![]() ![]() Also a Royalist newspaper titled La Gazette de France praised their former conspirator for sacrificing his life for the Fatherland.Ĭharles Maurras declared that the 'gallant soldier's' forgery stood among his "finest feats of war". However, Drumont's La Libre Parole sponsored a public subscription in favour of Henry's widow, in which the donors were invited to vent all their anger against Jews. Post-death and the Henry Monument Īt first, anti-Dreyfusards such as Édouard Drumont and Henri Rochefort, upon hearing of Henry's suicide, felt as though it was as good as declaring the guilt of a forged document and therefore Dreyfus' innocence to the people of France. However, due to Henry's actions, letters and state of mind, a cause of suicide was declared. On the day of his arrest, the Colonel had been searched and no razor had been found this sparked another outcry of murder. ![]() While halfway through a bottle of rum and midway through another letter to his wife, Henry wrote "I am like a Madman" and proceeded to slit his throat with a shaving razor. The cause of death was a wound to the throat. Henry was found dead in his cell on the morning of 31 August 1898, having died at some point the previous night. The day after he arrived he began to write: to his wife, "I see that except for you everyone is going to abandon me" to his superior General Gonse, "I absolutely must speak to you" in one cryptic comment seemingly implying his guilt he wrote "You know in whose interest I acted." The meaning of this comment has never been explained it may have referred to Ferdinand-Walsin Esterhazy, who was the actual author of the bordereau document, which had been used to arrest Captain Dreyfus, or perhaps to Lt Colonel Sandherr, another superior who passed on the bordereau to other high-ranking officers, such as the Minister of War, General Auguste Mercier. Henry was sent to the military prison at Fort Mont-Valérien. This led to the resignations of Generals de Pellieux and de Boisdeffre, who admitted having been duped by the forgery. Henry was called in for questioning on 30 August by Cavaignac and managed to protest his innocence for only an hour before he confessed. Cuignet soon learned that the most damning evidence brought to the court in 1896 by Henry was in fact a forgery using two separate documents, later known as the "faux Henry," to achieve the sentence he and his supporters desired. This matter should have been brought before Parliament, owing to the impossibility of obtaining a revision of the legal process, but due to Cavaignac's nature he threw caution to the wind. In August 1898, Minister of War Godefroy Cavaignac ordered Captain Louis Cuignet to examine the documents which sent Captain Dreyfus to his exile from France to Devil's Island. Thanks to the general staff's and government's support Henry was promoted Lieutenant Colonel, whereas Picquart was initially removed from office, the army, and even arrested. Lieutenant Colonel Georges Picquart, appointed new chief of army's intelligence section in 1895, was convinced that Major Henry had forged a document in order to prove definitively that Alfred Dreyfus was a traitor in favor of Germany. He subsequently served in Tunisia, Tonkin and Algeria before returning to counter-intelligence duties in Paris. Four years later Henry, now a captain, joined the Statistics Section of the Ministry of War - the office responsible for counter-intelligence. In 1875 Henry was appointed as an aide to General Joseph de Miribel, Chief of the General Staff. In 1870, he was commissioned as a lieutenant in an infantry regiment. Promoted to sergeant-major in 1868, Henry served in the Franco-Prussian War, being captured twice but each time successfully escaping. He enlisted in the French Army as an infantryman in 1865. Hubert-Joseph Henry was born into a farming family. He was considered a hero by the Anti-Dreyfusards. Arrested for having forged evidence against Alfred Dreyfus, he was found dead in his prison cell. Here's a major movie covering the affair, an enormous two reels.Hubert-Joseph Henry (2 June 1846 – 31 August 1898) was a French Lieutenant-Colonel in 1897 involved in the Dreyfus affair. By the time he retired at the end of the First World War, he was a Lieutenant Colonel who had taken part in Verdun and the Second Aisne. By 1906, the matter had been settled, and Dreyfus restored to the Army with the rank of Major. Dreyfus was an Alsatian Jew who went to the Wrong School: L'Ecole Polytechnique - which nowadays, of course, is the Right School. The Dreyfus Affair, in which Alfred Dreyfus was convicted of passing French military secrets to Germany, sentenced to Devil's Island, and later found innocent, was powered by many passions of the French military. ![]()
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