. ^ For this episode, see the studies by Vermale and Choulet; Bourset, Casimir Perier, pp.35-36.
  20. ^ See Reed Geiger, The Anzin Coal Company (Newark, DE, 1974).
  21. ^ Besides Claude Perier, the administrators of the Caisse des Comptes Courants who became regents of the Bank of France were: Perregaux, Le Couteulx, Basterrèche, Desprez, Récamier, Doyen and Davillier. See the articles in Wikipedia (in French) for "Liste des régents de la Banque de France" and "Caisse des Comptes Courants." See Louis Bergeron, Banquiers, Négociants et Manufacturiers parisiens du Directoire à l'Empire (Paris, 1978).
  22. ^ Bourset, Casimir Perier, p. 42. For the term "Notables," essentially the "governing elite," see the article by Robert Forster in Owen Connelly (ed.), Historical Dictionary of Napoleonic France, 1799-1815 (1985).
  23. ^ Stendhal (Marie-Henri Beyle), Vie de Henri Brulard (Paris 1973), p.402.
  24. ^ See Bourset, Casimir Perier, p.41 and pp.27-33; Choulet, La famille Casimir-Perier, pp.89 ,95.

claude, perier, claude, nicolas, perier, 1742, february, 1801, assured, important, place, french, history, when, opened, château, vizille, near, grenoble, famous, meeting, estates, province, dauphiné, july, 1788, heralding, coming, french, revolution, notable,. Claude Nicolas Perier 28 May 1742 6 February 1801 was assured an important place in French history when he opened his Chateau de Vizille near Grenoble to the famous meeting of the estates of the Province of Dauphine 21 July 1788 heralding the coming of the French Revolution He is notable also as the founder of the remarkable Perier family bourgeois dynasty that rose to economic and political influence and prominence in France during the 19th century Claude s descendants became leading Paris bankers regents of the Bank of France and owner directors of Anzin the major coal mining company of France in the Department of Nord They were mayors of towns prefects of departments and members of municipal tribunals and chambers of commerce Many were elected representatives of departments to the Chamber of Deputies in Paris and appointed to France s Chamber of Peers Most notably Casimir Pierre Perier 1777 1832 the fourth of Claude s eight sons became Prime Minister of France in 1831 32 during the Orleanist monarchy of Louis Philippe I Casimir s grandson Jean Casimir Perier 1847 1907 was elected president of the Third Republic in 1894 Claude Perier was sufficiently wealthy before 1789 to be known as Perier Milord in Grenoble and surroundings but it was mainly during the decade of revolution 1789 99 that he created the financial underpinning of the Perier dynasty His eight sons and two daughters would share his legacy of around 5 800 000 francs 1 Claude Nicolas PerierPortrait of Claude Perier by Jean Baptiste Francois Desoria Museum of the French Revolution VizillePersonal detailsBorn 1742 05 28 28 May 1742Grenoble FranceDied6 February 1801 1801 02 06 aged 58 ParisSpouseMarie Charlotte Pascal m 1767 1801 wbr ChildrenJacques ProsperElisabeth JosephineEuphrosine MarieAugustin CharlesAlexander JacquesAntoine ScipionCasimir PierreAdelaide HeleneCamille JosephAlphonseAmedee AugusteAndre Jean JosephProfessionBanker merchant Contents 1 Children of Claude Perier 2 Claude Perier at Grenoble and Vizille before 1789 2 1 Early life 2 2 Business career 2 2 1 Purchase of the Chateau de Vizille 2 2 2 Cane sugar investments 2 2 3 Involvement in Hospital General 3 Claude Perier from Grenoble Vizille to Paris 1789 1801 3 1 Involvement in the French Revolution 3 2 Claude Perier in Paris 3 3 Late life 4 ReferencesChildren of Claude Perier editJacques Prosper 1768 Died at birthElisabeth Josephine 1770 1850 m Jacques Fortunat Savoye de Rollin Member of the Tribunat Deputy Isere Prefect Eure Seine Maritime Deux Nethes Cote d Or Legion of HonorEuphrosine Marie 1771 1779 Died youngAugustin Charles 1773 1833 m Henriette de Berkheim Ecole Polytechnique Banker Manufacturer Grenoble Vizille Deputy Isere Peer of France Legion of HonorAlexander Jacques 1774 1846 Manufacturer and mayor Montargis Deputy Loiret Legion of HonorAntoine Scipion 1776 1821 m Louise de Dietrich Perier Bank Paris Regent Bank of France Anzin owner director Chaillot machine shops Paris Chamber of CommerceCasimir Pierre 1777 1832 m Pauline Loyer Perier Bank Paris Regent Bank of France Anzin owner director Chaillot machine shops Paris Chamber of Commerce Deputy Seine Aube Prime Minister Legion of HonorAdelaide