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 | A Short History of Gautier-Languereau
 and La Semaine de Suzette
 
 Article 
                  published in the 2010 October issue of Journal of Belles 
                  Lettres
 edited by Anne Baxter VI, n°5, pp 19-35.
 
 A shorter version appears as well in A. Levi, Storia della 
                  Biblioteca dei Miei Ragazzi,
 Bibliografia e Informazione, 2012, pp. 400-407
 NO REPRODUCTION RIGHTS
 ________________________________________
 |   
              | 
                   Henri 
                  Gautier, a few months before his death in 1938
 © Hachette
  Maurice 
                  Languereau © Hachette
 |  
                  Henri Eugène Gautier, founder of the publishing 
                    house H. Gautier, later to become Gautier et Languereau Editeurs, 
                    was born in Paris in the VII arrondissement, on October 17th, 
                    1855, the youngest son of Marius Léonard Gautier and 
                    Claire Amélie Bourdon.
 The Gautiers were originally from Marseille, where Henri's 
                    paternal grandfather, Symphorien Marie, (b.1782) had been 
                    a tailor.
 Marius Léonard, (b. Marseille 1812-d. 1867) was a manufacturer 
                    of iron tools who owned a hardware shop (quincalleirie) 
                    in rue du Temple, 20. In 1839 he married Claire Amélie, 
                    issued from a family of Parisian tradesmen. Besides Henri 
                    they had four more children:
 
 
                     
                      |  
                          Claire 
                            Amélie Virginie: (1840-1930) Léon Gustave Adolphe: 1842-1916, Négociant 
                            quincaillier, with his brother Paul Emile, 
                            he inherited his father's business in rue du Temple 
                            , 20 (recorded at this adress in 1889 and again in 
                            1908). His daughter Suzanne married Alfred Tolmer 
                            ca1905
 Paul Émile Louis: b. 1844-d. 1910. Négociant, 
                            manufacturier rue du Temple, 20 in 1884 and 
                            avenue Victoria in 1889. He attended l'École 
                            Nationale Supérieure du Génie Maritime 
                            and became a civil engineer. He is listed (in rue 
                            du Temple) in the 1884-85 issue of Annuaire de la 
                            Société Amicale du Génie Maritime, 
                            whose members were former pupils of the school and 
                            in Mémoires de la Société des 
                            Ingénieurs Civils de France, 1875
 Charles-Albert: b. Paris (VII) 20 May 1846-d.11 
                            April 1915. He became a well known architect. Graduate 
                            Ecole Centrale d'Architecture in 1869. and École 
                            des Beaux-Arts (1869-1877), inspector of Bâtiments 
                            Civils et des Palais Nationaux, Paris, Architecte 
                            of the Greenhouses of Paris, renown for his innovative 
                            designs of glass & ironworought domes. Officier 
                            Légion d'Honneur. Tout-Paris, 1900: adresses 
                            in Paris at rue Cambon & 37 rue de Lille.
 |  In 
                    1861 Claire Amélie married Jean Languereau (1831-1903) 
                    a bronze manufacturer (fabricant de bronzes). They 
                    had three children: Amélie Pauline (b.. 1862), Eugénie 
                    Jeanne Marie (b..1864) and Jules Léon Maurice (the 
                    future Caumery) born in Paris (10e), 66, Boulevard de Strasbourg 
                    on January 8th, 1867. Witnesses were the two grandparents 
                    Marius Gautier and Jacques Languereau. 
 The Languereaus were a wealthy family of tradesmen/rentiers:
 Maurice's grandfather, Jacques, who in 1840 had been a pasta 
                    dealer (marchand des pâtes à potage), 
                    was living as a rentier by the time of his death in 
                    1888. He left an estate worth 72,520 francs, (short of 10M 
                    pounds at today's value) which included properties in rue 
                    de la Roquette n°44, in passage Louis Philippe, in rue 
                    de Lappe n°21, in passage Choisel n° 12, and possibly 
                    also in Maisons-Laffite.
 Maurice Languereau's sisters were married as it befitted their 
                    social status: Amélie Pauline to Pierre Laville, a 
                    rich Parisian tradesman from Rue de Rivoli, Eugénie 
                    Jeanne Marie to Emmanuel Parmegiani who eventually became 
                    Head of Cabinet at the Ministry of War and Officier de la 
                    Légion d'Honneur.
 
 At the end of his secondary studies, two weeks after his 18th 
                    birthday Henri Gautier joined the Army under the "engagement 
                    conditionnel" scheme, destined to form the officers, 
                    which allowed "les bacheliers" young men who had 
                    gained the baccalaureat and were able to pay 1500francs for 
                    their upkeep in the Army, to do only one year military service 
                    instead of the obligatory five. (Marcel Proust will avail 
                    himself of the same prerogative a few years later.
 In 1875 he was discharged (passé dans la disponibilité) 
                    and then in 1879 he was moved to the Reserve de l'Armée 
                    active. Having attended over the following years the mandatory 
                    two weeks recalls for military exercises, by 1907 he had reached 
                    the grade of Chef de Bataillon de l'Armée Territoriale 
                    d'Infanterie dans la 9me Région. Until the age of fifty 
                    he could be mobilized, in case of war.
 
 |   
              |  |  
                  As 
                    soon as he left the Army in 1875, Henri Gautier (1) went into 
                    business and became a publisher with modest beginnings: he 
                    published music sheets.
 
                     
                      |  
                          La 
                            Tentation, scène dramatique avec solos 
                            et choeurs. Poésie de M. Paul Vrignault., 1875 
                            in-8 ° à 2 col., 4 p. Le bal des fleurs, quadrille par Eugène 
                            Besançon, Impr. Fouquet, 3 p., couv. orn., 
                            35 cm Dédicace: "à mademoiselle 
                            Emilie Bonnemye" . La couv. porte "Oeuvres 
                            musicales". Gravé par Baudon, 1878 d'après 
                            le cachet de dépôt légal.
 Les roses, piano par Eugène Besançon 
                            [Paris] H. Gautier, Impr. Fouquet, Dédicace: 
                            "à monsieur Georges Laruaz". La couv. 
                            porte "Oeuvres musicales". Gravé 
                            par Baudon, 1878 d'après le cachet de dépôt 
                            légal.
 Glissade polka pour piano, op. 48 par 
                            Eugène Besançon Paris, H. Gautier, Impr. 
                            Fouquet, 3 p.,couv. ill.,35 cm, Gravé par Mlles 
                            Field, 1879 d'après le cachet de dépôt 
                            légal.
 |  In 
                    1880 he is already into books, printing Le Roman bourgeois 
                    avec introduction littéraire et biographique par Charles 
                    Simond, Paris: H. Gautier, (1880). by Antoine Furetière 
                    an author who lived in the XVII Century. 
 Two years later Gautier becomes Blériot partner.
 In 1882, the Parisian Librairie Blériot Frères 
                    (Charles Félix et Louis). was one of the leading French 
                    publishers/booksellers.
 It existed already in 1859 as "Librairie de Charles Blériot", 
                    at 11, rue Rousselet, owned by Charles Blériot (b.1838) 
                    who was later joined by his older brother Louis.
 In 1860 Charles Blériot bought the bookseller licence 
                    (brevet de libraire) of Firmin Alphonse Pringuet (b.5 Feb 
                    1820-d.3 Apr. 1905) (2) libraire-commissionaire at 
                    25, rue Bonaparte with a full-fledged catalogue of religious 
                    and historical literature (e.g.: Preuves de la Religion 
                    présentées à la jeunesse, suivi de l'Instruction 
                    de E. Costa sur le dogme de l'Immaculée Conception, 
                    Pringuet, Paris 1855) which included La Revue de l'Art 
                    Chrétien, founded 1856.
 
