Murderpedia has thousands of hours of work behind it. To keep creating
new content, we kindly appreciate any donation you can give to help
the Murderpedia project stay alive. We have many
plans and enthusiasm
to keep expanding and making Murderpedia a better site, but we really
need your help for this. Thank you very much in advance.
Henriette
CAILLAUX
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
The
wife of France's minister of finance, Joseph Caillaux
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder: March 16, 1914
Date of arrest:
Same day
Date of birth: December 6, 1874
Victim profile:
Gaston Calmette, 55 (editor of Le Figaro)
Henriette Caillaux (1874-1943)
was a Parisian socialite and wife of the former Prime Minister of
France who is remembered as an assassin.
Born Henriette Raynouard, she
was having an affair with Joseph Caillaux while he was still married
but eventually he divorced and the two married. While serving as
Minister of Finance in the government of France, Joseph Caillaux came
under bitter attack from his political foes and at a time when
newspapers took political sides, the editor of the Le Figaro
newspaper, Gaston Calmette (1858-1914) had been a severe critic.
Calmette received a letter belonging to
Joseph Caillaux that journalistic etiquette at the time dictated
should not be published. The letter seemed to suggest that
improprieties had been committed by Caillaux; in it he appeared to
admit having orchestrated the rejection of a tax bill while publicly
pretending to support its passage. Calmette proceeded to publish the
letter at a time when Joseph Caillaux, in his capacity as Minister of
Finance, was trying to get an income tax bill passed by the French
Senate. The publication of his letter severely tarnished Joseph
Caillaux's reputation and caused a great political upheaval.
Madame Caillaux believed that the only
way for her husband to defend his reputation would be to challenge
Calmette to a duel, which, one way or another, would destroy her and
her husband's life. Madame Caillaux made the decision to protect her
beloved husband by sacrificing herself.
On March 16, 1914, the elegant and
sophisticated woman walked to the newspaper's offices where she
confronted the editor. After a few words, she pulled out a pistol and
fired several shots point-blank into the man's chest, killing him
instantly.
Henriette Caillaux's trial dominated
French public life. It featured a deposition from the president of the
Republic, an unheard-of occurrence at a criminal proceeding almost
anywhere, along with the fact that many of the participants were among
the most powerful members of French society. At a time when feminism
was still beginning to impact French society, most republican and
socialist men paid no more than lip service to the feminist cause.
However, it was this male chauvinism
that actually proved Henriette Caillaux's best friend during the
proceedings. She was defended by the prominent attorney
Fernand-Gustave-Gaston Labori (1860-1917); he convinced the jury that
her crime, which she did not deny, was not a premeditated act but that
her uncontrollable female emotions resulted in a crime of passion.
With male beliefs that women were not as strong emotionally as men, on
July 28th, 1914, Madame Caillaux was acquitted.
A 1985 made for
French television movie called "L'Affaire Caillaux" and a 1992 book
titled The Trial of Madame Caillaux by American history professor
Edward Berenson, recounts the event.
Wikipedia.org
The Press and L'Affaire Caillaux
Late in the evening on March 16, 1914, six shots
rang out from the office of Gaston Calmette, the famed editor of
Le Figaro. Adrien Cirac, an office aide, was the first to rush
into the editor's office. There he found Henriette Caillaux, the wife
of France's minister of finance, Joseph Caillaux, standing in front of
a bookcase with her right hand still raised holding a Browning 6 mm
aimed at the slumped figure of Gaston Calmette.
Moments earlier, Adrien Cirac had led Henriette
Caillaux into the office. She was a strange and unexpected visitor to
the offices of Le Figaro, but Calmette had not hesitated to
receive her, saying, it's a woman…I cannot refuse to receive a
woman. Calmette had reached the apex of a three month long
slanderous campaign leveled against Mme. Caillaux's husband just three
days prior to her visit.
