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Rue du Faubourg-Poissonnière

The Rue du Faubourg-Poissonnière[1] marks the boundary between the 9th and 10th arrondissements of Paris, the main thoroughfare of the old Faubourg Poissonnière district.

Rue du Faubourg-Poissonnière
Shown within Paris
Arrondissement9th and 10th
QuarterSaint-Vincent-de-Paul
Porte-Saint-Denis
Rochechouart
Faubourg-Montmartre
Coordinates48°52′36.949″N 2°20′55.878″E / 48.87693028°N 2.34885500°E / 48.87693028; 2.34885500
FromBoulevard Poissonnière
ToBoulevard de Bonne-Nouvelle

Location and access edit

Origin of the name edit

The rue du Faubourg-Poissonnière owes its name to the fact that it crossed the hamlet located outside the porte de la Poissonnerie of the surrounding wall drawn in the alignment of the rue des Poissonniers to the north and the rue Poissonnière to the south, it formed part of the chemin des Poissonniers. The faubourg was originally a district “fors le bourg” (from the old French “fors”, derived from the Latin forisen dehors” and from borc, “bourg”, forsborc around 1200, forbours around 1260).[2]

History edit

In the 17th century, the street which appears on the old plans bore the name of “Chaussée de la Nouvelle-France” because it led to the hamlet of Nouvelle-France founded in 1642 on an old vineyard.

It ran along, in its southern part of the boulevard to the large sewer (location since its covering in 1760 of the rue des Petites-Écuries), the seam of the Filles-Dieu which extended to the east to the rue du Faubourg-Saint-Denis, and, to the north of the rue de Paradis, the Saint-Lazare enclosure which also extended to the east to the faubourg Saint-Laurent.

In 1660, it took the name "rue Sainte-Anne", because of a chapel that had been built there at number 77 to serve the district of New France.[3]

From 1770, Claude-Martin Goupy speculated in the Faubourg Poissonnière on land sold by the community of Filles-Dieu, of which he was the entrepreneur, playing a key role in the urbanization of the district4.

During the Trois Glorieuses, the route was the scene of confrontation between the insurgents and the troops.

On March 8, 1918, during the World War I, a bomb thrown from a German plane exploded at no. 66 rue du Faubourg-Poissonnière.[4]

On April 1, 1918, a shell launched by the Paris Gun exploded at no. 54 rue du Faubourg-Poissonnière.