 |  
              |  |  fragment 
                  from the cover of La Revue de l'Art Chrétien, 1860 
 |   
              |  |  
                  In 
                    1861 he moved from 25, rue Bonaparte (round the corner from 
                    rue Jacob) to 55, Quai des Grands Augustins. Blériot 
                    used outside printers like, for instance, Imprimerie Mme V.ve 
                    Belin, Saint Cloud or, in 1861, Rousseau-Leroy, 26, rue Saint-Maurice, 
                    Arras.On the 23rd Feb. 1882 a full page obituary signed by Raoul 
                    de Navéry announced in the front page of L'Ouvrier 
                    the sudden death, at the age of 46, of Louis Blériot 
                    (3). Exactly four weeks later, on the 25th March 1882, Librairie 
                    Blériot Frères became Librairie de Blériot 
                    et Gautier. No explanation as to why or how Gautier had become 
                    a partner was given.
 
 An unconfirmed source states that, after his military service, 
                    Henri Gautier started at Blériot as an apprentice, 
                    working his way up to the top, finding himself in the right 
                    place at the right time, with suitable means and experience, 
                    to become Charles Félix's partner.
 Whichever way Gautier started his successful career - on his 
                    own or as an apprentice - it is an undisputed fact that after 
                    becoming Maison Blériot's partner in 1882, three years 
                    later, in July 1885, aged thirty, he became its sole proprietor 
                    (Charles Blériot, who died in 1898, stills appears 
                    as Directeur Gérant). Gautier also bought the catalogue 
                    of the bookseller/editor Dillet (Constant René), 15 
                    rue de Sèvres (who had been one of Raoul de Navéry 
                    and Zénaide Fleuriot's publishers). (4)
 The whole operation may have been financed with the help of 
                    his brothers and/or brother-in-law Jean Languereau. Surely 
                    no coincidence, the same year (1885), his very young nephew, 
                    Jules Léon Maurice Languereau, the son of his sister 
                    Claire Amélie, barely eighteen, joined the firm.
 
 The daily La Patrie thus referred to Gautier in July 1885: 
                    "Le nouveau propriétaire de l'ancienne maison 
                    Blériot, M. Henri Gautier, un jeune, intelligent et 
                    laborieux editeur".
 
 The new publishing house traded under various names: Blériot 
                    et Gautier (1882), Henri Gautier (1887-1900), Librairie Henri 
                    Gautier (1903), Librairie Blériot, Henri Gautier Successeur 
                    (used as late as 1922).
 Their premises remained at 55, Quai des Grands-Augustins, 
                    in a district of Paris where printing and publishing firms 
                    existed since the XIII century. An adress with literary and 
                    artistic connections, it was where "au dernier étage 
                    du 55, quai des Grands-Augustins, Colette et Willy, fraîchement 
                    mariés, passent quelques semaines en mai-juin 1893" 
                    Picasso will have his studio at no7 during WWII.
 
 he catalogue Gautier acquired from Blériot contained 
                    over one thousand titles of religious and historical works, 
                    adventure and melodramatic novels with titles such as Les 
                    Terreurs de Lady Suzanne by Claire de Chandeneux (Emma Bailly), 
                    authors like Raoul de Navéry, Zenaide Fleuriot, Marie 
                    Marechal, Maryan and two magazines:
 
                  L'Ouvrier 
                    (founded 1st May 1861 - closed 24 April 1920) Journal hebdomadaire 
                    illustré, paraissant tous les samedis, Biographies, 
                    Causeries, Littérature, Romans et nouvelles, Sciences, 
                    etc., Paris, au bureau du Journal L'Ouvrier, 55 Quai des Grands 
                    - Augustins. In 1920, after 59 years, because of the political/social 
                    overtones associated with the name it was renamed Fils 
                    de France.
 Les Veillées des Chaumières (September 
                    1860 - to date) Journal illustré paraissant le Mercredi 
                    et le Samedi , a literary revue aimed at a young modern female 
                    readership, the big sisters of Suzettes, gently introducing 
                    in their stories the subject of love. The first number appeared 
                    on 1st September 1860 and cost five cents; published initially 
                    on Saturday and then twice a week, Wednesday and Saturday, 
                    in 1884 the circulation reached 75,000 copies. [The name is 
                    now owned by Emap Femme; still published, it reached issue 
                    2630 in February 2005]. Some of the contributors were or became 
                    famous French writers: René Bazin, Henry Bordeaux, 
                    Paul Bourget, Gérard de Nérval, Sully Prud'homme.
                    
                    Gautier 
                    started immediately to re-organize Blériot catalogue 
                    and launch his own collections:
 
