Alcide Marie Treille

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Alcide Marie Treille
Born August 12, 1844(1844-08-12)
Poitiers, Vienne, France
Died January 14, 1922 (aged 77)
Alger, Algeria
Spouse Lucie Sarradin (m. 1879) «Did not recognize date. Try slightly modifying the date in the first parameter.»"Marriage: Lucie Sarradin to Alcide Marie Treille" Location: (linkback:http://jimlindstrom.com/mediawiki/index.php/Alcide_Marie_Treille), Nantes, Loire Atlantique
Children Marcel Treille
Roger Treille
Marguerite Treille
Parents Gustave Casimir Treille
Marie Marguerite Mathé


From the French National Assembly, Biography:[1]

Extracted biography dictionary French parliament from 1789 to 1889 (Adolphe Robert and Gaston Cougny)

Member of Parliament from 1881 to 1889, born in Poitiers (Vienne) December 8, 1844, studied medicine and was awarded a doctorate in 1869. Established as a doctor in Constantine, he was appointed general counsel in 1879, and after the option to Mr. Thomson for the second district of the department of Constantine, presented himself to succeed him in the House, as a member of the 1st: he was elected on 4 December 1881 by 2,421 votes (4,814 voters registered 7,106) 2,298 against Mr. Forcioli, radical. Alcide Treille sat on the benches of the Republican Union, supported his vote firms Gambetta and J. Ferry, and spoke to the credit of Tonkin and against the separation of church and state. Worn on 4 October 1885 on the Republican list of Constantine, he was re-elected, the second and last member of this department, 6,077 votes (12,010 voters, 17,355 participants). Mr. Treille took his place on the left, spoke on the Algerian question and voted most often with the majority of opportunistic ministries of the legislature for the new military law, for the expulsion of the princes, and in the last session for the restoration of the district election (11 February 1889), against the indefinite postponement of the revision of the Constitution to the charges against three members of the League of Patriots deputies to Bill Lisbon restrictive of freedom the press, for the prosecution against General Boulanger.

Extracted biography dictionary French parliament from 1889 to 1940 (John Jolly)
Born December 8, 1844 in Poitiers (Vienne), died January 14, 1922 in Algiers.
Deputy Constantine from 1881 to 1889.
Senator Constantine from 1897 to 1906.

(See the first part of the biography in ROBERT AND COUGNY, Dictionary of Parliamentarians, vol. V, p. 442.)

After being defeated in 1889 by renewing its former competitor Forcioli he obtained a professorship at the School of Medicine of Algiers. January 3, 1897, he applied the three-year renewal and was elected Senator Constantine by 105 votes out of 192 voters, against 86 votes in Saint-Germain.
Member of the Democratic Left and the agricultural group, he was part of many committees.
Was heard in the discussion of a draft law to deny electoral rights of judicial officers deposed (1897) and in the discussion - the bill aimed to protect public health. He took part in the arrest made by a colleague the Minister of War (1898) on measures to be taken during the epidemic of typhoid fever broke out in the garrison Lure and gave its opinion on the suppression of advertising executions. The amnesty, the approval of an agreement on extradition between France and the Congo Free State were discussions which he took part in 1900.
He was interested, as he did in the House, the colonial question and hygiene. He took a prominent part in the deliberations of the law on medical assistance in rural areas.
He was not reelected in 1906.
Trellis has published some work on diseases of tropical countries. It makes editing by the Medical Review, a communication made to the Society medical practitioners Paris, in its meeting of 21 April 1905 under the title: The lead poisoning in painters in Paris.
He was an officer of the Legion of Honor.


Notes