Remarkable buildings and places of memory edit

  • No 3: location, in the second half of the 19th century, of the Bains du Gymnase, the first Parisian public bath establishment to have been raided by the morality police. The trial of the homosexuals who were arrested there took place in June 1876 (Affaire des Bains du Gymnase[5]) before the Paris Criminal Court.
  • No 4: the vaudevillist Nicolas Brazier lived there in 1831.
  • No. 5: house where Colonel La Bédoyère was arrested in 1815, at Madame de Fontry's. This number was then occupied by the newspaper Le Matin.
  • No 9: Jean-Baptiste Buffault lived there.
  • At number 10 was the Alcazar café-concert opened in 18588 and replaced in 1899 by a four-storey commercial building designed by the architects Auguste and Gustave Perret, the first office building built in France.
  • At number 13 was the Hôtel de Sénac de Meilhan.
  • At no. 15 was the former Hôtel des Menus-Plaisirs du Roi, where his administration was based, in a vast building that stretched from rue Bergère to rue Richer today. During the Revolution, the revolutionary section of Faubourg-Montmartre met there. This is where the Convention set up the Music Conservatory in 1795.
  • Nos 15-17: Bergère telephone exchange, also called “Provence”, built in 1911-1914 by the architect François Le Cœur.[6]
  • Number 25 was inhabited by Luigi Cherubini during the last years of his life.
  • At number 26 was the Hôtel de Cypierre, since destroyed, built by the architect Jean-Benoît-Vincent Barré for Jean-François Perrin de Cypierre.
  • Classified as a historic monument, no. 30, Hôtel Benoît de Sainte-Paulle, also known as "Hôtel Chéret" or "Akermann" and Hôtel Ney,[7] built by Nicolas Lenoir in 1773 for François Benoît de Sainte-Paulle, on land acquired in 1172 by Claude-Martin Goupy, architect and speculator behind the creation of the district. The two courtyard wings were built in 1778 by Antoine-François Peyre. From 1779 to 1795, this hotel was the property of Marie-Louise O'Murphy, wife of François Nicolas Le Normand de Flaghac. Under the Empire, it belonged to Marshal Ney. In 1942 the design office of the Société anonyme des factories Farman was housed there, which employed the future General Jacques Collombet there that year, as an engineer. The hotel is now occupied by social housing managed by the property management of the city of Paris.[8]
  • No 32: entrance to a coach passage leading to a dead end. This set, or city, comes from the subdivision made by the marble sculptor Leprince (apparently François-Robert, from a dynasty of marble workers and wives of marble workers, including François Leprince, marble worker of the king who died in 1746, already installed in the Notre-Dame-de-Bonne-Nouvelle district). The land had been acquired by Claude-Martin Goupy in 1771 by emphyteutic lease from the convent of the Filles-Dieu. In 1772, Goupy ceded his rights to these lands to Leprince, who had buildings built between 1773 and 1776, probably by his brother, on the site of the gardens and the few farmhouses that already existed. The marble worker established his accommodation and probably his workshops on the spot, without it being possible to say whether he was staying on the street, or in one of the two hotels located in the impasse.
    • The building on the street (no. 32 bis) was joined to no. 34 during the 19th century to form a large apartment building after complete recovery of the wings of the building at the back of the courtyard. This building was completely separated from the rest of the housing estate, apparently from the end of the 18th century. It is probably Leprince who is the author of the models of the stuccoed panels with antique motifs visible on the street facade of 32 bis, and of which we can see occurrences on various Parisian buildings of the same period. He also probably created the stucco decorations of the same type preserved in the reception rooms of one of the hotels in the passage;
    • The first hotel in the passage (no. 32A) is in a "U" shape, backing onto a courtyard, without a garden. It was modified in the middle of the 19th century and then raised by one floor at the beginning of the 21st century, following the style adopted for the lower floors ;
    • The back of the Leprince housing estate is occupied by a second hotel accessible under a porch (no. 32, building 1), organized around a courtyard. Oral tradition indicates that the Folies Bergère feather workshop occupied the 1st floor of the hotel during the 20th century. Its outbuildings consisted of a set of wings flat against the northern adjoining areas, up to rue d'Hauteville (building 4 is a remnant of this). These wings housed accommodation and possibly workshops. Before the end of the 18th century, the half facing rue d'Hauteville was separated by building a transverse wing (building 3), thus closing off a second courtyard. Under the Empire (around 1810), the garden of this hotel was replaced by an immovable (building) along the passage, in order to extend the spaces of the initial hotel. This building was separated from Building 1 around 1830 and converted into an independent apartment building, still in the neoclassical style. To replace the wing overlooking the garden, an industrial building (building 5) was built around 1900, between the adjoining building and building 2. The interior of this building was completely transformed in the 1980s and then in 2012-2013. The Cité Leprince is a good example of historical stratification within the framework of the progressive subdivision of the Faubourg Poissonnière between 1770 and 1900.[9]
  • No 34 : plaque in memory of the poet Sully Prudhomme born in this house on March 16, 1839.
  • No 36 : building facade.
  • No 50: Hotel Cardon built around 1773-1774 by Claude-Martin Goupy for the sculptor and director of the Académie de Saint-Luc, Nicolas-Vincent Cardon.
  • No 52: hotel built around 1775 by Claude-Martin Goupy for the painter-decorator Pierre-Hyacinthe Deleuze, of the Academy of Saint-Luc15.
  • No 52: Julie Candeille lived there in 1834.
  • No 56: plaque in memory of the painter Camille Corot, who died on February 22, 1875 in this house. Here lived in 1833 the painter Alexandre-Charles Sauvageot (1781-1860), who was represented in the dining room of his apartment, in the middle of his collections by his friend Louis-Pierre Henriquel-Dupont, a drawing in 1833 and an engraving of 1852. A painting of the same was also painted by the painter Arthur Henry Roberts in 1857.
  • No 57: location of the former Opéra décor store which was destroyed by fire in 1894. The store occupied the site of the former Menus-Plaisirs du Roi stores. At this location, rue Ambroise-Thomas was opened in 1897.
  • No 58: former Hôtel Titon built by Jean-Charles Delafosse around 1776.[10]
  • No 64 (corner of rue de Paradis): location of the Porte Sainte-Anne built in 1645 and destroyed around 1715. The granting barrier at this location is shown on Turgot's plan. It was replaced around 1788 by the Poissonnière barrier on the Wall of the Ferme générale.
  • No 66-68: Gustave Prioré publishing house, musical editions (circa 1850). Gustave Prioré is also a composer.
  • No 69-71 (corner rue Bleue): then rue Sainte-Anne, site of the dwelling of the Sanson family, executors of high works of justice. The garden extended beyond the current rue Bleue.[11] After the death of Charles-Henri Samson in 1778, his heirs sold the complex to the architect Nicolas Lenoir who subdivided the land with the opening in 1780 of the streets Papillon, Riboutté and the widening of the rue Bleue (then rue d'Enfer).
  • No 72: stay from 1841 to 1846 of Henri Heine (1797-1856). Large plate.
  • No 76: location of the first so-called “New France” barracks, built by Claude-Martin Goupy on land he had purchased in 1770 from the monks of Saint-Lazare. From 1773, he rented this barracks by the year to the French Guards. Louis Antoine de Gontaut-Biron, Lazare Hoche (then 17 years old and a soldier) and François Joseph Lefebvre (sergeant in 1789) began their military careers there. An unfounded legend adds the name of Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte.