                      On 
                    the 2nd of February 1905, heralded by a massive campaign in 
                    Les Veillées and L'Ouvrier, Gautier issued 
                    the first number of La Semaine de Suzette a magazine specifically 
                    aimed at girls aged 8-14, daughters of the professional bourgeoisie, 
                    being educated at home or in private religious establishments. 
                        |  
                            Collection 
                              Blériot (es. Marinette by Marie 
                              Alderic) which then became Collection Blériot - Bibliothèque 
                              Grise (1884)
 Nouvelle Bibliothèque Populaire (1887) 
                              a series of cheap paper-backs sold at ten centimes, 
                              dedicated to French and foreign classics: Milton, 
                              Racine, Schiller. (n°1, was Lettres De Louis 
                              XVI , n°2, Contes fantastiques de 
                              E.TA. Hoffmann n°3, Dante, La Divine Comédie). 
                              This collection in competition with the very cheap 
                              Bibliothèque Nationale was very well received 
                              at home and abroad "Of all the cheap "libraries," 
                              quite the cheapest is the Nouvelle Bibliotheque 
                              Populaire, just started in France" (The 
                              Nation, 1887) "La Nouvelle bibliothèque 
                              populaire à dix centimes, que vient de créer 
                              l'éditeur Henri Gautier, est une publication 
                              qui mérite d'être signalée et 
                              encouragée" (Revue politique et littéraire: 
                              revue bleue, 1887)
 Une Nouvelle bibliothèque populaire, 
                              la bibliothèque Henri Gautier, se publie 
                              à Paris au prix de 10 centimes le cahier 
                              de 32 pages - Que peut-on bien avoir pour 10 centimes? 
                              - Peu de chose mais souvent un petit chef-d'oeuvre" 
                              (La Revue de Belgique, 1888)
 "Inexpensive as is this Biliothèque 
                              Nationale it has now a new rival - the Nouvelle 
                              Bibliotheque Populaire - in which the single numbers 
                              are sold for two cents each" (Cheap Books 
                              and good books, The American Copyright League, 
                              1888) "J'avoue que j'ai beaucoup lu, mais je 
                              n'avais pas encore vu pareil pour dix centimes" 
                              (Vallette in Le Mercure de France, 1907).
 Bibliothèque de Souvenirs et Récits 
                              Militaires (1893) Collection Récits des 
                              grands jours de l'histoire.
 Bibliothèque de voyages, de chasses et 
                              d'aventures
 Collection Bibliothèque des Petites Sources 
                              de Richesses
 Bibliothèque scientifique des écoles 
                              et des familles (it includes La Photographie: 
                              Development et Tirage par Louis et Auguste Lumière)
 Bibliothèque de Ma Fille (1897)
 Collection Choisie (the old Dillet stock 
                              rebound under a Gautier-Languereau cover (after 
                              1918)
 Collection Familia (1922-1947) 120 titles. 
                              The first volume Lequel? by Mathilde Aigueperse
 |  In a Country where religion and education will be soon officially 
                    separated by a Bill of Law to be passed on the 9th of December 
                    1905, in the wake of the Congregations' expulsion from teaching, 
                    in the full swing of La Belle Epoque, Henri Gautier has a 
                    reassuring message for parents: "La Semaine de Suzette 
                    sera le complément récréatif d'une éducation 
                    religieuse et intelligente". However it can be safely 
                    stated that the immediate success of Suzette was due to his 
                    nephew Maurice who was simply an advertising, marketing, and 
                    merchandising genius and a shrewd businessman, qualities obviously 
                    inherited from his ancestors. 
                    
                    Why 
                    the name Suzette was chosen, official history doesn't say 
                    (5).
 Suzette could be a generic name for "little girl", 
                    the fashionable diminutive "ette" of Suzanne, a 
                    girl name popular in France at the beginning of the century.
 Or maybe the title was inspired by a schoolbook by Marie Malezieux 
                    Halt, L'Enfance de Suzette, livre de lecture courante a 
                    l'usage des jeunes filles, Paris, P. Delaplane, 1892 or 
                    possibly by a series of postcards published around 1900 called 
                    La Journée de Suzette in circulation as long as 1910, 
                    depicting the daily activities of a little girl from the moment 
                    she wakes up to her bedtime prayers.
 There was also the classic novellette La dot de Suzette 
                    by Joseph Fievée, published in 1798, still in print 
                    in 1992. And there was La Semaine des Familles (1858-1896) 
                    founded by Alfred Nettement, managed for many years by Zenaide 
                    Fleuriot. And there had been La Semaine des Enfants 
                    by Hachette (1857-1876).
 Whoever named the paper after a girl, and for whatever reason, 
                    it was a masterstroke soon to be followed by other publishers.
 Magazines or rather periodical instalments of books for (rich) 
                    children had been published in France since the XVIII century: 
                    L'Ami des Enfans par M. Arnaud Berquin ( Paris 1782 
                    and London 1783), Le Portefeuille des enfans (1784-1800), 
                    Le courrier des enfans (1796-1799).
 In the XIX century beside general magazines pour enfants , 
                    aimed indiscriminately at boysand girls i.e. Le Journal 
                    des jeunes personnes (Julie Gouraud, 1832) La Semaine 
                    des Enfants (Hachette, 1857-1876) there were also some 
                    specifically destined to fillettes, jeunes filles and demoiselles 
                    such as L'Abeille des demoiselles (1826-28), L'Album 
                    des demoiselles (1832), Le journal des demoiselles 
                    [sold on subscription it will last from 1833 to 1922], Magasin 
                    des demoiselles (1844-1881), La Jeune fille (1888-1898) 
                    and many more.
 Some were illustrated with strips like Le Jeudi de la Jeunesse 
                    (Tallandier 1903-1914), others did not have many illustrations 
                    and were quite expensive, i.e. Mon Journal and Le 
                    Petit Français illustré (just to name two).
 But 
                    Suzette was personal, it adressed itself directly to an existing 
                    potential reader, who could identify with and respond to it. 
                    Incidentally the popularity of the name Suzette in its own 
                    right peaked in France in 1932.
 Suzette's editorial staff consisted of a team of female writers, 
                    headed by the Editor-in-chief Jacqueline Rivière, Mme 
                    Alexandre Bernhardt, née Jeanne Spallarossa, known 
                    as Mme Bernard de la Roche, an established editor at Les 
                    Veillées des Chaumières and L'Ouvrier 
                    who, until her death in 1920, will run Suzette practically 
                    single-handed, covering many features under different pseudonyms. 
                    Contributors such as Agon de La Contrie, Roger Dombre, Pierre 
                    Besbre and Jeanne de Coulomb came as well from Les Vieillées 
                    and/or L'Ouvrier. They wrote on commission to a set 
                    formula and over the years they often represented the heroines 
                    reading  La Semaine de Suzette, a subliminal in-house 
                    advertising message suggesting that to identify with the book's 
                    characters, a little girl had to read the magazine.
 
 For 
                    the launch of Suzette, one hundred thousand copies of the 
                    first number were distributed free of charge. As an incentive 
                    to prospective subscribers, Maurice offered a doll called 
                    Bleuette. G&L marketing strategy returned more results 
                    than expected. The subscription offer was an instant sell 
                    out; Gautier who had placed an order for an estimated 20000 
                    subscriptions with the manufacturer (Jumeau), soon had to 
                    order another 60000 dolls. After the first two stocks run 
                    out, Bleuette was put on sale.
 
 A fore-mother of Barbie, Bleuette, was supplied with a continous 
                    range of merchandising: clothes, accessories, furniture patterns 
                    and ready-made trousseaux which were exhibited at Gautier-Languereau's 
                    premises where Bluette's fashion shows were held regularly.
 
 Catalogues with invitations to view the new season's models 
                    were issued. As soon as a new pattern for Bleuette's elegant 
                    wardrobe came out, little mummy started sewing.
 