On March 13, Calmette had printed an embarrassingly
intimate letter Joseph Caillaux had written thirteen years earlier to
Berthe Gueydan, the mistress who later became his first wife. The
publication of the letter, nicknamed Ton Jo for the
sentimental valediction, not only publicized an affair, but also
exposed Caillaux's suspect political dealings. Mme. Caillaux would
later claim that the personal attack and the perceived threat of the
publication of her own scandalous lettres intimes from Joseph
drove her to Calmette's offices, where she committed the murder. As
the police arrived to take Mme. Caillaux to the Saint-Lazare Women's
Prison, she calmly explained, since there is no more justice in
France…I resolved that I alone would be able to stop this campaign.
The campaign to which she referred was, of course, the alleged slander
published by Calmette.
After enduring a three month long pre-trial
investigation, Henriette Caillaux appeared in the cour d'assises
in Paris on July 21, 1914, just three weeks after the assassination of
Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife, Sophie, in Sarajevo. In the
weeks following the assassination in Sarajevo, alliances between the
great European powers solidified, and tensions mounted. Despite these
circumstances, Henriette Caillaux's trial consumed the dailies
circulated by Paris's mass popular press. The trial spanned nine days
during which time Paris newspapers printed little other than news of
the unfolding drama in court.
To a degree, the trial merited this level of
attention. The case featured the accused socialite murderess Henriette
Caillaux, her famous husband Joseph, who had served as France's prime
minister on two occasions, and was conducted by two of France's
leading lawyers, Fernand Labori for the defense and Charles Chenu for
the prosecution, both of whom had served as counsel in the notorious
trial of Captain Alfred Dreyfus. Drama and sensationalism dominated
the trial and provided fodder for celebrity gossip, particularly in
the testimony of Joseph's first wife, Berthe Gueydan, who exposed
private details of the scandalous start to the Caillaux couple's
adulterous relationship.
Throughout the nine day trial, these main actors
took center stage in a court case dominated by emotion, romance,
hot-tempers, and secret political dealings. With every dramatic turn
in the trial's events, the Parisian press was present to carefully
report every detail. The papers related Joseph's insulting
interjection in the middle of Berthe's testimony that masculinized her
by stating that their natures were at the time opposed and too
similar. The press captured Berthe's calculated moves to checkmate
M. Labori as she granted him custody of the notorious lettres
intimes, thereby forcing him to choose between betraying his
client and withholding evidence from the court. The dailies reported
Henriette's dramatic fainting spells and described her husband as he
rushes, leaps, and ascends the railing, to take his wife in
his arms. And they faithfully recorded the violent altercation
between the Calmette-supporter Henry Bernstein, the famed playwright,
and Joseph Caillaux which resulted in the greatest uproar and
disorder and ended with the trial's temporary suspension.
After nine days of hearings and despite the
testimony by witnesses against her, an abundance of evidence, and
Chenu's legal skill, the jury returned a verdict of not guilty after
less than an hour of deliberation. The same day the papers announced
Henriette Caillaux's acquittal, tensions between the great European
nations came to a head with Austria-Hungary's declaration of war on
Serbia. Surprisingly, when compared to the press's coverage trial, the
events leading to war received very little attention. The limited
number of newspaper reports of the mounting tensions abroad was
somewhat unusual. Soon after the rise of France's mass popular press
in the 1880s, French dailies averaged between 15 and 20 percent
coverage of foreign affairs, with one of the largest French dailies,
Le Matin, allocated on average 50 percent of its coverage to
news from abroad.
Many of the larger papers limited their foreign
affairs coverage during the week of the trial to accommodate the
commentary, elaborate images, and complete transcripts of trial
proceedings. Among the newspapers boasting the largest circulation
numbers, the trial dominated the front pages: Le Matin
devoted approximately 56 percent of its front page to the trial,
Le Petit Journal only 26 percent, and Le Petit Parisien
42 percent. In contrast, Le Figaro, with a lower circulation
but perhaps more closely aligned with the trial, devoted approximately
70 percent of its front page to the trial.7
In addition to the front page coverage, each of these papers printed
between two and three pages of the complete trial transcripts. For
L'Echo de Paris, a conservative Parisian newspaper, complete
coverage of the trial meant excluding nearly all other news coverage
from its four pages. The unprecedented trial coverage was achieved at
the expense of foreign affairs coverage, which dropped well below
average over the course of the week.