On July 27, 1830, Captain Flandin, at the head of 200 citizens, of whom there were perhaps not 20 who were armed, attacked this barracks, made 140 young soldiers of the 50th line lay down their arms, and seized this important post, where valuable resources for the defense were found. Infantry troops sat there until 1914, then the Republican Guard. Dilapidated, the building was destroyed around 1930. A new barracks was built at nos. 80-8218.

  • No 77: site of the Sainte-Anne chapel built in 1650, demolished in 1790, where the wife of the executioner Charles Sanson was buried.
  • Listed as a historical monument, number 80 was a former pub at the corner of rue des Messageries, with a storefront from the first half of the 19th century, listed as a historical monument.
  • Nos 80-82: the new barracks in New France were built between 1932 and 1941 for the city of Paris by the architect Boegner. On the wall of the building located at no. 80 rue du Faubourg-Poissonnière, the sculptures come from the entrance to the first barracks which was located at current no. 76.[12]
  • No 88: Gaston Poittevin (1880-1944) lived there in 1941.[13]
  • No 92: Étienne Calla, mechanic, pupil of Jacques de Vaucanson, set up a foundry in 1820.[14] It was the Calla firm that produced the ornamental cast iron for the church of Saint-Vincent-de-Paul at the request of Jacques Hittorff. The Calla foundry moved north of the Saint-Lazare enclosure, to La Chapelle, in 1849.[15]
  • No 98: Boris Vian lived there after his marriage from 1942.
  • No 106: Lycée Rocroy-Saint-Léon, private establishment opened in 1877.[16] Before the construction of the high school, Philippe-Frédéric de Dietrich lived there in his private mansion, which was subsequently demolished.
  • Classified as a historic monument, no. 121, the Lycée Lamartine founded in 1893 on the site of a lustschloss (mansion) dating from the 17th century, bought in 1891 by the National Education. Many works are done, but some parts were kept as they were and classified as historical monuments (office, living room and interior decor).[17]
  • No 129: site of the entrance to the first gasworks in Paris. In 1807, François de Neufchâteau bought a house on this site comprising a plot of 1 hectare.[18] In 1821, in debt, he was forced to sell this property. In 1823, Antoine Pauwels built a gasometer there, then Étienne Calla set up a foundry there until 1849.[19]