 At the end of the publishing year - which until 1926 fell 
                    on the 2nd of February, the date of the first issue - for 
                    those who had missed out, Suzette was sold bound in albums. 
                    (For the numbering of La Semaine de Suzette see Trésors 
                    de la bande dessinée, BDM: BERA, Michel, DENNI 
                    Michel, MELLO, Philippe, Ed. de l'Amateur)
 There were also concours, competitions in which readers could 
                    take part by answering a number of questions spread over many 
                    issues and by attaching to their reply a coupon from each 
                    issue. There were rich prizes: results for the Grand Concours 
                    du Bourreur de Crane which had been running since August 
                    were announced in the 23rd December 1926 issue. The 1st prize 
                    was a bycicle Fillette Touriste Peugeot, in black enamel 
                    lined in gold, with brakes and accessories, a bag, mudguards, 
                    and skirt net. For the record the winner was M.lle Marie-Louise 
                    Paul (Isère). To keep the girls busy in summertime, 
                    the yearly Suzette en Vacances offered, since 1906, 
                    a structured program of activities and entertainments.
 The illustrations were made by artists who at the time were 
                    already famous and in great demand, though some having illustrated 
                    "littérature galante"- as it was called then 
                    - were somewhat beyond the pale for a Catholic magazine.
 
 The result was a vibrant publication which even after a century 
                    still exudes an exciting go-getting feeling. It gave its readers 
                    a specific personality: once a Suzette forever a Suzette, 
                    demonstrating and anticipating Miss Brodie's famous pedagogical 
                    axiom "give me a girl at an impressionable age and she 
                    is mine for life".
 
 Nevertheless Suzette doesn't lack its share of negative 
                    comments: bromidic, repetitive, the mouth piece of a nationalistic 
                    conservative class, patronizingly racist, paying lip service 
                    to new trends, a propagandist of the Catholic Church, etc... 
                    These were certainly not the considerations of a little girl 
                    anticipating the Thursday thrill of its arrival, nay of a 
                    girl deprived of a television set. Par manque de Blue 
                    Peter, the instructions on how to build from nothing a baquet 
                    à fleurs pour égayer la table (Feb. 1938) 
                    were as much exciting. Of course it is not a coincidence that 
                    the demise of the magazine coincides with the advent of television.
 
 To fill an empty space in the first issue of La Semaine 
                    de Suzette (so the story goes) Languereau or, according 
                    to others, Jacqueline Rivière, who is officially credited 
                    with the first script, invented the character of the maid 
                    Bécassine (6) which appeared as a strip. The accidental 
                    illustrator happened to be Joseph Porphyre Pinchon (Amiens, 
                    17 April 1871 - 20 June 1953). Painter by training and vocation, 
                    he was working - out of necessity - as a magazine illustrator. 
                    By 1910 he was the established artistic director and costumes 
                    designer at the Opéra Garnier in Paris .
 But the story is true: the last minute arrival of Bécassine 
                    is actually documented.
 Since 1904 G&L had started advertising the new issue (which 
                    like all magazines was prepared months ahead) in Les Veillées 
                    and L'Ouvrier.
 L'Ouvrier no 76, dated 21 Jan 1905 carries two columns 
                    (pag 604 & 605) signed E. de Prémartin, outlining 
                    in detail each feature of the soon-to-be-born Suzette. No 
                    mention of Bécassine.
 In L'Ouvrier, no 77, 25 Jan.1905 (one week to go), 
                    a box lists the contents - still no mention of Bécassine 
                    - whereas she is suddenly announced on the 28th Jan. 1905, 
                    no 78, (Saturday, four days before the launch) under the heading 
                    Les exploits de Bécassine (page gaie) illustrations 
                    de Pinchon.
 
 On popular demand Bécassine became a regular feature 
                    and from 1905 to 1914, ninety-nine short stories were scripted 
                    appearing in the centrefold pages. Becassine became even a 
                    radio vedette.
 In fact Bécassine became - and remains to this day 
                    - so popular that in November 1913 Gautier launched Bécassine's 
                    own collection under the name Les Albums de Bécassine. 
                    Though over the years Bécassine was scripted also by 
                    other writers, Languereau continued to write until his death 
                    some of her endless adventures under the pseudonym-anagram 
                    Caumery Léon, which he used initially to hide the frivolous 
                    activity of strip scriptwriter from his colleagues in the 
                    publishing world. Twenty eight albums were produced in 45 
                    years: " "Je ne pensais guère à doubler 
                    d'un écrivain, l'éditeur que j'étais" 
                    said Languereau in 1934 of his scriptwriting.
 If Maurice Languereau, a well educated man, was not a writer, 
                    he was most certainly a man who wrote: in fact he contributed 
                    as a literary critic to his uncle weekly Revue de France 
                    (published 1889-1893): i.e.: "Le marquis de Breuteuil", 
                    20 Aug, 1892, "René Bazin: Sicile" - "Henri 
                    Dabot: Lettre d'un écolier" 10 Dec 1892, & 
                    "Henri Meilhac" April 1892).
 Bécassine was also distributed under copyright in the 
                    USA. The copyright was regularly re-newed, the latest available 
                    record in the Sixties (18 Nov. 1960 and in 1967) in the names 
                    of Mme Maurice Languereau, née Yvonne Gallien & 
                    Mme Jean-Pierre Pinchon, née Suzanne Armande Wurtz. 
                    Presently it belongs to Hachette-Gautier-Languereau.
 
                      Maurice 
                    Languerau had been exempted from military service for feeble 
                    constitution (exempté pour faiblesse de constitution) 
                    and assigned to the Services Auxiliaires. Therefore 
                    at the outbreak of WWI he was put in charge of the administration 
                    of a military hospital near Paris (it became the setting of 
                    Bécassine pendant la guerre, 1916). 
                        |  The Postman cometh ... postcard 
                            1905, ill. R de La Nézière
 
 |  
 Les petites Suzettes as well took part in the war effort, 
                    together with Bécassine who was mobilisée 
                    and went chez les Alliées and Bleuette who was 
                    at the front-line donning the uniform of infirmière, 
                    (n°2, 1915) and ambulancière de la Croix Rouge 
                    (n°11, April, 1915). In 1915 the young readers were invited 
                    to become marraines de guerre, (war-godmothers: more 
                    than just a pen-pal), "adopting" and supporting 
                    a soldier at the front as a personal friend, especially those 
                    without families.
 
 The war was covered in many Suzette's articles and stories.
 
 For instance, in 1917, Jean et his sister Jeannette on their 
                    way to school, stop every day at the tobacconist. A neighbour 
                    reports them to their mother on suspicion of smoking (those 
                    were the days when there was an educational community spirit). 
                    Mother follows them and indeed catches them entering the shop.
 But, before she has time to give them the good hiding she 
                    thinks they deserve, she sees through the window Jean and 
                    Jeannette deposit the cigarettes they have bought with quatre 
                    sous - their snack money - into the "N'oubliez pas 
                    les soldats" basket, containing offerings for the soldiers 
                    at the front. Outside the shop, the patriotic children, "fort 
                    surpris", find maman "qui les embrasse tendrement, 
                    les larmes dans les yeux".
 
