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Marcel Dassault

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Full Name
  
Marcel Bloch

Resting place
  

Nationality
  
French

Name
  
Marcel Dassault

Ethnicity
  
Jewish

Role
  
Industrialist

Marcel Dassault AircraftLoadouts French Air Force in British tech tree

Born
  
January 22, 1892 (
1892-01-22
)
Paris, France

Known for
  
Died
  
April 17, 1986, Neuilly-sur-Seine, France

Spouse
  
Madeleine Minckes (m. 1919–1986)

Children
  
Serge Dassault, Claude Dassault

Books
  
The Talisman: The Autobiography of Marcel Dassault, Creator of the Mirage Jet

Movies
  
La Boum 2, The Seventh, Carmen

Similar People
  
Serge Dassault, Olivier Dassault, Darius Paul Dassault, Alain Poire, Claude Pinoteau

Alma mater
  
Breguet SchoolSupaero

Occupation
  
aircraft industrialist

Excellence Française - Interview Laurent Dassault


Marcel Dassault (born Marcel Bloch; 22 January 1892 – 17 April 1986) was a French aircraft industrialist.

Contents

Marcel Dassault The Dassault Systemes Success Story Part 5 Deelipcom

L odyss e des mirage de marcel dassault aviation


Early life

Marcel Dassault wwwdassaultaviationcomwpcontentblogsdir2f

Bloch was born on 22 January 1892 in Paris. Both of his parents were Jewish.

Marcel Dassault marceldassaultlhommeaupardessus503063632jpg

He was educated at the Lycée Condorcet in Paris. After studies in Electrical Engineering he graduated from the Breguet School and Supaéro. At the latter school Bloch was classmates with a Russian student named Mikhail Gurevich who would later be instrumental in the creating of the MiG aircraft series.

Career

Bloch worked at the French Aeronautics Research Laboratory during World War I and invented a type of aircraft propeller subsequently used by the French army during the conflict. In 1928 Bloch founded the Société des Avions Marcel Bloch aircraft company which produced its first aircraft in 1930.

In 1935 Bloch and Henry Potez entered into an agreement to buy Société Aérienne Bordelaise (SAB). In 1936 the company was nationalized as the Société Nationale de Constructions Aéronautiques du Sud Ouest (SNCASO). Bloch agreed to become the delegated administrator of the Minister for Air.

During Nazi Germany's occupation of France, the country's aviation industry was virtually disbanded, other than the compulsory manufacturing, assembly and servicing of German designs. In October 1940, Bloch refused to collaborate with the Germans occupiers at Bordeaux-Aéronautique and was imprisoned by the Vichy government. In 1944 the Nazis deported Bloch to the Buchenwald concentration camp, while his wife was interned near Paris. Bloch was detained at Buchenwald until it was liberated on 11 April 1945.

He changed his name from Bloch to Bloch-Dassault and, in 1949, to simply Dassault. Dassault was the alias used by his brother, General Darius Paul Bloch, when he served in the French resistance, and is derived from char d'assaut, French for "battle tank". In 1971 Dassault acquired Breguet, forming Avions Marcel Dassault-Breguet Aviation (AMD-BA).

Personal life

In 1919, Bloch married Madeleine Minckes, the daughter of a wealthy Jewish family of furniture dealers. They had two sons, Claude and Serge.

As Dassault, he converted to Roman Catholicism in 1950.

In July 1952, Dassault acquired the landmark Paris buildings, still known as the Hôtel Marcel Dassault, dating from 1844, at nos. 7 and 9 rond-point des Champs-Elysées (at the angle of the avenue des Champs-Élysées and avenue Montaigne), from the Sabatier d'Espeyran family. Now, the building at no. 7 has been occupied from 2002 by auction house Artcurial, which made further alterations according to plans by architect Jean-Michel Wilmotte. While no. 7 has been sold, no. 9 continues to be occupied by the Groupe Industriel Marcel Dassault.

Death and memorials

Marcel Dassault died in Neuilly-sur-Seine, in 1986 and was buried in the Passy Cemetery in the 16th arrondissement of Paris.

Serge Dassault, Marcel's son, became CEO of Avions Marcel Dassault, which was restructured as Groupe Industriel Marcel Dassault, reflecting its broader interests. In 1990, the aviation division was renamed Dassault Aviation.

In 1991, the rond-point des Champs-Elysées was renamed the rond-point des Champs-Elysées-Marcel Dassault in his honor.

In The Adventures of Tintin comic Flight 714 to Sydney, Dassault is parodied as the aircraft construction tycoon Laszlo Carreidas - "the millionaire who never laughs", who offers Tintin, Captain Haddock and Professor Calculus his personal jet, the Carreidas 160 to travel to Sydney.

References

Marcel Dassault Wikipedia