- Marcel Dassault
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Marcel Dassault, born Marcel Bloch (22 January 1892 - 17 April 1986) was a French aircraft industrialist.
Biography
Dassault was born in Paris. After graduating from the lycée Condorcet, Breguet School and Supaero, he invented a type of aircraft propeller used by the French army during World War I and founded the Société des Avions Marcel Bloch aircraft company. Following the nationalization of his company in 1936, under the Front Populaire, he stayed as a director. As a Jew, he was deported to Buchenwald during World War II, refusing collaboration with the German aviation industry. He changed his name from Bloch to Bloch-Dassaut then Dassault in 1949. Dassault was the pseudonym of his brother, General Darius Paul Bloch, in the French resistance and means "for assault", originally from char d'assault, French for tank. Marcel Dassault converted to Catholicism in 1950. After the war, Dassault built the foremost military aircraft manufacturer in France, Avions Marcel Dassault. He was succeeded by his son Serge as head of the group.
Marcel Dassault died at Neuilly-sur-Seine in 1986 and was buried in the Passy Cemetery in the 16th arrondissement of Paris.
See also
- Societé des Avions Marcel Bloch
- Dassault Group
- Dassault Aviation
- The Talisman; the Autobiography of Marcel Dassault, Creator of the Mirage jet. translated by Patricia High Painton. New Rochelle, N.Y., Arlington House (1971) ISBN 0-87000-149-3
External links
Categories:- French business biography stubs
- 1892 births
- 1986 deaths
- Businesspeople from Paris
- French aerospace engineers
- Businesspeople in aviation
- French industrials
- French inventors
- French Jews
- Buchenwald concentration camp survivors
- Burials at Passy Cemetery
- French Roman Catholics
- Converts to Roman Catholicism from Judaism
- Lycée Condorcet alumni
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