Family, Femininity, and Gender Reflected
Why did this trial dominate the Parisian press in
the final weeks of July 1914? The trial possessed all the necessary
characteristics required for an entertaining story. Murder, romance,
celebrities, and politics filled the pages of the daily papers
distributed in Paris the week of the trial. In many ways, the trial
fed national curiosity and provided a diversion to looming
international threats by entertaining readers with news that read more
like a play than journalism. There were transcripts detailing court
dialogue, columns describing wardrobe, and elaborate illustrations
depicting each witness's stance and attitude while they gave
testimony. The papers cast Joseph Caillaux, Henriette Caillaux, and
Berthe Gueydan as "the three protagonists," and describe dramatic
points in the trial as a "coup de théâtre." At a time when most major
daily papers entertained as well as informed readers, Henriette
Caillaux's trial created a unique opportunity of combining
entertainment with reality.
However, more importantly than the question of why
the press covered the trial to such an extent, is the question of what
this coverage signifies. I contend that themes of family, femininity,
and gender roles run throughout the press coverage of Henriette
Caillaux's trial and act as a social mirror reflecting complex
mentalities French society had toward gender at the turn of the
twentieth century.
I draw predominately from six Parisian daily
newspapers that claimed varying levels of circulation in order to
gauge how the press portrayed the trial. Of these six newspapers,
Le Matin, Le Petit Parisien, and Le Petit Journal
boasted the highest circulation figures and made up three of the four
quatre grands. Together, the quatre grands printed
4.5 million copies a day and reached nearly half of all Paris. I also
include Le Figaro, the conservative newspaper whose
contributors included many prominent figures from the literary world.
Le Figaro's it was intimate connection to the trial
proceedings provide a unique perspective few other newspapers shared.
Lastly, I examined L'Echo de Paris, a conservative and highly
nationalistic newspaper, to represent a right leaning paper with
smaller circulation figures and The New York Herald's
European edition printed in Paris to incorporate an outside
perspective on the events of the trial.
The Parisian press gained notoriety in the Third
Republic as unabashedly biased. The French newspapers were littered
with slanted stories and used its influence on the public to
perpetuate its own agendas. Yet, due to high literacy rates and wide
circulation, the French press was considered widely influential in
forming public opinion. Writing on the media in the Third Republic,
Keiger notes that "many politicians equated the press with public
opinion, so that, if governments had the support of the press…, they
carried public opinion." The press's influence extended beyond the
realm of politics to influence other areas of Parisian life. According
to Robert Nye, the "images of criminality [newspapers] presented,
their often explicit attributions of responsibility, and their
suggestions on appropriate punishments are valuable indices of levels
of anxiety" experienced within a society. In the case of Mme.
Caillaux, newspaper coverage coalesced around questions of the
importance of family and respect for traditional gender roles as
emergent social issues in Belle Epoque Paris.
To demonstrate how themes of family, femininity,
and gender roles emerged in the Parisian Press's coverage of the
Henriette Caillaux trial, I analyze the trial through the eyes of the
press as represented by the above mentioned daily newspapers. I am
less concerned with the actual events of the trial than I am with the
trial's representation in the press. Therefore, I do not intend to
delve into Henriette's guilt or innocence nor do I extrapolate from
the proceedings the sincerity of the defense and motivations of the
accused. Instead, I examine the text and illustrations printed in
Parisian newspapers covering the trial to show parallels between the
press's portrayal of the trial and trends in gender in 1914 Parisian
society.
State of the Nation
To fully comprehend these evolving trends in
Parisian society at the turn of the twentieth century and how they
emerged in the trial, it is important to situate the Caillaux Affair
within the context of the historical framework. By 1914, France
experienced a rise in nationalism and had increasingly come under the
influence of the conservative right, a group highly suspicious of
Germany and who rejected the left's policies of détente with Germany.
