Louis-Edmond Antoine le Picard de Phélippeaux (1768–1799), mainly referred to as Antoine de Phélippeaux, was a French émigré best known for defeating Napoleon Bonaparte in an effort to defend Egypt. In 1783, Louis Phélippeaux met Napoleon Bonaparte at the École Militaire in Paris where the two young men became lifelong enemies. Phélippeaux was also an enemy of the state to France, due to his participation in many anti-revolutionary movements. Previously a French military officer, Phélippeaux immigrated to Great Britain in 1791 during the French Revolution. He served in the Army of Condé and fought against the French Republic. Fighting against Napoleon in a battle in Acre, Phélippeaux died from fever in April 1799.
Louis-Edmond Antoine le Picard de Phélippeaux was born in 1768 in the Vendée. His father, name unknown, was an officer and a monarchist. At 16 years old, Antoine de Phélippeaux attended École Militaire in Paris where he met Napoleon Bonaparte, two years his younger. Napoleon never favored Phélippeaux due to jealousy of his superb performance in class. At one point during training, a sergeant-major was forced to get between the two quarrelers, but he was kicked in the process. At École Militaire, the two were taught the same warfare strategies. Both Napoleon and Phélippeaux obtained a commission after examination on September 1, 1785; Phélippeaux listed forty-first and Napoleon listed forty-second. After obtaining his commission of Second Lieutenant, Phélippeaux was sent to the artillery regiment of Besançon.
In 1789, Louis-Edmond Antoine le Picard de Phélippeaux was promoted to Captain of the Besançon regiment. Two years later, he resigned and emigrated from France to Great Britain, presumably to escape from the French Revolution, being a monarchist like his father. For four years, he served in the Army of Condé against the French Republic. In 1795, he returned to France to help organize an insurrection in Berri. However, Phélippeaux was arrested, and the plan failed. He was imprisoned in Bourges but escaped on the eve of his execution with the help of a relative. Unscathed, he secretly resumed counter-revolutionary activities outside of Paris. Two years later in 1797, Antoine de Phélippeaux returned to Paris in order to free an English naval officer named Sir William Sidney Smith from Temple prison. At the same time, he planned to rescue three royalists and two people that had aided in his escape. The elaborate plan included the construction of a tunnel from a nearby house to the prison, and involved the help of a mason to chip away at bricks and a seven-year-old girl to serve as a decoy. Nevertheless, the plot failed and Phélippeaux had to reorganize. This time, in order to communicate with the prisoners, he made love to the jailer’s daughter. Phélippeaux procured false papers and presented himself at Temple prison as a police commissioner. After presenting a forged order, Smith and the others were released and left quickly by carriage. Notwithstanding, the carriage turned a sharp corner, injuring a child and causing a crowd to gather around the overturned carriage. Despite that, Phélippeaux forced himself and the escapees through the crowd. The authorities were notified of Smith’s absence just as Phélippeaux, Williams, and others fled Paris. The group slept in a safe house in the Rue de l’Universite, and the next morning Phélippeaux led their path to the coast. Once they had arrived in Rouen, they prepared forged passports at a royalist’s house. Upon completion, the group dressed in sailor clothes and traveled to Honfleur. Phélippeaux chartered a small fishing boat, and once they were in the British Channel, the group boarded a British ship. On May 7, 1798, they landed in Portsmouth and arrived in London by the next morning. Phélippeaux soon become a hero after Smith told others about his daring rescuer.