Eugène Vaillé Explained

Eugène Vaillé (10 August 1875, Bédarieux, Hérault[1] - 1959, Riols[2]) was a French postal historian and the first curator of the postal museum of France, now La Poste's Museum, from 1946 to 1955.

Biography

Born in Bédarieux, in the déparement of Hérault, Vaillé was a Doctor of Law. In 1920, he was hired by the Minister of Posts, Telegraphs and Telephones (PTT) as a librarian. Over the next ten years, he managed the central library of the PTT.

In 1936, he convinced PTT Minister Georges Mandel to restart the project to create a postal museum, which had been originally proposed around the turn of the 20th century. Even if the economic crisis of the 1930s and World War II prevented any concrete action, Vaillé inventoried the collections and material available in the PTT's archives and libraries. In 1943, he became president of the future museum's ruling board.

On 4 June 1946, he became its first curator with the inauguration of the Postal Museum of France. The museum was installed in the Choiseul-Praslin residence in the 6th arrondissement of Paris. He retired in 1955.

He was elected as a titular member of the Académie de philatélie in 1938, and then as an honorary member in 1955. He wrote a seven-volume "General History of the French Posts", published between 1947 and 1955.

Publications

He wrote fables under the pseudonym of Jean Coulanges.[2]

Sources and references

Notes and References

  1. http://academiedephilatelie.org/memorialtitulaires.html Memorial
  2. (1959). "Nécrologie : Eugène Vaillé". Bulletin des bibliothèques de France #10, pages 444-445 ; retrieved here 3 November 2007.