To a degree, the conservatives were rightfully weary of their German
neighbor. In 1870, the French went to war with the soon to be German
nation confident of victory in what came to be known as the
Franco-Prussian War. French confidence began to wane as the war raged
on and the Prussians laid siege to Paris. Throughout the siege,
Parisians experienced massive unemployment, the tripling of mortality
rates when the sanitation system broke down, and hunger as they turned
to horses, dogs, cats, and rats for nourishment.
The dehumanizing and humiliating experience of the
siege saw no reprieve with peace. The terms of peace granted Prussia
all of Alsace and part of Lorraine, payment of a five billion gold
franc indemnity, and allowed the Prussians to enter Paris
triumphantly. During the Franco-Prussian War, the French government
had collapsed and was replaced by the Third Republic, the Parisians
had revolted and established the Paris Commune, and France had lost
the major industrial centers of Alsace and Lorraine.
The years following France's defeat witnessed a
widening demographic and industrial gap between France and the newly
formed Germany. Throughout the end of the nineteenth century and the
beginning of the twentieth, conservative factions of the French public
became increasingly concerned by Germany's growing strength in
contrast to France's relative weakness. Their demographic concerns
were justified. In the sixty years preceding Henriette Caillaux's
trial, France's population had grown by 9.5 percent while Germany's
population had increased by 74.9 percent. At the time of the trial,
France had a population of 39 million, and the death rate outstripped
the birth rate. By contrast, Germany had experienced rapid population
growth in the last century, bringing its population to approximately
60 million in 1914.
France's demographic weakness raised concerns for
the security of the nation, and according to historian Karen Offen,
following France's defeat in the Franco-Prussian War and the loss of
Alsace-Lorraine, "leaders of the Third Republic were painfully aware
of the international implications of the decline: the German victory
underscored the relationship between population and national might."
France's dangerously low population growth was
perceived as a threat to the nation's security. France's demographic
weakness was compounded by similar discrepancies in industrial
prowess. Germany had experienced rapid population growth and
industrialization which far outstripped the industrialization France
had undergone by 1914. These disparities in population and industrial
productivity between the two countries made it unfeasible for France
to compete with Germany.
From 1870 through the first years of the twentieth
century, France's diplomatic relationships with Germany fluctuated
between the liberals's policy of détente and the conservatives's
defensive hostility. Historian J.F.V. Keiger writes that following
France's defeat in 1871, "France's foreign and defense policies were
predicated on how to deal with the German 'question.'" In part, the
question of France's relationship with Germany played itself out in
the colonies. On July 1, 1911, a diplomatic standoff began between
Germany and France in the Moroccan Port of Agadir. What became known
as the Agadir Affair had originated with France's violation of the
Algeçiras agreements, which had prohibited France from interfering in
events transpiring in Moroccan backcountry. Earlier that year, France
had sent troops into Morocco to intervene on behalf of European
citizens in a political upheaval in Fez. In response to France's
violation, Germany ordered a gunboat into the port of Agadir, which
then brought Franco-German tensions to a head.
The liberal government under then Premier Joseph
Caillaux opted to begin secret negotiations with Germany to avoid an
outright conflict, the odds for which were not in France's favor. An
agreement was reached on October 11, 1911, that granted Germany claims
on joint economic and financial venture and granted them part of the
French Congo. In exchange, France received a protectorate over
Morocco, which was far more profitable than the Congo. However, once
Joseph Caillaux's secret dealings with the Germans came to light, the
French public was outraged. Le Petit Journal reported on
November 8, 1911, that "the accord that was just signed is the
definitive condemnation – by the Germans themselves – of the clumsy
politics, unjust and without glory, which they have managed against
France for more than ten years." There was a general sense of betrayal
and heightened suspicions of Germany that resulted from the Agadir
Affair. These tensions and suspicions quashed all hope of achieving
détente with Germany was lost and the two countries entered into an
arms race.
While tensions with Germany varied in degree of
intensity in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, French fears
of the German threat mounted with the growing force of the nationalist
movement. The nationalist movement was most powerful among French
conservatives, but at the turn of the twentieth century, its influence
extended beyond political identification. The nationalist movement
responded to France's demographic vulnerabilities by valorizing the
family as the building block of population growth.