  • No 138: location of the Wallart carpentry factory built in 1896 (building also fronting 45, rue de Dunkerque). It was a three-storey building in sculpted wood with mortise and tenon fittings (the workshops were on rue du Faubourg-Poissonnière, the main porch for the passage of trucks opened on rue de Dunkerque), a unique masterpiece of wooden architecture in Paris, which disappeared with the construction in the early 1970s of the apartment building that is there today.
  • No 146: headquarters of the Éditions Sociales and the Éditions Messidor as well as the Livre-club Diderot and the Cahiers du communisme.
  • No 148: headquarters of the Union of French Women and Clear Hours.
  • No. 153: Émile Souvestre lived there.
  • Nos. 157 to 187: location of the Promenades egyptiennes, an establishment where parties such as those at the Tivoli amusement park were held. Opened on May 4, 1818, they gave way to the Delta garden, from 1819 to 1824.[20]
  • No 161: location of a house where Charles de Bourbon-Condé lived with his mistress Madame de la Saune.
  • Nos 171, 173 and 175: buildings on rue du Faubourg-Poissonnière from the building complex built by the insurance company La Confiance in 1880, consisting of six buildings on this road (three on the street, three on the garden), four buildings on rue de Dunkerque (all on the street), and a hotel surrounded by a garden and equipped with outbuildings at the back of the plot.
  • The day after August 10, 1792, it was near the Poissonnière barrier, in a vast trench dug for this purpose, that the 400 to 500 corpses of the Swiss Guards killed in the stairs, courtyards and Tuileries garden were thrown pell-mell19.
  • On June 23, 1848, the Poissonnière barrier was the subject of fierce fighting between the insurgents, barricaded in the buildings, and the government troops.

References edit

  1. ^ Nomenclature des voies
  2. ^ Alain Rey, Dictionnaire historique de la langue française, Le Robert, 2006
  3. ^ Dictionnaire administratif et historique des rues de Paris et de ses monuments
  4. ^ Excelsior du 8 janvier 1919 : Carte et liste officielles des bombes d'avions et de zeppelins lancées sur Paris et la banlieue et numérotées suivant leur ordre et leur date de chute
  5. ^ Perverses promiscuités ? Bains publics et cafés-concerts parisiens au second XIXe siècle
  6. ^ Central téléphonique «Provence»
  7. ^ Hôtel Chéret ou Akermann
  8. ^ Ravalement des façades sur cours et reprise des pans de bois 30-32, rue du Fbg-Poissonnière (10e)
  9. ^ Pascal Etienne, Le Faubourg Poissonnière. Architecture, élégance et décor, Paris, Délégation à l'Action artistique de la Ville de Paris, 1986, 312 p., p. 30-32
  10. ^ Maison, ancien hôtel Titon
  11. ^ Pascal Etienne, Le Faubourg Poissonnière. Architecture, élégance et décor , Paris, Délégation à l'Action artistique de la Ville de Paris , 1986, 312 p., p. 62-66
  12. ^ Emplacement de la caserne de la Nouvelle France
  13. ^ Le Petit Parisien : journal quotidien du soir
  14. ^ Les Rues de Paris. Paris ancien et moderne ; origines, histoire, monuments, costumes, mœurs, chroniques et traditions; ouvrage rédigé par l'élite de la littérature contemporaine sous la direction de Louis Lurine, et illustré de 300 dessins exécutés par les artistes les plus distingués, volume 2
  15. ^ Histoire de la culture tecHnique et scientifique en Europe (XVie-XiXe siècles)
  16. ^ Histoire
  17. ^ Lycée Lamartine
  18. ^ François DE NEUFCHATEAU
  19. ^ Guide exposition « Le clos Saint-Lazare »
  20. ^ POURQUOI LE LOUXOR. DE LA CAMPAGNE D’ÉGYPTE AU JARDIN DU DELTA