 In February 1918, Henri made his nephew - who already had 
                    power of attorney - a full partner. The partnership took the 
                    name Gautier et Languereau Éditeurs. Henri Gautier 
                    remained Directeur Gérant of the firm until 
                    his death.
 Towards the end of 1919 Gautier-Languereau launched the book 
                    collection Bibliothèque de Suzette, editing 
                    in book format the most popular feuillletons published in 
                    Suzette. The collection became as successful as the magazine. 
                    The volumes came in various formats. The internal illustrations 
                    remained the same. The covers of the paperback version were 
                    designed by the usual illustrators. In 1936 G&L contracted 
                    out the illustration of the covers to Maison Tolmer. Its owner 
                    Alfred, had married (ca 1905) Suzanne, Henri's niece, (daughter 
                    of Gustave Adolphe Gautier).
 They sold the translation rights to foreign publishers in 
                    a number of Catholic countries like Spain, Italy and Portugal. 
                    The Italian translations rights of over fifty titles were 
                    sold in 1931 to Adriano Salani Editore for 600FF per volume. 
                    Other titles were sold to Marietti.
 In the Fifties nine Bibliothèque de Suzette 
                    including P'tit Oiseau were adapted in Turkish published 
                    anonymously by Dogan Kardes Yayinlari. P'tit Oiseau 
                    was again published in Turkish in 2002 also in an adapted 
                    version this time with the author's name.
 
 G&L books were distributed abroad by La Maison du Livre 
                    Français. For the Americas G&L signed an agreement 
                    in 1946 with Editions B.-D. Simpson (Berthe Dulude Simpson 
                    of Montréal) under which the sale of Suzettes published 
                    in their joint names was "strictement limitée 
                    au Canada, aux Etats-Unis d'Amérique et à l'Amérique 
                    du Sud à l'exclusion de tous autres pays" (i.e. 
                    Une petite fille tombée de la lune, Gautier 
                    Languereau, Paris & B.-D. Simpson, Montreal, 1937 and 
                    Il était un petit page, 1932 and La tutelle 
                    de Cousine Linotte, 1931)
 
 To promote the company and the French press industry, Maurice 
                    travelled continuously taking part to conferences, symposiums. 
                    (es. Rome 1928 Conferenza sui diritti di autore) and book 
                    exhibitions.
 
 
 
                       
                        | In 
                            the year 1922 G&L attended the exhibitions held 
                            in Florence (Fiera Internazionale del Libro 1922), 
                            San Sebastian and Stockholm Rio de Janeiro 1923 (Gold Medal)
 Strasbourg 1924 (not competing)
 Paris 1925, Exposition des Arts Décoratifs 
                            (Silver medal for Bleuette)
 Zagreb 1925
 Madrid 1927 (Grand Prix)
 Barcelone 1929 (not competing)
 Liège 1930 (Grand Prix)
 Paris 1931, Exposition Coloniale: Palais du Livre, 
                            Palais des Informations (Press), Section Métropolitaine 
                            (Jouets) (received a Grand Prix in each section)
 Lyon 1933, Exposition Internationale de la Poupée, 
                            Diplôme d'Honneur
 Paris 1937, Exposition Internationale "Arts et 
                            Techniques dans la Vie moderne", (Gold Medal)
 |  Reading through La Petite Poste it is evident from 
                    the letters looking for pen-pals that Suzette was read all 
                    over the world (and not just by the daughters of the expatriate 
                    community) including the United States and Great Britain (not 
                    so much Germany) but the magazine is unknown in English speaking 
                    countries, though two of its readers were the British princesses 
                    Elizabeth and her sister Margaret-Rose, which conjures up 
                    an idle question: does the Queen still keeps her old Suzette's 
                    copies? 
                    
                    Gautier-Languereau's 
                    catalogue was enormous but they became and remained famous 
                    for Les Albums de Bécassine, the long Brigitte 
                    series by Berthe Bernage, La Semaine de Suzette and 
                    Bibliothèque de Suzette. The last two had various 
                    spin-offs (Suzette en vacances, Suzette et le bon 
                    ton, Le livre de Suzette, etc.). Three generations 
                    of French women were profoundly influenced by Suzette's literature.
 In 
                    August 1926 Gautier-Languereau moved their offices to 18, 
                    rue Jacob, a narrow medieval street in the Quartier Latin, 
                    like Grands-Augustins an address equally full of literary 
                    resonances, which had been the headquarters of Hetzel, near 
                    to Firmin-Didot (no 24) and just next door to the American 
                    writer-socialite-heiress Nathalie Clifford-Barney, whose famous 
                    salon at no 20 was attended by French intellectuals and American 
                    expatriates. People such as Jean Cocteau, Gertrude Stein, 
                    Paul Claudel, Truman Capote, Colette and F. Scott Fitzgerald, 
                    to name a few, must have passed in front of Gautier Languereau 
                    quite regularly: was it during one of his visits to Barney 
                    that Fitzgerald stopped at Gautier to buy, maybe for his daughter 
                    Scottie, La petite marquise de Karabat (ed.1927) now 
                    in the Fitzgerald Library at Princeton University? One likes 
                    to think so.
 Stendhal too had been a resident of 18, rue Jacob and it was 
                    where the young Jules Verne arrived an autumn afternoon in 
                    1862, introduced by a mutual friend, the writer Alfred de 
                    Brehat, to submit to Hetzel the manuscript of his very first 
                    book Cinq Semaines en ballon.
 
 Maison 
                    Pierre-Jules Hetzel et C.ie, (est. 1837), publishers 
                    of Balzac, Sand, Verne and Hugo, can be considered the first 
                    mass-production publisher of juvenile educational literature 
                    with their Bibliothèque d'Education et de Récréation 
                    and Magazine illustré d'Education et de Récréation 
                    (1864-1915) of which Jules Verne became not only the main 
                    author but also a co-director.
 A non-denominational publishing house, it needs to be mentioned 
                    in this context not just for being Gautier's predecessor in 
                    rue Jacob (7), but because, Pierre-Jules influenced the philosophy 
                    and contents of contemporary and later juvenile publications, 
                    including Gautier's, by successfully marketing quality collections 
                    jeunesse written specifically for the youth by professional 
                    or contract writers.
 Hetzel started to sell their assets in bits and pieces at 
                    the beginning of the XX Century and effectively ceased to 
                    exist in 1930 with the death of Louis-Jules Hetzel son of 
                    Pierre-Jules. From Hetzel, Gautier inherited the premises 
                    and a few writers, e.g. Pierre Perrault.
 