Helene Marine 1779 1851 m Camille Teisseire Sub Prefect Ardeche Deputy Isere Legion of Honor Camille Joseph 1781 1844 m Pelagie Lecouteulx de Canteleu Ecole Polytechnique Auditor Conseil d Etat Mayor Chatou Prefect Correze Meuse Deputy Correze Sarthe Peer of France Legion of HonorAlphonse 1782 1866 m Antoinette Bonne de Tournadre Ecole Polytechnique Manufacturer Banker Tribunal of Commerce Grenoble Vizille Mayor Eybens Deputy Isere Auditor Conseil d Etat Legion of HonorAmedee Auguste 1785 1851 Auditor Conseil d EtatAndre Jean Joseph 1786 1868 m Marie Aglae Clavel de Kergonan Perier Bank Paris regent Bank of France Anzin owner director Deputy Marne Legion of HonorClaude Perier at Grenoble and Vizille before 1789 editEarly life edit Grenoble the capital city of the Province of Dauphiny in southeastern France was where the Periers began their rise to prominence Claude s father Jacques Perier 1702 1782 moved there about 1720 from the hamlet of Perier located near the small town of Mens some 50 kilometers south of Grenoble 2 He was an aspiring merchant of linen and canvas cloth and Grenoble at the time was becoming a main commercial center with links to important markets at Arles Avignon Lyons Marseilles and the great annual fair at Beaucaire He prospered at Grenoble and in 1741 married Marie Dupuy the daughter of a merchant and one time municipal consul Claude Perier born in 1742 was the first of their seven children In 1749 Jacques purchased an imposing multi story home for the family on the Grande Rue Business career edit Jacques business developed as a family affair over the years His daughter Elisabeth for example married Pierre Jordan a wealthy merchant in Lyon Commerce with Voiron near Grenoble was added by Francois Perier Lagrange who was a nephew In 1764 Madeleine Perier a niece married a leading merchant in Voiron Francois Tivolier 3 Claude Perier cemented these connections when he came of age by marrying Marie Charlotte Pascal 1749 1821 the daughter of a leading Voiron merchant Her dowry in 1767 amounted to 60 000 livres By that date Claude was already an active member of the family enterprise In 1764 the business was named Jacques Perier Father Son Nephew amp Company Claude Perier and Perier Lagrange were the minor partners When this association was renewed in 1773 the shares of Jacques and his son Claude were 344 266 livres and 72 493 livres respectively 4 The trade in linens was a mainstay but the Periers also acted as credit bankers for area businesses made land investments and ventured into manufacturing at Grenoble on their own account muslins 1777 hardware 1779 5 Most importantly Claude and his father responded to the increasing demand in France for printed cotton cloths toiles peints and wallpapers papiers peints Printed cottons were mainly imported from India and were known as indiennes 6 but they began to be fabricated in France in 1760 by the famous industrialist Christophe Philippe Oberkampf 1738 1815 His factory for cotton prints at Jouy near Paris which employed 900 workers by 1774 was named a royal manufacturer in 1783 by Louis XVI Oberkampf invented the first machine for printing wallpaper in 1785 7 Jacques and Claude Perier began the production of these printed stuffs in 1775 1777 at Vizille a small village just south of Grenoble 8 nbsp Chateau de VizillePurchase of the Chateau de Vizille edit Famously in a bold entrepreneurial move in 1780 Claude purchased the historic 17th century Chateau de Vizille with its large rooms and spacious main hall extensive grounds numerous out buildings streams and water park as well as nearby lands in Oisans and La Mure All told here were ideal conditions for the manufacture of indiennes Claude paid Gabriel Louis de Neufville duc de Villeroy approximately 1 254 000 livres for the buildings and properties By 1785 about 100 workers 400 by 1789 were employed at the chateau producing printed cottons 9 As became typical of his business style Claude Perier was involved in other money making projects even as production of printed cottons at the Vizille factory began to get underway In fact the factory was rented out to Swiss experts from Geneva Jean Louis Fazy and his son who ran the operation until January 1794 at which time other specialists from Geneva and Mulhouse were brought in Only beginning in 1798 would Claude s eldest son Augustin Charles assume direction of the family enterprise 10 Cane sugar investments edit Meantime