Paul Chocheprat Explained

Paul Chocheprat
Birth Name:Paul-Louis-Albert Chocheprat
Birth Date:11 June 1855
Birth Place:Périgny, Allier, France
Death Place:Toulon, France
Allegiance: France
Serviceyears:1871–1917
Rank:French: [[vice-amiral]]

Paul Chocheprat (pronounced as /fr/; 11 June 1855 – 31 March 1928) was a French naval officer who served during the First World War.

Early life

He was born in Périgny, Allier.[1]

Career

He entered the French: [[École Navale]] (Naval School) in October 1871 and left it as an French: [[aspirant]] in October 1874. He then joined the gunnery training ship-of-the-line and then on the ironclad in an evolution squadron in 1875 before serving on the ironclad to the Pacific Naval Division (1876) where he proved to be a remarkable hydrographer.

Ensign in August 1877 on the ironclad in a squadron of evolutions, he went in 1878 on the aviso as a maneuver officer at French Senegal and participated in expeditions on the Haut-Fleuve. Surviving a very violent bout of yellow fever, he entered in 1880 on the cruiser in the flying and training division of Cherbourg and proved himself an excellent instructor.

Promoted to lieutenant in January 1882, he commanded the battery on the unprotected cruiser then was sent to the general majority of Toulon. Officer of Admiral Benjamin Jaurès, he was appointed to the command of the evolutions squadron on the Richelieu in 1884 then became an instructor of the school of application for aspirants on the training cruiser in 1885.

Major (1887) of the School of Torpedo Officers in Toulon, commander of the torpedo-boat Couleuvrine in evolution wing then adjutant of division on the cruisers and in Newfoundland (1889–1890) was promoted to frigate captain in May 1891.

He then served as a maneuver officer on the ironclad . Second of the ironclad in the division of the Mediterranean and the Levant, it passes on the Vauban in 1893 then on the ironclad in 1894 where its qualities of maneuver are again noticed.

Commander of the aviso-transport Aube and the local station of Tahiti in 1895, he participated in the operations of Raïatea and Tahaa in January–February 1897 as well as missions to Samoa and New Hebrides.

In 1898, he was assigned to the staff at Cherbourg and in August became French: [[capitaine de vaisseau]] (Captain). Commander of the pre-dreadnought battleship in the Mediterranean (1899) then of the pre-dreadnought in 1902, he carried out missions in Greece and on the coasts of Morocco before being promoted to chief of general staff of the naval army during the maneuvers from 1905–1906. He then worked on the signal books and naval tactics redesign commission with French: Amiral (Admiral) François Ernest Fournier.

Rear-admiral in March 1907, he commanded the 4th division in the Mediterranean, then was promoted to vice-admiral and maritime prefect of Brest in October 1911. Maritime prefect of Toulon (November 1913), in 1914 he commanded the 1st wing in the army naval with flag on the semi-dreadnought battleship and is then one of the main collaborators of Boué de Lapeyrère.

Member in 1916 of the Superior Council of the Navy, he accompanied Joffre on a mission to the United States and passed to the reserve cadre in June 1917.

From 1920 to 1922 he chaired the Société des Œuvres de mer.

Awards and distinctions

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Taillemite, p. 65