faubourg, poissonnière, marks, boundary, between, 10th, arrondissements, paris, main, thoroughfare, faubourg, poissonnière, district, shown, within, parisarrondissement9th, 10thquartersaint, vincent, paulporte, saint, denisrochechouartfaubourg, montmartrecoord. The Rue du Faubourg Poissonniere 1 marks the boundary between the 9th and 10th arrondissements of Paris the main thoroughfare of the old Faubourg Poissonniere district Rue du Faubourg PoissonniereShown within ParisArrondissement9th and 10thQuarterSaint Vincent de PaulPorte Saint DenisRochechouartFaubourg MontmartreCoordinates48 52 36 949 N 2 20 55 878 E 48 87693028 N 2 34885500 E 48 87693028 2 34885500FromBoulevard PoissonniereToBoulevard de Bonne Nouvelle Contents 1 Location and access 2 Origin of the name 3 History 4 Remarkable buildings and places of memory 5 ReferencesLocation and access editThis section is empty You can help by adding to it July 2023 Origin of the name editThe rue du Faubourg Poissonniere owes its name to the fact that it crossed the hamlet located outside the porte de la Poissonnerie of the surrounding wall drawn in the alignment of the rue des Poissonniers to the north and the rue Poissonniere to the south it formed part of the chemin des Poissonniers The faubourg was originally a district fors le bourg from the old French fors derived from the Latin foris en dehors and from borc bourg forsborc around 1200 forbours around 1260 2 History editIn the 17th century the street which appears on the old plans bore the name of Chaussee de la Nouvelle France because it led to the hamlet of Nouvelle France founded in 1642 on an old vineyard It ran along in its southern part of the boulevard to the large sewer location since its covering in 1760 of the rue des Petites Ecuries the seam of the Filles Dieu which extended to the east to the rue du Faubourg Saint Denis and to the north of the rue de Paradis the Saint Lazare enclosure which also extended to the east to the faubourg Saint Laurent In 1660 it took the name rue Sainte Anne because of a chapel that had been built there at number 77 to serve the district of New France 3 From 1770 Claude Martin Goupy speculated in the Faubourg Poissonniere on land sold by the community of Filles Dieu of which he was the entrepreneur playing a key role in the urbanization of the district4 During the Trois Glorieuses the route was the scene of confrontation between the insurgents and the troops On March 8 1918 during the World War I a bomb thrown from a German plane exploded at no 66 rue du Faubourg Poissonniere 4 On April 1 1918 a shell launched by the Paris Gun exploded at no 54 rue du Faubourg Poissonniere Remarkable buildings and places of memory editAt No 2 is Lycee Edgar Poe nbsp Lycee Edgar PoeNo 3 location in the second half of the 19th century of the Bains du Gymnase the first Parisian public bath establishment to have been raided by the morality police The trial of the homosexuals who were arrested there took place in June 1876 Affaire des Bains du Gymnase 5 before the Paris Criminal Court No 4 the vaudevillist Nicolas Brazier lived there in 1831 No 5 house where Colonel La Bedoyere was arrested in 1815 at Madame de Fontry s This number was then occupied by the newspaper Le Matin No 9 Jean Baptiste Buffault lived there At number 10 was the Alcazar cafe concert opened in 18588 and replaced in 1899 by a four storey commercial building designed by the architects Auguste and Gustave Perret the first office building built in France At number 13 was the Hotel de Senac de Meilhan At no 15 was the former Hotel des Menus Plaisirs du Roi where his administration was based in a vast building that stretched from rue Bergere to rue Richer today During the Revolution the revolutionary section of Faubourg Montmartre met there This is where the Convention set up the Music Conservatory in 1795 Nos 15 17 Bergere telephone exchange also called Provence built in 1911 1914 by the architect Francois Le Cœur 6 Number 25 was inhabited by Luigi Cherubini during the last years of his life At number 26 was the Hotel de Cypierre since destroyed built by the architect Jean Benoit Vincent Barre for Jean Francois Perrin de Cypierre Classified as a historic monument no 30 Hotel Benoit de Sainte Paulle also known as Hotel Cheret or Akermann and Hotel Ney 7 built by Nicolas Lenoir in 1773 for Francois Benoit de Sainte Paulle on land acquired in 1172 by