The Family as France's Foundation
The value placed on the family was clearly visible
in public attitudes toward divorce. France legalized divorce in 1884,
but by 1914 the law still sparked tremendous controversy. Le Matin
took advantage of this controversy in February 1908, by publishing a
series of readers's letters advocating and opposing divorce. Many of
divorce's supporters argued for the necessity of having the right to
escape marriages marked by infidelity, illegitimate children, and
suffering in unhappy marriages. However, many of divorce's opponents
aligned the dissolution of families with the weakening of France. One
reader responded in a survey on February 9 that "if you want a great
France, strong and prosperous, if you want to affirm the stability of
our beautiful country and assure its repopulation with healthy and
strong men, form indissoluble families."
Three days later on February 12, another reader
wrote, "it is only the homeland in danger and the defense of the
territories that can separate spouses," and in so doing, aligned the
unity of family with the defense of nation. Parisians closely
identified maintaining strong, unifies families with patriotism and
the nation's defense against threatening outside forces.
At the center of healthy families was a respect for
traditional gender roles. Men were to assert their masculine duties of
protecting their honor and the honor of their families, while wives
were to adhere to a subservient, domestic lifestyle. The recent
emergence of the feminist movement in France threatened traditional
roles as women began to step outside their spheres and into the world
of men. In some extreme anti-feminist circles, loud-spoken individuals
painted the feminist movement as a foreign disease infecting French
society and undermining traditional values. Yet, as French historian
Edward Berenson argues, in more reserved circles "feminism, even in
its mildest version, aroused the most exaggerated, and contradictory,
species of masculine fears." These fears arose in response to women
breaching traditional gender norms and adopting more masculine roles.
On January 1, 1900, the newspaper Le Gaulois
printed in its front page an editorial comparing the women of 1900 to
those under Napoleon, claiming that "education changed their form…we
gave to women a mature instruction" and "they were subjected to
redoubtable contact with ideas" through which they grew "accustomed to
looking at truth, in the boldest manner," and "they become virilized."
According to the editorial, women who moved outside
of their traditional domestic roles to receive a worldly education
previously reserved for men would take on other manly characteristics.
Women who challenged traditional gender roles lost their femininity
and thereby threatened the stability of the family. For this reason,
Feminists were perceived as threats to traditional social order and
women's place in the family, and conservative elements of society
rejected the feminist movement and behavior that affronted traditional
female roles.
Scandal and Divorce
When Henriette Caillaux's trial opened on July 20,
1914, it found itself well within this historical context that was
increasingly dominated by nationalist pride that valorized the family
and supported traditional gender roles. The controversy of divorce's
threat to family stability swiftly followed the opening remarks on the
first day of the trial as Henriette Caillaux took the stand for the
judge's inquiry. The judge began by asking Mme. Caillaux about the
circumstances surrounding her divorce. His direct opening question
reflected the imposed centrality of issues of marriage, divorce, and
adultery to the case. While these issues were secondary to the main
events of the trial, the presiding judge deemed the placement of
Henriette in the context of two marriages to be of utmost importance.
In 1908, Henriette divorced her husband of fourteen years. She had
been having an affair with Joseph Caillaux over the course of the
previous year and had decided to leave her first husband to marry
Joseph. Joseph, also, was married at the time of their affair to
Berthe Gueydan, but unlike Henriette, he had no children by his first
marriage. The couple's adulterous relationship and morally
questionable divorces made the integrity of family a theme developed
by several newspapers covering the trial.
Henriette's response to the judge's questioning
reflected careful navigation of social norms. She began by identifying
herself with her peers, stating:
"I was raised like all the other young girls of
my time… I never left my parents until the day of my marriage." She
then confessed that soon after her first marriage, which took place
when she was only nineteen years old, "bad feelings unexpectedly
arose…our characters did not complement one another; on several
occasions, I was at the point of breaking off the union, but I had
two children, two girls, and for them I waited."
