Jean Veillet (1901–1985)

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Jean Veillet
Veillet Jean 2.jpg
Mayor of Dijon
In office
1968–1971
Preceded byFélix Kir
Succeeded byRobert Poujade
Personal details
Born(1901-03-14)14 March 1901
Dijon, France
Died1985 (aged 84)
Dijon, France
NationalityFrench
Political partyCNI
Alma materUniversity of Lyon
ProfessionPhysician

Jean Veillet (born (1901-03-14)March 14, 1901 in Dijon (Côte-d'Or) and died in 1985 in the same city) was a French doctor. French Resistance and local politician, he was and president of the .

Biography[]

Born in Dijon in 1901, Jean Veillet is a doctor of medicine in 1924, graduated from the Faculty of Lyon. Successively head of clinic, doctor of the hospitals then head of service, he is also in charge of course of therapeutic at the school of medicine from 1945 to 1964.

During the German-occupied Europe, he engages in the French Resistance as head of health services. He is then regional delegate of the National Council of the Resistance (CNR) as well as of the (COSOR).

These responsibilities during the war led him to politics, along with his medical and hospital activities: in 1945, he joined the . President of the Departmental Commission, then of the Finance Committee, he became president of General Council in 1966. In 1968, on the death of the famous canon Kir, deputy mayor of Dijon, Jean Veillet, then deputy, replaces him at the head of the town hall for a short period of three years. In 1971, not standing in the municipal elections, he left the place to the promising Robert Poujade, recent MP and occupying the new Ministry of Ecology, Development and Sustainable Development. Jean Veillet, however, continues to preside over the General Council until his withdrawal from politics in 1975.[1]

During his tenure as mayor, the "Dr. Veillet"[2] took on many health and social tasks, his favorite areas.

Elective functions[]

  • General Councilor of Côte-d'Or from 1945 to 1975
  • President of the of 1966

Notes and references[]

  1. ^ "Municipal Deliberation of March 28, 1988", in "Municipal Bulletin of the City of Dijon", March 1988, page 221. See also: Page devoted to Jean Veillet.
  2. ^ The Dijonnais used to call their mayor by his professional title.
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