in 1782 Jacques Perier died leaving a fortune of 600 000 livres to be divided among his three sons Claude Jacques Augustin and Antoine As the eldest son Claude s share of the estate was 400 000 livres 11 These were funds that helped Claude establish a new commercial house at Voiron in 1783 The purpose was to make money importing cane sugar from the Caribbean The business was called Perier Father and Son Berlioz Rey amp Company Berlioz and Joseph Rey who were business associates at Grenoble each invested 48 000 livres 4 shares in the company Claude also invested 48 000 livres plus 240 000 as working capital and one share 12 000 livres was listed in the name of Augustin Perier Claude s then 10 year old son In 1784 Claude took a half interest in another sugar import company at Marseilles Pierre Chazel amp Company These companies were very profitable until 1793 12 Involvement in Hospital General edit In the 1770s the directors in charge of the Hospital General of Grenoble a facility meant to incarcerate paupers and beggars abandoned the hospital A group of new men became the directors and among them was Claude In fact out of all the directors Claude Perier was the wealthiest Claude was wealthy and powerful enough to bring along his business associates onto the board of directors for the Hospital as well Monsieur Dupy Monsieur Pascal and his cousin Perier Lagrange 13 Claude Perier from Grenoble Vizille to Paris 1789 1801 editInvolvement in the French Revolution edit Claude Perier played an important role in the onset of the French Revolution by supporting resistance in Grenoble Assembly of Vizille by the Parlement of Dauphiny against the centralizing and fiscal abuses of the monarchy of Louis XVI His eldest son Augustin would write later His travels in England had given him a proper idea of the benefits of a free government Associating himself readily with all the opinions and all of the hopes of that period he made hurriedly all the preparations necessary for such a large gathering and his eagerness which was not without danger was worthy of the tokens of public gratitude 14 Almost 500 persons gathered at the Chateau de Vizille 21 July 1788 where Claude provided a large banquet for the deputies of the province Mostly although also with popular support it was an assemblage of well to do notables churchmen landed nobility lawyers notaries municipal officials businessmen and doctors Their famous demand was for the convocation in Paris of an Estates General wherein the Third Estate would have double representation and votes would be by head rather than by order 15 Thus was precipitated a revolutionary movement in France more inclusive complex and disruptive than anyone could have anticipated Claude Perier dealt opportunistically with the escalating political postures of France s decade of revolution 1789 99 He became a valuable member of the new municipal council of Grenoble Department of Isere but did not aspire to political leadership or fame He remained at heart and acted basically as a merchant banker and inveterate money manager manieur d argent 16 He kept abreast of opportunity in matters of investment and enterprise Early on 1789 90 when it was considered patriotic he purchased nationalized properties of the church and emigrated nobles paying in assignats the paper money issued by the National Assembly in Paris In 1790 he acquired a mechanized cotton spinning factory at Anilly near Montargis In 1791 he invested heavily in a sugar refining company in Marseilles Seren amp Company 17 In 1793 when France was at war and Jacobins of the National Convention held sway in Paris Marie Antoinette was guillotined on October 31 1793 he organized a company to manufacture rifles for the French Army in Savoy and with the chemist geologist Alexandre Giroud he petitioned Paris for permission to establish the production of commercial soda at the cantons of Vizille and Mure near Grenoble 18 These initiatives enhanced his reputation as a patriot and good citizen bon citoyen at an opportune time for in October 1793 Claude found himself denounced as an enemy of the Revolution by Pierre Chepy who was president of Grenoble s Societe Populaire He was accused of cupidity for liquidating his sugar importing company Perier Berlioz amp Rey by paying investors in depreciated assignats and more seriously of supporting an anti Jacobin revolt in southern France at Lyons There was some substance to these charges