Henriette characterized herself as a woman of the
time: she had the same upbringing as her peers and the same
expectations for a happy marriage, and she placed her family above her
personal needs. Parisian society could not blame a woman for desiring
happiness in marriage; after all, by 1914, happiness in marriage had
become a realistic expectation. Henriette's desire for a happy
marriage was not uncommon for women in the Belle Epoque, and her
postponement of personal satisfaction for the sake of her children
suggested to the public that she was a woman who upheld family values.
Divorce was a point of contention in the Third
Republic, in addition to being widely considered unpatriotic. Divorce
undermined family and was thus seen as linked to France's purported
moral decay. In his article on divorce in the Belle Epoque, Berenson
writes, that the link between moral decay and divorce, "commentators
claimed, had spread to the family itself, an institution progressively
weakened by feminism, individualism, and divorce" with depopulation as
the "inevitable result." Immorality, divorce, adultery, and feminism
were intimately linked in the conservative minds of the right.
Parisian press in opposition to Henriette Caillaux exploited these
connections to portray her as unwomanly and thereby associated with
the moral decay perceived as subverting French society. By contrast,
newspapers that wrote sympathetically of Henriette overlooked her
checkered past to emphasize her respect for social norms and her
attempt to live by them.
The question of divorce was certainly formidable,
but it was second to the public nature of Henriette's affair with
Joseph Caillaux. While much of French society feared that divorce
undermined the family, it placed growing value on happiness and sexual
fulfillment in marriage. According to Michèle Plott, "between 1860 and
1900…to a far greater extent, upper-middle-class women could construct
a sexual sense of self while remaining respectable," and in fact,
"many respectable middle-class women expected to find sexual
satisfaction in marriage." The growing acceptance in France of women's
sexuality and the expectation of sexual fulfillment in marriage
resulted in society's growing acceptance of women engaging in acts of
adultery, and it grew increasingly acceptable for women who did not
find happiness in marriage to turn elsewhere.
While society accepted women's adultery, it did not
accept the scandal that accompanied public knowledge of such affairs.
Women engaged in extramarital relations were expected to keep the
knowledge of it within the confines of their intimate circle. The
paradox of Belle Epoque society was that the perception of morality
and purity of the family was idealized while the reality of discrete
immorality was accepted. Parisian society thus deemed it acceptable
for a woman to seek sexual fulfillment outside of wedlock if the
marriage was devoid of it, but it was unacceptable for a woman to
allow her extramarital affairs to be made public. Gaston Calmette's
campaign threatened to make Henriette's affair public by publishing
intimate love-letters on the front page of Le Figaro. Her
extreme reaction to the threat of her affair's publication, that is
the murder of M. Calmette, was cast by favorable newspapers as playing
by social rules rather than subverting them. By contrast, newspapers
hostile to Henriette took advantages of the opportunity to emphasize
the morally questionable start to the marriage of Henriette and
Joseph, in which two families were dissolved.
Biasses in the Press
Le Matin's front page report of the
trial's first day proceedings ran sympathetic headlines that
emphasized Henriette's fear that Calmette would have exposed her
affair with Joseph. The headlines printed across Le Matin's
front page directly quoted Henriette's testimony and were selected by
the editors to summarize the important points from the day's
proceedings. One headline read, "I feared the publication of the
lettres intimes, I feared for my husband, for myself, for my
daughter." Le Matin used this quote to highlight the portion
of Henriette's testimony that reflected her concern first for her
family and then for her own reputation. This headline made clear to
the reader that Henriette feared the consequences of the affair's
exposure for her husband and his career and for her daughter and the
consequences she would experience as a result of the dishonorable
beginning to her parents's relationship. Le Matin's depiction
of Henriette's fear overlooked the morally questionable affair to
direct the reader's attention to her laudable love and concern for the
wellbeing of her family.
