Joseph Aveline


Joseph Aveline was a 20th-century French politician and agricultural expert from the Orne department of France, who served as mayor of Dorceau for a half century and, as parliamentary deputy, opposed full powers to Marshall Philippe Pétain in July 1940.

Background

Joseph Louis Aveline was born on December 10, 1881, on a cattle-breeding farm in Dorceau in Orne, France. His parents were Louis Joseph Aveline and Cécile Aline Poussin. His father had started the "New Farm" there to breed Percheron horses and cattle of Normandy. He kept 40 Percheron horses, which he exported worldwide.

Career

Aveline spent his life as both politician and champion of Norman animal husbandry.

Ferme-Neuve

In 1851, Aveline's father built la Ferme-Neuve into a closed-court estate at a former farm. In 1908, Aveline encircled with ten redwood as natural protection. The farm was famed for breeding Percheron horses and Normande dairy cattle bulls.

World War I

In 1914, Aveline began serving for France in World War I through the war's end in 1918, for which he received the Croix de Guerre. After demobilization, he took over management of the farm.

Horse breeder

The Aveline family had already been breeding Percheron in the early 1800s:
We find the name of Aveline for the first time in 1823 at Mont Gaudray. He had a brown-bay mare...
M. Cousin, commune of Peray, had a dapple-gray stallion, born 1827, slightly under 16 hands, which served 40 mares in 1832, 43 mares in 1833, and 42 in 1834. We find the names of Avelines and Hamelin among the owners of mares served by this horse...
His relative, Charles Paul Aveline received a short biographical entry in the 1917 book A History of the Percheron Horse: of particular note was M. Charles Aveline' brown Percheron named "Dragon." In 1889, there is mention that Percheron "Gris-Blue 9477" was appartenant à M. Joseph Aveline. In 1917, a photo of his farm in Dorceau appears in A History of Percheron Horses.
Joseph Aveline helped spearhead agriculture in Normandy. He led farmers in farming co-ops and trade unionism. He served as president of the regional bank for agricultural credit, president of the Orne Chamber of Agriculture, and vice-president of the Normandy Chamber of Agriculture.
Due to technical prowess, he also became president of the Percheron Horse Racing Society of France; member of the Higher Council of Agriculture, the Advisory Committee on Livestock, the Higher Stud Council, the Higher Council on Agronomic Research; president of the Federation of Genealogical Books, and foreign trade advisor.
Aveline won numerous breeding competitions. He also headed a large stud farm and became a horse specialist who, later in life, went on lecture tours, particularly in South America. The Harness racing horse track of Vincennes has a race and prize in his name.

Politician

In 1908, at age 27, Aveline was elected mayor of Dorceau–an office he would hold for the next 50 years.
He served on the Council of the Department of Orne. In 1930, he became an Advocat général.
Aveline joined the Independent Radicals, a center-right French political group during the French Third Republic: it refused alliance of the "Parti républicain, radical et radical-socialiste" with the Left.
On April 26, 1936, Aveline first ran for the Chamber of Deputies in Mortagne-au-Perche for Orne. On May 3, 1936, he won his seat as deputy from Orne in the Chamber of Deputies in the XVI-th Legislature of the Third Republic; its president was Léon Blum. A decree in July 1939 extended the service of deputies from May 19136 until May 31, 1942. He served on the Committee on Agriculture and also the National Agricultural Credit Fund. In July 1940, with Paul Reynaud as president, he abstained from the vote for full powers to Marshal Philippe Pétain.

Later life

After World War II, Aveline continued as mayor, advised agricultural organizations and government ministries, and participated in a French trade mission to South America.

Personal life and death

On April 28, 1903, Aveline married Berthe Marie Tuffier of Nogent-le-Rotrou.
His son Pierre took over the farm's management.
Joseph Aveline died age 77 on December 12, 1958, in Dorceau.

Legislation

Aveline led the following legislation:
He supported the following legislation:
He led legislative efforts for:
In 2018, the current mayor of Rémalard-en-Perche dedicated the "Joseph Aveline Hall" in the renovated mairie of Dorceau, noting la carrière exceptionnelle de celui qui au cours un demi-siècle était le premier magistrat de sa commune. stating:
Né en 1881, il a créé la Ferme-Neuve en 1903 pour l'élevage des percherons. Maire bâtisseur, député de l'Orne de 1936 à 1942. Il a créé le syndicat d'électrification de Dorceau, donné des terres pour le cimetière. Innovateur reconnu dans le monde agricole, il était commandant de la Légion d'honneur.
Great-grandson Joseph unveiled the plaque. The new hall went into use by November 2018 in Aveline's name.