Alcide Delmont | |
Office: | Deputy of the National Assembly[1] |
Birth Date: | 2 October 1874 |
Termstart: | 1936 |
Termend: | 1924 |
Constituency: | Martinique |
Nationality: | French |
Party: | PRS 1924-1928; Independents of the Left, 1928-1936 |
Birth Place: | Saint-Pierre, Martinique |
Death Place: | Brannay (Yonne) |
Alcide Delmont, (2 October 1874 – 14 October 1959), was a French lawyer and politician from Martinique.[2]
With a doctorate in law, Alcide Delmont was admitted to the Paris Bar on 11 February 1904 as a lawyer. Secretary of the conference of the training course for lawyers at the Paris Court of Appeal in Pierre Massé's class (1906-1907), he had a dual career in politics and the judiciary for almost 50 years. He was also a member of the central committee of the Human Rights League (France).
From 1924 to 1936 he was a deputy for Martinique as a socialist republican and then as a left-wing independent.
He was Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies from 3 November 1929 to 17 February 1930 and from 2 March to 30 December 1930, in the first and second André Tardieu governments.[3] Alcide Delmont was the second Martiniquan in history after Henri Lémery to be a member of a French cabinet.