Le Matin ran a second headline below the
first that emphasized the private, personal nature of the lettres
intimes. The second headline read, "it was all flaunted, my
intimacy, my most dear secret, but also the most hidden, my womanly
honor was made bare." Whereas the first headline emphasized
Henriette's concern for family, the second contrasted her socially
acceptable pursuit of love with Calmette's threat of exposure. This
headline implies that Henriette found happiness in her affair with
Joseph and that she recognized the importance of her affair's secret
nature. She desired to adhere to the social norms which dictated the
affair remain private if it were to remain socially acceptable. Le
Matin's choice of headline conveys the idea that the exposure of
Henriette's affair was no fault of her own, but rather, that of
outside forces which threatened her honor as a woman. Le Matin's
description appealed to public sympathy by casting Henriette as the
victim who was faced with the threat of exposure and inadvertent
violation of social rules.
More subtly, Le Petit Parisien also
emphasized aspects of the trial that cast Henriette Caillaux in a
favorable light. The Parisian press included complete transcripts of
the trial proceedings in their dailies. To make the long transcripts
more manageable, the press divided them into sections with section
headings. Section breaks and headings were subject to each paper's own
discretion and each determined where their breaks would fall and what
they would be titled. Sections functioned to bring the reader's
attention to certain passages and the section titles served to shape
the reader's perception of the content contained within.
In its July 21 coverage of the trial, Le Petit
Parisien inserted a section break at a point in Mme. Caillaux's
testimony that emphasized the private nature of the lettres
intimes and M. Calmette's violation of a woman's privacy. The
newspaper titled the section "The 'Ton Jo' letter was a private
letter" to introduce Henriette's statement that "it is well evident
that in publishing the 'Ton Jo' letter, M. Calmette entered into the
private life of the Minister, but in short he also entered into the
private life of a woman, the recipient of this letter."
Le Petit Parisien drew the reader's
attention to a passage portraying Henriette Caillaux as a victim,
whose respectability as a woman was threatened indirectly by M.
Calmette's attacks on her husband. Henriette Caillaux was not
responsible for the controversial political decisions made by her
husband that had instigated the attack from the right; however, she
was directly affected by what appeared as negligence on M. Calmette's
part. Therefore, public exposure of Henriette's affair was not an
instance of her social deviancy, but rather M. Calmette's disregard
for feminine honor.
Le Figaro was intimately connected with
the trial as its own editor, Gaston Calmette, was murdered by the
accused. Unsurprisingly, the newspaper was particularly hostile in its
treatment of Henriette. Le Figaro was more nuanced in its
bias than other, more widely circulated dailies. It relied primarily
on the printed text and photograph captions to sway the reader's
opinion. Le Figaro hostility toward Henriette Caillaux was
most clearly conveyed in the photograph captions dispersed throughout
the newspaper. One such caption quoted from Henriette's testimony,
claiming, "I did not yet know if I would be going to a tea or to
Le Figaro."
By isolating this phrase outside of the context of
the testimony, Le Figaro depicted Henriette as casual and
nonchalant in her decision to murder Gaston Calmette. It suggested
that Henriette considered murder on par with going to tea with
friends. In doing so, Le Figaro cast her as a cold and
heartless woman, unfazed by the thought of committing murder. Whereas
sympathetic papers stressed Henriette's fear of exposure, Le
Figaro suggests that Henriette was far from emotional in the
hours preceding Calmette's murder.
Le Figaro continued its assault against
Henriette's feminine nature by portraying her as a cold and unwomanly
through the caption, "my father put me in the habit of always carrying
a little revolver in delicate situations." If Henriette was accustomed
to carrying a gun, she was also familiar with using it. Describing the
prosecution's strategy, Berenson claims that in Belle Epoque society,
a woman's ability to operate a gun was an "apparent departure from
female propriety." Henriette's familiarity and ownership of a gun
situated her in a masculine role.
Furthermore, by drawing the reader's attention to
Henriette's familiarity with guns, Le Figaro pointed to the
question of motivation. Why would Henriette possess a gun? She was a
married woman and it was her husband's duty to protect her honor. As
Robert Nye argues, Belle Epoque society was governed by "the rituals
of a code of honor that idealized the feminine and required men to
defend their families, but they denied to women the quality of honor
that would permit their inclusion" in the masculine sphere.