 Henri 
                    Gautier, a self-effacing gentle man, devoted his life to the 
                    firm and the publishing world; out of his long list of offices 
                    and honours we mention only a few which prove his dedication 
                    to education and his social commitment. He was a founder member 
                    and director of La Maison des Orphelins du Livre and Chairman 
                    of La Caisse des Retraites du Personnel des Librairies.
 In 1932, under the patronage of the President de la République, 
                    he organized a lottery to fund a summer camp (colonie de 
                    vacances) for the orphans of the workers employed in the 
                    publishing industry.
 He was also a member of the Conseil d'administration du Cercle 
                    de La Librairie, member of the Comité du Syndicat des 
                    Editeurs, and a co-director of Imprimerie Crétéil 
                    (est. 1840) in Corbeil.
 Officier d'Académie in 1896 for his contribution to 
                    education, Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur since 1909, 
                    on the recommendation of the War Department, Gautier was made 
                    an Officer on Oct 21st, 1932, this time on the recommendation 
                    of the Ministry of Colonies for his contribution to the diffusion 
                    of French in the Colonies and particularly in Spanish and 
                    Portuguese speaking countries through his "nombreuses 
                    collections de volumes et albums pour la famille, les adultes 
                    e les enfants dont la scrupuleuse moralité assure une 
                    large diffusion à l'étranger".
 A Parisian through and through, in 1909 he was living at 17bis 
                    rue Paradis-Poissonière, (now simply Rue Paradis) in 
                    the Parish of Saint-Vincent-de-Paul Montholon; later he moved 
                    to the fashionable 213, Bd. Saint Germain. Aged 72, in 1928, 
                    with a pre-nuptial agreement, he married in Paris, VIII, Angèle 
                    Herluison. She was a 36yrs old woman, "sans profession". 
                    born in Aube. living in the fashionable 8me. Maurice Languereau 
                    was a witness. There were no children.
 In his latest years Gautier settled in Montecarlo where he 
                    died, at Palais de la Plage, Boulevard des Bas Moulins at 
                    eleven in the evening, on February 12th, 1938, having received 
                    the last rites.
 The 15th of February, Le Figaro reported his death in a short 
                    obituary in the section Le Carnet du Figaro. The funeral 
                    took place in Paris at the church of Saint-Germain-des Prés, 
                    Saturday 19th February. He was buried in the Cimetière 
                    de Passy.
 
 On November 9th 1918 at the age of 51, Maurice Languereau 
                    married Yvonne Adèle Marie Gallien (b. Coutances 27 
                    March 1882), who was employed at G&L as Secrétaire 
                    de rédaction; They lived in rue Saint-Guillaume 14. 
                    They had a daughter, Claude born in 1921, whom ML immortalized 
                    as Loulotte in the adventures of Bécassine.
 Henri Gautier was present at the birth of his little niece.
 Yvonne Gallien was also one of the designers of Bleuette's 
                    wardrobe: she was a friend of Jeanne Lanvin (8) the famous 
                    French couturière and she must have been inspired for 
                    the doll's clothes if not by the actual Lanvin's collections 
                    by their stylish elegance.
 
 From 1926 to 1929 Maurice was the Chairman (after 1929, Honorary 
                    Councillor for life) of the Cercle de la Librairie which 
                    since 1847 represented the interests of publishing houses 
                    and regulated publications' prices, copyrights and distribution. 
                    He was one of the founders of the Maison du Livre Français 
                    an association organizing the distribution of its associates' 
                    books and for a long time Président du Syndicat 
                    des Éditeurs.
 Following his uncle's charity involvement he was Administrator 
                    of Orphelinat des Industries du Livre
 Maurice Languereau who was a Law graduate, was a sound middle-class 
                    businessman with sound Catholic conservative principles, a 
                    charming and urbane man with a great sense of humour. "M. 
                    Languereau est d'un vrai charme en ce temps où l'on 
                    fait foin facilement de l'urbanité" wrote La 
                    Croix in 1934.
 Though issued from a conservative milieu, his views are surprisingly 
                    avant-garde particularly on the position of women in society 
                    as exemplified by Bécassine, a "Thoroughly Modern 
                    Millie", of whom he could have said (if he didn't) "Bécassine 
                    c'est moi".
 Chevalier de La Légion d'honneur in 1925 he was made 
                    an Officier In 1938 on the proposal of the Ministry of Trade 
                    for his relenteless work in the interests of the French book 
                    industry.
 He was a keen golf player and practised mountaneering during 
                    the family regular Swiss holidays in Montana and Megève. 
                    He died suddenly on August 10th, 1941 at his residence 23, 
                    Quay d'Orsay, in the 7me Arr.
 
 G&L had weathered WWI pretty much unscathed. Things were 
                    different in WWII: early in the war, in June 1940, G&L 
                    compelled by shortages of paper stopped the pubblication of 
                    La Semaine. They continued to publish books until 1943. 
                    Many were published using surplus covers of different titles, 
                    with an apology note. For instance La Filleule des Abeilles 
                    by Jacqueline Rivière printed by the Imprimerie Crété, 
                    Corbeil (10-1941) was printed under the cover of Les pupilles 
                    de Miss Giddily by Nalim.
 From 1940 to 1943 the German Occupation Authorities issued 
                    three Unerwuenschte franzoesische Literatur (known 
                    as Liste Otto), lists of banned anti-German, antifascist, 
                    pro-Marxist authors, publishers and books, and works by Jewish, 
                    British and American authors, forbidding their publication, 
                    sales and stocking.
 Gautier-Languereau were not included in the lists despite 
                    the continuous, not so subtle anti-German propaganda they 
                    had carried on for years through their editorials under the 
                    feature Lettre d'une Tante and the numerous Suzette stories 
                    set during the Prussian wars and WWI. Strictly speaking they 
                    conformed to the rules having neither foreign nor Jewish nor 
                    Marxist authors in their catalogue.
 However the Germans who had their sights on G&L well before 
                    arriving in France, raided their premises, positioning their 
                    tanks in the middle of rue Jacob, just two days after they 
                    entered Paris (14 June 1940) impounding a number of publications 
                    including three Bécassine albums published in 1916-18 
                    with subversive storylines: Bécassine mobilisée, 
                    Bécassine chez les Alliées, Bécassine 
                    pendant la guerre. The raid's instigator was Otto Abetz, 
                    the Germans' man in Paris who gave his name to the lists. 
                    He knew exactly where and what to look for: fluent French 
                    speaker, francophile since his youth, married to a Frenchwoman, 
                    an art teacher by profession, he could fully appreciate Becassine's 
                    antics' true meaning ... One cannot help thinking that the 
                    raid had the piquancy of a personal vendetta and may have 
                    contributed to Languereau's early death.
 Maurice Languereau was most definitively un-popular with the 
                    invaders. In December 1940 he was part of a group of publishers 
                    and printers (Hachette, Armand Colin, G&L , Masson and 
                    Papeteries de Navarre) who tried to prevent the Germans from 
                    dispossessing, under the new racial laws, the Jewish publishing 
                    house Nathan, owned by Fernand Cahen (a.k.a. Nathan). They 
                    formed a consortium (G&L took 30 shares) and - under the 
                    auspices of the Syndicat des Éditeurs - bought Nathan 
                    with the pledge to return it to its rightful owner in due 
                    course. But the sale was not approved by the occupying authorities. 
                    In 1942 the Company was eventually sold to a "groupe 
                    de personnes françaises et aryennes appartenant au 
                    monde du Livre", and became Ancienne Librairie Fernand 
                    Nathan.
 Henri Norbert "Daniel" Imhaus (b. 9 Jan. 1882) a 
                    former general director of Papeteries de Navarre managed it 
                    until the end of the war when Nathan was returned to its owners; 
                    Imhaus then moved to Gautier-Languereau.
 