Claude Martin Goupy architect and speculator behind the creation of the district The two courtyard wings were built in 1778 by Antoine Francois Peyre From 1779 to 1795 this hotel was the property of Marie Louise O Murphy wife of Francois Nicolas Le Normand de Flaghac Under the Empire it belonged to Marshal Ney In 1942 the design office of the Societe anonyme des factories Farman was housed there which employed the future General Jacques Collombet there that year as an engineer The hotel is now occupied by social housing managed by the property management of the city of Paris 8 nbsp Number 30 nbsp Panel Histoire de Paris Hotel Benoit de Sainte Paulle No 32 entrance to a coach passage leading to a dead end This set or city comes from the subdivision made by the marble sculptor Leprince apparently Francois Robert from a dynasty of marble workers and wives of marble workers including Francois Leprince marble worker of the king who died in 1746 already installed in the Notre Dame de Bonne Nouvelle district The land had been acquired by Claude Martin Goupy in 1771 by emphyteutic lease from the convent of the Filles Dieu In 1772 Goupy ceded his rights to these lands to Leprince who had buildings built between 1773 and 1776 probably by his brother on the site of the gardens and the few farmhouses that already existed The marble worker established his accommodation and probably his workshops on the spot without it being possible to say whether he was staying on the street or in one of the two hotels located in the impasse The building on the street no 32 bis was joined to no 34 during the 19th century to form a large apartment building after complete recovery of the wings of the building at the back of the courtyard This building was completely separated from the rest of the housing estate apparently from the end of the 18th century It is probably Leprince who is the author of the models of the stuccoed panels with antique motifs visible on the street facade of 32 bis and of which we can see occurrences on various Parisian buildings of the same period He also probably created the stucco decorations of the same type preserved in the reception rooms of one of the hotels in the passage The first hotel in the passage no 32A is in a U shape backing onto a courtyard without a garden It was modified in the middle of the 19th century and then raised by one floor at the beginning of the 21st century following the style adopted for the lower floors The back of the Leprince housing estate is occupied by a second hotel accessible under a porch no 32 building 1 organized around a courtyard Oral tradition indicates that the Folies Bergere feather workshop occupied the 1st floor of the hotel during the 20th century Its outbuildings consisted of a set of wings flat against the northern adjoining areas up to rue d Hauteville building 4 is a remnant of this These wings housed accommodation and possibly workshops Before the end of the 18th century the half facing rue d Hauteville was separated by building a transverse wing building 3 thus closing off a second courtyard Under the Empire around 1810 the garden of this hotel was replaced by an immovable building along the passage in order to extend the spaces of the initial hotel This building was separated from Building 1 around 1830 and converted into an independent apartment building still in the neoclassical style To replace the wing overlooking the garden an industrial building building 5 was built around 1900 between the adjoining building and building 2 The interior of this building was completely transformed in the 1980s and then in 2012 2013 The Cite Leprince is a good example of historical stratification within the framework of the progressive subdivision of the Faubourg Poissonniere between 1770 and 1900 9 Dead end of n 32 nbsp Entrance of the passage nbsp Private mansion of number 32A nbsp Entrance to the private mansion at the bottom of the Cite Leprince building 1 nbsp Court at the bottom of the impasse wings built between 1773 and 1785 nbsp View of the passage towards the street original gate of the Leprince estate in Louis XVI style No 34 plaque in memory of the poet Sully Prudhomme born in this house on March 16 1839 nbsp Entry of Number32 bis 34 nbsp Number34 commemorative plaque in homage to Sully Prudhomme No 36 building facade nbsp Number 36 with passage under building opening onto rue Gabriel