Auguste Baudin Explained

Auguste Baudin
Birth Date:21 November 1800
Birth Place:Hoogstraten
Death Place:Douai
Branch:Navy
Rank:Vice Admiral

Auguste Laurent François Baudin (pronounced as /fr/; 21 November 1800, Hoogstraten France (now in Belgium) - 1 August 1877, Douai) was a French admiral and colonial administrator. His uncle François-André Baudin was also a naval officer.

Life

Volunteering for the navy in 1817, he was promoted to élève de la marine in 1819, enseigne de vaisseau in 1822, lieutenant de vaisseau in 1829, capitaine de corvette in 1841, capitaine de vaisseau in 1846 and finally contre-amiral in 1855.

He spent most of his career as a naval officer in the French colonies, becoming governor of Senegal and commander of France's West Africa Coast (Côtes occidentales d'Afrique) naval station from 1847 to 1850 (in which role he proclaimed to Senegal the abolition of slavery decreed on 27 April 1848 by the Second French Republic), then governor and commander in chief of the naval division of French Guiana from 1855 to 1859, and finally commander of the navy in Algeria from 1860 to 1862. He was made a grand officer of the Légion d'honneur on 19 September 1860.

Sources