 To print their books, over the years, Gautier et Languereau 
                    used numerous outside printers, notably Imprimerie du Loiret 
                    in Orléans, Imprimerie Comte-Jacquet in Bar-Le-Duc, 
                    Imprimerie Creté, Corbeil, the celebrated Firmin-Didot 
                    in Mesnil sur l'Estrée and in the Sixties Imprimerie 
                    Mame, Tours. La Semaine was printed by Imprimerie Charaire-Sceaux 
                    until its very last number.
 
 On the death of Maurice Languereau, G&L's chairmanship 
                    had passed to Eugène Paturel. He was succeded by Yvonne 
                    Gallien Languereau, Daniel Imhaus, and later Jacques Canlorbe 
                    (Claude's husband).
 
 La Semaine restarted publications in 1946, initially 
                    twice a month.
 
 After the war, G&L decided to dedicate themselves only 
                    to youth literature embarking in a series of publications 
                    some more successful than others.
 
 1945 - Le Livre de Suzette: it contained the same features 
                    of La Semaine in paper-back format and was supposed 
                    to be a one-off, waiting for La Semaine to reappear, but was 
                    published yearly until 1953.
 
 1945 - Collection Johnny et Suzette with bilingual 
                    French-English facing text, which seems to have been shortlived 
                    because apart from Le chat Botté/Puss in Boots by Mad. 
                    H Giraud&Douglas Ferrers, ill. D. Arguillière, 
                    no other titles have come to light.
 
 1949 - Jeudi Matin a weekly in-folio newspaper for 
                    boys with a color supplement. In this magazine were introduced 
                    some of the authors and illustrators who later will write 
                    for the collection Jean François es.: Jean Droit, JAN-LOUP, 
                    Yves Dermèze (Les diamants du Tanganyika ), René 
                    Marly (Je suis cousin de Charlemagne). It carried mundane 
                    surveys such as "do you prefer to take a shower or a 
                    bath in the morning?". It lasted only until 1952.
 
 1950 - Colléction Jean-François jointly 
                    with Fleurus. This collection of mysteries and adventures 
                    for boys (and active girls) was quite popular, published until 
                    1962. Now a collector item.
 
 Notwithstanding dispirited, belated attempts to modernise, 
                    for instance introducing in La Semaine the photo-novel, by 
                    the Sixties G&L started to go into the decline typical 
                    of family run firms whose existence is tied to the strong 
                    personality of their founders.
 
 After the death of Imhaus in 1954, the classic historical 
                    Bibliothèque lasted only four years.
 
 In 1959, it changed seamlessly into Nouvelle Bibliothèque 
                    de Suzette with a new format and graphics, featuring many 
                    new anglosaxon writers. It was later renamed Bibliothèque 
                    Bleue (a unisex color for boys and girls) with the same 
                    format, graphics and contents, ending definitively in the 
                    mid-Sixties.
 
 La Semaine de Suzette had closed only a few years before 
                    Bibliothèque, a victim of the new American style press. 
                    Revues became comics. Fillettes, petites demoiselles, jeunes 
                    filles et garçons became teen-agers. In the new world 
                    there was no place for the gentle Suzette: after 55 years 
                    the last number was published on August 25th, 1960.
 
 Suzette surrendered with unaffected words.
 
 But, according to an old subscriber: "... with the new 
                    icons imposed by a new culture, like Paul Anka shouting Daiiiiianna 
                    at the top of his head, BB wearing a bikini [....] Suzette 
                    had become almost a caricature... [.... ]... going through 
                    the last semester [of Suzette] and comparing it to 
                    the Giraud years, it looked as if everybody had abandoned 
                    ship: only a handful of writers were left to dish out the 
                    much reduced usual features and insipid stories illustrated 
                    with garish colours, unconvincing Lettres d'une Tante sounding 
                    like a tired gramophone, remaining Bleuette stocks on sale, 
                    advertising increased discreetly: it was a sad "end of 
                    an era". To add insult to injury G&L immediately 
                    replaced Suzette with Le Journal de Mickey, recommending it 
                    as the favourite reading of half a million children and millions 
                    more readers ... As if... "
 
 At the end of the Seventies Gautier-Languereau re-published 
                    some of the feuilletons of Les Veillées in the 
                    collection Les Romans des Veillées des Chaumières 
                    (i.e. Le royaume des ombres by L.N. Lavolle, 1980).
 
 In June 1988 Gautier-Languereau was bought by the Group Cible 
                    and in 1991, in a round kind of way, they became the property 
                    of Hachette the same company who had bought the bulk of Hetzel 
                    in 1914. The brand still exists as a division of Hachette. 
                    What was left to constitute an archive (eleven boxes) is kept 
                    in a center of literary studies, somewhere in the North of 
                    France. In 1997 rue Jacob 18 was bought by a real estate investment 
                    group who transformed the building in luxury apartments & 
                    shops, keeping the front as it was in the Thirties.
 Yvonne Gallien Languereau lived to a very old age dying almost 
                    ninety in Louvenciennes on the 22nd of August 1969.
 At the time of writing Loulotte is alive and well and living 
                    in Paris. From her marriage to Jacques Canlorbe she had four 
                    children.
 The infaticable Bécassine continued her innumerable 
                    adventures in new prints and re-prints. In 2005, still in 
                    great demand, she celebrated her hundredth anniversary. The 
                    French Post Office issued a commemorative stamp.
 Rue Jacob is now a street of hotels and art galleries. However 
                    nostalgic visitors be warned: apparently the old n°18 
                    has become n°52. Yet for me, strolling through the romantic 
                    silent rue Jacob, one Sunday morning in spring, after having 
                    chased Henri Gautier over a century, suddenly, somehow, nothing 
                    seemed to matter anymore.
 
 
 
                      
                        
                          NOTES
 1) Between 1810 and 1870, the profession 
                            of printer, bookseller, lithographer and engraver 
                            was subject in France , to the grant of a licence 
                            (Brevet) and an oath of allegiance to the king. The 
                            earliest record of a H. Gautier book is dated between 
                            1840-1870. This was Henri Joseph Gautier, (no relation) 
                            of 197, Palais-Royal, Paris , who obtained the licence 
                            (Brevet n° 1616) of bookseller on 26 June 1821. 
                            He was succeeded on 28 April 1830 by M.lle Françoise 
                            Eugénie Boileux, born 30 May 1793, of 10, rue 
                            Montpensier, Paris. The licence was replaced by a 
                            new one (n° 3091). M.lle Boileux had managed M. 
                            Gautier's bookshop for many years before becoming 
                            its proprietor on his retirement. Miss Boileux's brevet 
                            expired on 14th September 1860 "pour inexploitation".
 