Laumain No 50 Hotel Cardon built around 1773 1774 by Claude Martin Goupy for the sculptor and director of the Academie de Saint Luc Nicolas Vincent Cardon No 52 hotel built around 1775 by Claude Martin Goupy for the painter decorator Pierre Hyacinthe Deleuze of the Academy of Saint Luc15 No 52 Julie Candeille lived there in 1834 No 56 plaque in memory of the painter Camille Corot who died on February 22 1875 in this house Here lived in 1833 the painter Alexandre Charles Sauvageot 1781 1860 who was represented in the dining room of his apartment in the middle of his collections by his friend Louis Pierre Henriquel Dupont a drawing in 1833 and an engraving of 1852 A painting of the same was also painted by the painter Arthur Henry Roberts in 1857 nbsp The number 56 nbsp Number 56 Camille Corot No 57 location of the former Opera decor store which was destroyed by fire in 1894 The store occupied the site of the former Menus Plaisirs du Roi stores At this location rue Ambroise Thomas was opened in 1897 nbsp Number 57 No 58 former Hotel Titon built by Jean Charles Delafosse around 1776 10 nbsp Number 58 No 64 corner of rue de Paradis location of the Porte Sainte Anne built in 1645 and destroyed around 1715 The granting barrier at this location is shown on Turgot s plan It was replaced around 1788 by the Poissonniere barrier on the Wall of the Ferme generale No 66 68 Gustave Priore publishing house musical editions circa 1850 Gustave Priore is also a composer No 69 71 corner rue Bleue then rue Sainte Anne site of the dwelling of the Sanson family executors of high works of justice The garden extended beyond the current rue Bleue 11 After the death of Charles Henri Samson in 1778 his heirs sold the complex to the architect Nicolas Lenoir who subdivided the land with the opening in 1780 of the streets Papillon Riboutte and the widening of the rue Bleue then rue d Enfer No 72 stay from 1841 to 1846 of Henri Heine 1797 1856 Large plate No 76 location of the first so called New France barracks built by Claude Martin Goupy on land he had purchased in 1770 from the monks of Saint Lazare From 1773 he rented this barracks by the year to the French Guards Louis Antoine de Gontaut Biron Lazare Hoche then 17 years old and a soldier and Francois Joseph Lefebvre sergeant in 1789 began their military careers there An unfounded legend adds the name of Jean Baptiste Bernadotte On July 27 1830 Captain Flandin at the head of 200 citizens of whom there were perhaps not 20 who were armed attacked this barracks made 140 young soldiers of the 50th line lay down their arms and seized this important post where valuable resources for the defense were found Infantry troops sat there until 1914 then the Republican Guard Dilapidated the building was destroyed around 1930 A new barracks was built at nos 80 8218 nbsp Number 76 barracks Nouvelle France nbsp Panel Histoire de Paris barracks Nouvelle France No 77 site of the Sainte Anne chapel built in 1650 demolished in 1790 where the wife of the executioner Charles Sanson was buried Listed as a historical monument number 80 was a former pub at the corner of rue des Messageries with a storefront from the first half of the 19th century listed as a historical monument nbsp Number 80 facade of the ancien debit de boisson Nos 80 82 the new barracks in New France were built between 1932 and 1941 for the city of Paris by the architect Boegner On the wall of the building located at no 80 rue du Faubourg Poissonniere the sculptures come from the entrance to the first barracks which was located at current no 76 12 No 88 Gaston Poittevin 1880 1944 lived there in 1941 13 No 92 Etienne Calla mechanic pupil of Jacques de Vaucanson set up a foundry in 1820 14 It was the Calla firm that produced the ornamental cast iron for the church of Saint Vincent de Paul at the request of Jacques Hittorff The Calla foundry moved north of the Saint Lazare enclosure to La Chapelle in 1849 15 No 98 Boris Vian lived there after his marriage from 1942 No 106 Lycee Rocroy Saint Leon private establishment opened in 1877 16 Before the construction of the high school Philippe Frederic de Dietrich lived there in his private mansion which was subsequently demolished Classified as a historic monument no 121 the Lycee Lamartine founded in 1893 on the site of a lustschloss mansion dating from the 17th century bought in 1891 by the National Education Many works