Jules Carde

Jules Carde
Jules Carde. Press photograph taken at the gare d'Orsay in 1923
Governor General of French West Africa
In office
18 March 1923  15 October 1930
Preceded by Martial Henri Merlin
Succeeded by Jules Brévié
Governor General of Algeria
In office
3 October 1930  21 September 1935
Preceded by Pierre-Louis Bordes
Succeeded by Georges le Beau
Personal details
Born Jules Gaston Henri Carde
3 June 1874
Batna, Algeria
Died 10 July 1949 (aged 75)
Nationality French
Occupation Colonial administrator

Jules Gaston Henri Carde (3 June 1874 - 10 July 1949) was a French colonial administrator who served as Governor General of French West Africa and then Governor General of Algeria.

Life

Jules Gaston Henri Carde was born in Batna, Algeria on 3 June 1874. He joined the colonial administration under Joseph Gallieni in Madagascar, where he remained for seven years until 1907. He was then Chief of Staff to the Governor of Martinique, secretary general of the Ivory Coast, Chief of Staff of the Governor General of French Equatorial Africa (AEF), lieutenant governor of French Congo and General Secretary of the Governor of French West Africa (AOF). From 1919 to 1923 he was the first Commissioner of the French Republic in Cameroon, whose status changed during this period.[1]

Succeeding Martial Merlin, Jules Carde was appointed governor general of French West Africa on 18 March 1923, a position he held until 15 October 1930. Shortly after installation, on 11 November 1923 he laid the first stone of the Dakar Cathedral. The ceremony was attended by Blaise Diagne, then deputy for Senegal.[2] Carde was particularly interested in economic development, public health and education. Under his authority public education was reorganized in the AOF, by the decree of 1 May 1924. Jules Brévié was his successor as head of the AOF. On 3 October 1930 Carde was appointed civilian governor general of Algeria, a position he held until 21 September 1935.

Jules Carde died on 10 July 1949. He was buried in the Alphonse Karr cemetery in Saint-Raphaël, Var.[3] He was an officer of the Legion of Honour.

Bibliography

  • Principales réformes réalisées et mesures adoptées, 1920, 75 p.
  • « La réorganisation de l'enseignement en Afrique occidentale française », Revue indigène, May-June 1924, n° 185-186, p. 111-129
  • Magasins généraux de la santé publique : notice n° 5, 1933
  • Instructions d'ordre général relatives au fonctionnement de l'assistance médicale : notice n° 3, 1933
  • L'Afrique Occidentale française, Vie Technique, Paris, 1926, 130 p.
  • Exposé de la situation générale de l'Algérie en 1934, Solal, 1935
  • « La colonisation indigène dans la vallée du Niger », Le Monde colonial illustré, Paris, 17e year, n° 189, March 1939

Memorials

The African School of Medicine and Pharmacy, founded in 1916 in Dakar, at first was named after him. Today his memory is perpetuated by the Boulevard Carde in Abidjan, the seat of the Constitutional Council of Côte d'Ivoire .

References

Citations

Sources