 (2) In an interview to La Croix in 1934 M Languereau 
                            stated that Gautier-Languereau was going back to 1853, 
                            ("notre maison fondée en 1853") Was 
                            he referring to the date of foundation of Pringuet? 
                            or to the beginnings of Charles Blériot ?. 
                            In 1853 Blériot was 15 years old. As for Alphonse 
                            Pringuet he was already in business in 1851 (see LE 
                            CORRESPONDANT, vol. 28, 1851).
 
 (3) Louis Blériot, born in 1836, " fort 
                            instruit , ayant fait son droit", (wrote R de 
                            Navéry in his obituary) died unmarried in his 
                            property at Meudon, a suburb of Paris . After the 
                            funeral service in the Church of Saint-Séverin, 
                            he was buried in the family vault in the Cimitière 
                            de Montparnasse.
 Among the mourners de Navéry noted the presence 
                            of M. Alexandre Guilmant, his brother-in-law. Guilmant 
                            (b. Boulogne-sur-Mer, 12 March 1837 - d. Meudon, 29 
                            March 1911) was an eminent organist, the greatest 
                            composer of organ music of his time, comparable to 
                            Bach, a celebrity on both sides of the Atlantic, received 
                            at the Court of St James by Queen Victoria and at 
                            the White House by President Grover Cleveland. Organist 
                            at the Church de La Trinité, he was also a 
                            teacher: his very first pupil, Louise-Rosalie Blériot 
                            (b. 1842 - d. 23 Oct.1908) a talented musician who, 
                            as a young girl had sang in the Choir of la Trinité, 
                            became his wife in 1865. Guilmant's funeral took place 
                            1st April 1911 in Meudon at the Saint-Martin Church 
                            . The blessing was made by an Abbé Blériot. 
                            Gabriel Fauré pronounced a speech.
 They had four children:
 Cécile Rosalie Thérèse, 
                            Mme Sautereau (b. 1866-d. Meudon 4 July 1911). She 
                            became professor of solfège at the Paris Conservatoire. 
                            In 1906 she was photographed by Nadar. A son, Joseph 
                            Sautereau was born in 1888.
 Félix Louis Jean Baptiste, (b. Boulogne-sur-Mer 
                            7 Dec. 1867- d.?) At the age of twenty-four Félix 
                            was already a distinguished painter, member of the 
                            Académie des Beaux Arts. Eventually he worked 
                            as an artist and illustrator for the Director General 
                            of the Egyptian Authorities. Member of the Institut 
                            français d'archéologie orientale du 
                            Caire he took part in the archaeological excavations 
                            in the Valley of the Kings in 1898 and made a complete 
                            photographic record of the tomb of Rameses IX, one 
                            of the first to produce a systematic photographic 
                            record of archaeological discoveries which he published 
                            in Le Tombeau de Ramsès IX, Le Caire, impr. 
                            de l'Institut français, 1907. Married on 5 
                            November 1923, in Paris , to Suzanne Alphonsine Lecocq.
 Pauline Jeanne, (Boulogne-sur-Mer 24 March 
                            1870-d.1950). In 1892 she married Adrien-Louis Maurice 
                            Aliamet (c.1863-1919) an electrical engineer. Author: 
                            Principales découvertes et publications concernant 
                            l'électricité de 1562 à 1900 
                            : monographie du musée rétrospectif 
                            français de l'électricité à 
                            l'exposition universelle de 1900 / E. Sartiaux & 
                            M. Aliamet Paris : J. Rueff, 1903. They had two daughters.
 Marie Louise Alexandrine, (b. 1876) Guilmant's 
                            youngest daughter. She married, in 1896, Victor, the 
                            son of the organist Clément Loret. Victor Loret 
                            (Paris 1 Sept.1859-3 February 1946) was a famous Egyptologist 
                            & naturalist. He was a reader at the University 
                            of Lyons between 1886 and 1929, where he founded the 
                            school of Egyptology . Between 1897 and 1899, he was 
                            the Director General of the Egyptian Antiquities Service 
                            "He ought to have been a musician, but instead 
                            of this he is professor of Sanskrit and things of 
                            that sort in the University of Lyons " (cit. 
                            Music: A Monthly Magazine, 1897)
 Guilmant's opus is immense. He started to compose 
                            at a very early age: his Offertoire sur deux Noels 
                            Opus19, no 2, completed in 1862 appeared in the fifth 
                            book of pieces dans different styles published in 
                            Paris by Blériot in 1868. He dedicated his 
                            Opus 90-18 Pièces Nouvelles en sept livraisons 
                            (1902) Livraison 4 Méditation-prière; 
                            Mi mineur/majeur (1901) "à la mémoire 
                            de mon cher beau-frère Charles Blériot 
                            ". Born in 1838 Charles Félix died childless 
                            at Meudon 10 Octobre 1898 aged sixty. His death was 
                            reported in Le Figaro on the 11th. Les Veillées 
                            de Chaumières (12 Nov. 1898) obituary reads: 
                            "Peu de mots suffisent à résumer 
                            sa vie: il travailla pour Dieu. Tout ce qu'il y avait 
                            en lui d'intelligence, d'énergie, de génie 
                            commercial , il l'employa à servir la cause 
                            de l'église catholique"
 Clearly, there had been nobody in the family, neither 
                            children nor nephews, to take over Blériot 
                            Frères' publishing empire at their death.
 As a footnote: Louis Blériot, the aviator, 
                            was not a relation.
 
 (4) Between 1918 when it was already Gautier-Languereau 
                            and 1926 before they moved to rue Jacob, Henri Gautier 
                            was still selling Dillet stock re-bound in a flimsy 
                            Gautier-Languereau cover in Collection Choisie (see 
                            Laure Aubry, Collection Choisie, Dillet 1876-Librairie 
                            Henri Gautier, Gautier-Languereau Editeurs, 55 Quai 
                            des Grands-Augustins s.d.).
 
 (5) It is suggested that the name Suzette was chosen 
                            by Jacqueline Rivière who was part of the original 
                            editorial team and had a daughter called Suzanne.
 (6) 
                      For a historical and critical appraisal of Bécassine 
                      see: Bécassine ou l'image d'une femme by Hélène 
                      Davreux, Ediitons Labor, 2006 Bécassine inconnue, 
                      by Marianne Couderc CNRS ÉDITIONS, 2000  (7) 
                      One thing Hetzel father and H. Gautier had in common was 
                      that they both used to winter in Montecarlo where in fact 
                      both died, Hetzel in 1886, Gautier in 1938.  ( 
                      8) According to Bernard Lehembre in Bécassine: Une 
                      Légende du Siècle, Gallien had been "gouvernante 
                      des enfants du couturier Lanvin". As far as it is known 
                      Jeanne Lanvin had only one daughter Marie-Blanche (1897-1958) 
                      by her first husband Henri di Pietro. Lanvin dressed a number 
                      of Huret-Prevost dolls (now at the Museée des Arts 
                      Decoratifs) and dolls made during WWI at the National Manufactory 
                      at Sèvres. 
 
 
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