are done but some parts were kept as they were and classified as historical monuments office living room and interior decor 17 No 129 site of the entrance to the first gasworks in Paris In 1807 Francois de Neufchateau bought a house on this site comprising a plot of 1 hectare 18 In 1821 in debt he was forced to sell this property In 1823 Antoine Pauwels built a gasometer there then Etienne Calla set up a foundry there until 1849 19 Faubourg Poissonniere street gasometer nbsp Location of the future gasometer on rue du Faubourg Poissonniere in 1814 nbsp Location of the rue du Faubourg Poissonniere gasometer in 1837 nbsp Location of the rue du Faubourg Poissonniere gasometer in 1848 No 138 location of the Wallart carpentry factory built in 1896 building also fronting 45 rue de Dunkerque It was a three storey building in sculpted wood with mortise and tenon fittings the workshops were on rue du Faubourg Poissonniere the main porch for the passage of trucks opened on rue de Dunkerque a unique masterpiece of wooden architecture in Paris which disappeared with the construction in the early 1970s of the apartment building that is there today No 146 headquarters of the Editions Sociales and the Editions Messidor as well as the Livre club Diderot and the Cahiers du communisme No 148 headquarters of the Union of French Women and Clear Hours No 153 Emile Souvestre lived there Nos 157 to 187 location of the Promenades egyptiennes an establishment where parties such as those at the Tivoli amusement park were held Opened on May 4 1818 they gave way to the Delta garden from 1819 to 1824 20 No 161 location of a house where Charles de Bourbon Conde lived with his mistress Madame de la Saune Nos 171 173 and 175 buildings on rue du Faubourg Poissonniere from the building complex built by the insurance company La Confiance in 1880 consisting of six buildings on this road three on the street three on the garden four buildings on rue de Dunkerque all on the street and a hotel surrounded by a garden and equipped with outbuildings at the back of the plot The day after August 10 1792 it was near the Poissonniere barrier in a vast trench dug for this purpose that the 400 to 500 corpses of the Swiss Guards killed in the stairs courtyards and Tuileries garden were thrown pell mell19 On June 23 1848 the Poissonniere barrier was the subject of fierce fighting between the insurgents barricaded in the buildings and the government troops nbsp Poissonniere Barrier Days of June in the Enclos Saint LazareThe 23rd of June 1848 nbsp Plan of the real estate complex of Numbers 171 173 and 175 rue du Faubourg Poissonniere and the numbers 46 48 et 50 rue de DunkerqueReferences edit Nomenclature des voies Alain Rey Dictionnaire historique de la langue francaise Le Robert 2006 Dictionnaire administratif et historique des rues de Paris et de ses monuments Excelsior du 8 janvier 1919 Carte et liste officielles des bombes d avions et de zeppelins lancees sur Paris et la banlieue et numerotees suivant leur ordre et leur date de chute Perverses promiscuites Bains publics et cafes concerts parisiens au second XIXe siecle Central telephonique Provence Hotel Cheret ou Akermann Ravalement des facades sur cours et reprise des pans de bois 30 32 rue du Fbg Poissonniere 10e Pascal Etienne Le Faubourg Poissonniere Architecture elegance et decor Paris Delegation a l Action artistique de la Ville de Paris 1986 312 p p 30 32 Maison ancien hotel Titon Pascal Etienne Le Faubourg Poissonniere Architecture elegance et decor Paris Delegation a l Action artistique de la Ville de Paris 1986 312 p p 62 66 Emplacement de la caserne de la Nouvelle France Le Petit Parisien journal quotidien du soir Les Rues de Paris Paris ancien et moderne origines histoire monuments costumes mœurs chroniques et traditions ouvrage redige par l elite de la litterature contemporaine sous la direction de Louis Lurine et illustre de 300 dessins executes par les artistes les plus distingues volume 2 Histoire de la culture tecHnique et scientifique en Europe XVie XiXe siecles Histoire Lycee Lamartine Francois DE NEUFCHATEAU Guide exposition Le clos Saint Lazare POURQUOI LE LOUXOR DE LA CAMPAGNE D EGYPTE AU JARDIN DU DELTA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rue du Faubourg Poissonniere amp oldid 1173088080, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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