Claude Perier s opportunism was not always circumspect But ultimately his indiscretions came to be excused probably most importantly because he had befriended Camille Teisseire a very popular Jacobin member of Grenoble s municipal council and the city s chief of police In 1794 Teisseire married Marine Perier Claude s youngest daughter 19 Claude Perier in Paris edit When the Thermidorian Reaction cooled down revolutionary fervor in France Claude shifted his business activity to Paris where he took up residence 28 November 1794 at No 341 43 rue Saint Honore His eldest son Augustin was primed to take over family affairs at Grenoble Vizille In Paris Claude made contacts with leading merchant manufacturers and money managers such as Jean Lecouteulx de Canteleu William Sabatier Medard Desprez and Jean Perregaux and also the noted legal advisor Pierre Nicolas Berryer His first financial coup came in 1795 when he participated in a major loan of 2 418 505 livres to the owners of the Anzin Coal Company in the department of Nord The loan allowed the company to buy back shares in the enterprise that had been nationalized confiscated by the government of the Convention Claude s investment in the loan was 393 425 livres payable in assignats In return he received a large number of the company s coveted shares and in 1798 a directorship Anzin would be a major client of the Paris bank founded in 1801 by two of Claude s sons Casimir and Scipion 20 Claude Perier s most notable achievement as a money manager came in 1799 1800 when he was a founder and became one of the first regents of the Bank of France Claude had associated in 1796 with a group of twenty or so bankers and businessmen to establish a private bank called the Caisse des Comptes Courants This bank with offices in Paris on the Place des Victoires was capitalized modestly at 5 million francs and specialized in short term business loans at 6 per cent interest but the group aspired to grow the capital base and expand into long term investments and government finance In brief these were the financiers who shortly after the coup d etat of 18 Brumaire November 9 1799 established the government of the Consulate met with the new First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte and convinced him to enlarge and transform the Caisse des Comptes Courants into the Bank of France to be capitalized at 30 million francs They agreed to loan the new government 12 million francs to get the bank started Claude Perier aided by the lawyer Berryer drafted the statutes of the bank He was appointed as one of its first fifteen regents Subsequently he was named a member of Napoleon s Corps Legislatif The Bank of France began its operations on February 29 1800 in the former offices of the Caisse des Comptes Courants at the Hotel Massiac Place des Victoires Jean Frederic Perregaux was named president of its directing Council of Regents 21 Late life edit Claude Perier died at his mansion in Paris on February 6 1801 He was 59 years old He had brought the Periers successfully through the difficult years of the Revolution leaving an enormous fortune and invaluable social and business connections that would help the family on its way to prominence For the Perier family he had opened the doors to the two powers entrusted to Notables politics and high finance 22 Paris now became the major arena of Perier business activity Claude had positioned his family members well to play significant roles in the industrialization of France during the early 19th century Addendum regarding the death of Claude Perier Writers sometimes report Stendhal s assertion that Claude Perier died of the cold in the night because he was too miserly to pay for wood to heat his mansion 23 However as Madeleine Bourset warns in her biography of Casimir Perier the novelist Stendhal exercised a certain personal bitterness toward Claude Perier claiming even that his sons Casimir and Scipion were left to starve and share clothing for lack of money Claude was in fact very careful about money and did not pamper his sons They were not raised with a sense of entitlement But he loved them and saw to it that they had allowances He ceded them income providing properties As for Claude s death Bourset references the matter of fact report in the Duc d Audiffret Pasquier s Notices historiques sur la famille Perier Paris 1844 that he died for having spent an hour in his unheated study wearing a mere dressing