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Moïse Polydore Millaud

Moïse Polydore Millaud
Portrait de Moïse Millaud, (Bordeaux 1813 et Paris 1871).jpg
Born 27 August 1813
Bordeaux, France
Died 13 October 1871
Occupation Banker, journalist

Moses Polydore Millaud, Moïse Polydore Millaud, (27 August 1813 – 13 October 1871) was a journalist, banker and entrepreneur who founded Le Petit Journal, at one time the leading newspaper in France.

Millaud was born in Bordeaux, to Felicity (née Bellon) and Jassuda Millaud 1 (born 1769, L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue – died 1865, Paris), Jewish merchants originally from the Papal States who originally sold horses.

Self-taught, he became a clerk to a bailiff and in 1833 founded his first newspaper in Bordeaux, Le Lutin. Moses wrote articles under the pseudonym Duallim an anagram of Millaud. His son was the journalist, writer and playwright Albert Millaud. His daughter Blanche was the wife of George Silva, the editor of the Journal des Voyageurs.

In 1836, Moïse Millaud moved to Paris and founded Le Gamin de Paris, the first newspaper sold exclusively at the door of the theatre, and Le Négociateur, an exclusively financial newspaper.

In 1839, he founded L’Audience, a legal gazette appearing on Monday, then in 1848 La Liberté, supporting Napoleon III.

In 1848 Millaud became associated with fellow banker Jules Mirès. They established the paper "Le Conseiller du Peuple," and went on to found two banking institutions. In October 1848 they bought the Journal des Chemins de Fer which was to become the Journal des Voyageurs, a force in finance and speculation. Subsequently the companies Caisses des Actions Réunies and Caisses des Chemins de Fer merged to become Crédit Mobilier, generating three million francs each for Mirès and Millaud in 1853.

In 1854 he founded a property company to develop land in Paris, which made his fortune. He also bought the newspaper Le Dock renaming it Le Journal des actionnaires (shareholders), and created the Caisse Générale des actionnaires (Bank of Shareholders) capitalised at 25 million francs and with the object of publicising his banking activity.

Also in 1854, Millaud bought the rights of La Presse from Émile de Girardin, and throughout 1856 and 1857 hosted lavish feasts for journalists and other influential men in his hotel in the Rue Saint-Georges. In February 1857 he hosted a banquet for the Goncourt brothers, but later that year he was faced with financial difficulties and sold the newspaper to Felix Solar.


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