- Louis de Rougemont
Louis De Rougemont (
12 November 1847 –9 June 1921 ) was a would-be explorer who claimed to have had adventures inAustralasia ."De Rougemont" was born Henri Louis Grin in 1847 in
Suchy ,Switzerland . He left home at the age of sixteen. He became a footman to the actressFanny Kemble , servant to a Swiss banker de Mieville in 1870 and a butler for thegovernor of Western Australia SirWilliam Robinson . In the latest job he lasted less than a year.He tried various ventures with very little success. He worked as a doctor, a 'spirit photographer' and an inventor. He also married and abandoned a wife in Australia.
In 1898 he began to write about his invented adventures in the British periodical " [http://www.collectingbooksandmagazines.com/wide.html The Wide World Magazine] " under the name "Louis De Rougemont". He described his alleged exploits in search of pearls and gold in
New Guinea and claimed to have spent thirty years living withIndigenous Australians in the Australianoutback . He claimed that the tribe with whom he had lived had worshipped him as agod . He also claimed to have encountered the Gibson expedition of 1874.Various readers expressed disbelief in his tales from the start, for example, claiming that no one can actually ride a turtle. De Rougemont had also claimed to have seen flying
wombat s. The fact that he could not place his travels on the map aroused suspicion. Readers' arguments in the pages of London newspaper, the "Daily Chronicle ", continued for months.Rougemont subjected himself to examination by the
Royal Geographical Society . He claimed that he could not specify exactly where he had been because he had signed a non-disclosure agreement with a syndicate that wanted to exploit the gold he had found in the area. He also refused to talk about Aboriginal languages he had supposedly learned. Still his supporters continued to find precedents to his exploits.After September 1898 "Daily Chronicle" announced that a certain F.W. Solomon had recognized De Rougemont and identified him as Louis Grin who had presented himself at Solomon's firm as an
entrepreneur . Grin had collected tidbits for his exploits from the Reading Room of theBritish Library .Edwin Greenslade Murphy had helped to expose him.Grin tried to defend himself by writing a letter to "The Daily Chronicle", using his original name, in which he expressed his consternation that anybody would confuse him with Louis De Rougemont. "Daily Chronicle" was very willing to publish the letter. "The Wide World Magazine" just exploited the situation and prepared a Christmas double issue. Sales of both papers soared. De Rougemont himself disappeared from the public view.
In 1899 Grin travelled to
South Africa as a music-hall attraction: 'The greatest liar on earth'; on a similar 1901 tour of Australia, he was booed from the stage. In July 1906 De Rougemont appeared at the London Hippodrome and successfully demonstrated his turtle-riding skills. DuringWorld War I he reappeared as an inventor of a useless meat substitute. He died a poor man inLondon on9 June 1921 .Books:
* Geoffrey Maslen: "The Most Amazing Story a Man Ever Lived to Tell" (1977)
* Rod Howard: "The Fabulist: The Incredible Story of Louis De Rougemont" (2006)References
*B. G. Andrews, ' [http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A080309b.htm De Rougemont, Louis (1847 - 1921)] ',
Australian Dictionary of Biography , Volume 8, MUP, 1981, p. 290.External links
*
** " [http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/1194 The Adventures of Louis de Rougemont] " fromProject Gutenberg
* " [http://www.thefabulist.com.au The Fabulist web site] " (book about Rougemont)
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