gown 24 References edit There is no biography in English Two important early studies are Francois Vermale Le pere de Casimir Perier Grenoble 1935 and Eugene Choulet La famille Casimir Perier Etude genealogique biographique et historique d apres des documents des archives de Grenoble de Vizille et de l Isere Grenoble 1894 More recent accounts are Robert Chagny Une dynastie bourgeoise dans la Revolution Les Perier Grenoble Conseil General de L Isere 1984 and Madeleine Bourset Casimir Perier un prince financier au temps du romantisme Paris 1994 Jacques Perier was one of 13 children of Claude s great grandfather who was also named Jacques Perier 1669 1758 Earlier ancestors in this family line were Pierre Perier 1596 1654 and Claude Perier 1638 1674 See the chart The Ancestors of Casimir Perier in Bourset s biography of Casimir Perier p 22 cited above Perier Lagrange and Madeleine Perier belonged to a second branch of the Perier family in Dauphiny headed by Jean Perier 1699 1759 See also Google online for Les negociants voironnais et le reseau Perier University of Lyon thesis 2007 See Bibliotheque de Grenoble R 90564 Liquidation de la succession de M Claude Perier Pierre Leon La naissance de la grande industrie en Dauphine fin du XVIIIe siecle 1869 Paris 2 vols 1954 I pp 274 80 305 In 1773 Claude Perier s younger brother Jacques Augustin Perier d 1794 established himself at Lorient the main port in northwestern France for the trade in cotton goods from India He became an administrator at Lorient for the new French East India Company organized in 1785 See N J Conan La derniere compagnie francaise des Indes 1785 1875 Paris 1939 H Clouzot Histoire de la manufacture de Jouy et de la toile imprimee en France Paris 2 vols 1928 See Francoise Ours Aux origines de l industrie manufacturiere vizilloise la manufacture des Perier de 1772 1825 in Bourgeoisie de province et revolution Actes du Colloque de Vizille Grenoble 1984 Vermale Le pere de Casimir Perier pp 8 9 Clouzot Histoire de la manufacture de Jouy vol I pp 124 25 Charles Ballot L introduction du machinisme dans l industrie francaise Paris 1923 pp 281 82 Vermale Le pere de Casimir Perier pp 9 49 See also his Augustin Perier sous la Revolution et sous l Empire Le Dauphine February 22 and March 15 1947 and Philippe Mieg Les relations de la famille Perier avec Mulhouse et l Alsace Bulletin de la societe industrielle de Mulhouse No III 1953 Choulet La famille Casimir Perier p 54 See Vermale Le pere de Casimir Perier pp 9 10 Mounier Casimir Perier p 25 Leon La naissance de la grande industrie en Dauphine vol 1 p 274 Norberg Kathryn 1985 Rich and Poor in Grenoble 1600 1814 University of California Press pp 172 173 Augustin Perier Histoire abregee du Dauphine de 1626 a 1826 Grenoble 1881 p 78 Augustin Perier Histoire abregee pp 83 84 Jean Egret Le Parlement de Dauphine et les affaires publiques dans le deuxieme moitie du XVIIIe siecle Grenoble 2 vols 1942 II pp 256 58 See Jean Bouchary Les manieurs d argent a Paris a la fin du XVIIIe siecle Paris 3 vols 1940 43 For these investments see the studies by Vermale and Choulet See Vermale pp 47 50 Archives Nationales F12 236 Giroud Perier petition of June 1793 The family of Alexandre Giroud became wealthy during the Empire and Restoration as owners of coal mines at Mure In 1831 the director of the mines Henri Francois Giroud married a daughter of Claude Perier s son Alphonse For this episode see the studies by Vermale and Choulet Bourset Casimir Perier pp 35 36 See Reed Geiger The Anzin Coal Company Newark DE 1974 Besides Claude Perier the administrators of the Caisse des Comptes Courants who became regents of the Bank of France were Perregaux Le Couteulx Basterreche Desprez Recamier Doyen and Davillier See the articles in Wikipedia in French for Liste des regents de la Banque de France and Caisse des Comptes Courants See Louis Bergeron Banquiers Negociants et Manufacturiers parisiens du Directoire a l Empire Paris 1978 Bourset Casimir Perier p 42 For the term Notables essentially the governing elite see the article by Robert Forster in Owen Connelly ed Historical Dictionary of Napoleonic France 1799 1815 1985 Stendhal Marie Henri Beyle Vie de Henri Brulard Paris 1973 p 402 See Bourset Casimir Perier p 41 and pp 27 33 Choulet La famille Casimir Perier pp 89 95 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Claude Perier amp oldid 1167753656, 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