Therefore, if Henriette were truly a feminine
woman, she would have no need to carry a gun, unless she intended to
usurp her husband's duty to defend her honor. Le Figaro's
strategic caption implies that Henriette's nature is at odds with
traditional gender roles, which dictated she defer acts of violence in
defense of honor to her husband. The newspaper's subtle accusation
that Henriette was in opposition to her role as a woman and a wife,
questioned her respect for family and adherence to traditional family
values.
Belle Epoque Feminity: Comme il Faut?
Similar to the divorce controversy was the question
of women and femininity. French women at the turn of the nineteenth
century increasingly questioned traditional gender roles. Le Matin
had reported on the first feminist march on Paris on July 6, 1914,
taking place just two weeks before the opening of Henriette's trial,
and columns like "Le Jeune Fille 'Comme il Faut'" made regular
appearances on the front pages of the Parisian dailies. Henriette's
trial was not exempt from the feminist discussion, and the French
press manipulated the contrasting stereotypes of feminine and feminist
to reflect their biases and sympathies throughout their trial
coverage.
The trial featured two leading women who in a sense
were foils of one another. While the papers cast both women in varying
degrees of sympathetic light, themes did emerge. Papers that favored
Henriette Caillaux portrayed her as a frail, delicate woman with her
frequent outbursts of sobs and repeated fainting spells, while they
depicted Berthe Gueydan, Joseph Caillaux's first wife, as an
aggressive woman with marked "bitterness and lassitude." The
newspapers exploited social themes that pitted the feminine against
the feminist and established a binary through which they bestowed
pardon and condemnation on these two women.
The press reports favoring Henriette Caillaux
stressed her submissive, feminine character not only in their
descriptions but also in the images they published in their papers.
The above illustration appeared in Le Petit Parisien and
represents Henriette Caillaux's postures on the day M. Labori read the
notorious lettres intimes. The artist sketches a submissive
woman, whose eyes are constantly averted and who positions her body in
a submissive attitude. Three out of the five sketches show Henriette's
head bowed. Interestingly, in the two sketches in which men appear,
Henriette is in this bowed, submissive attitude. Nothing in her
attitude or appearance would seem to threaten the upright and
aggressive postures of the men in the sketches.
In the three sketches in which Henriette appears
alone, she also appears lost and weak. She is hardly discernible in
the first drawing, having bowed her head so low that only the top of
her hat is visible. The center sketch is the only one of the five in
which she is drawn standing upright; however, her upright posture is
far from aggressive, as it shows her looking lost and concerned with
her arms drawn toward her as she gazes across the audience. The final
sketch depicts Henriette with a raised head and a hand grasping the
bar as she blankly stares out into the courtroom. Her attitude seemed
weak, timid, and worried. Despite appearing in the minority of
sketches, the men dominate this illustration with their aggressive,
erect stances. Henriette's humble, submissive attitude in relation to
these men affirms her feminine character and adheres to traditional,
submissive feminine gender roles.
Four days later, Le Petit Parisien printed
a similar drawing depicting Mme. Caillaux in a submissive, vulnerable
light. In the sketch captioned, "What one saw of Mme. Caillaux while
the lawyers spoke," Henriette appeared alone in three postures, all of
which depicted only a portion of the top of her head. The images
showed Henriette weak and weeping while seated at the dock as her
lawyer, M. Labori, read the lettres intimes before the court.
Le Petit Parisien sympathetically portrayed Henriette as a
woman attempting to hide her shame as she is publically exposed. The
drawings suggest that while Mme. Caillaux could not hide her
adulterous past, she could hide her person and thereby attempt to
maintain a sense of feminine decency.
Le Petit Journal printed sketches that
cast Henriette Caillaux in a similarly sympathetic light by drawing on
themes of weakness, uncertainty, and vulnerability. In its July 22
drawing of Henriette sitting at the dock, Le Petit Journal's
artist captured the image of a woman whose weak eyes and mouth make
her appear tired and sad. She can barely raise her head above the
dock's railing, and the incline of her head coupled with her sad,
tired features, gives her a pleading, helpless air. It is as if she
cannot help herself but requires the pity and charity of others to
bring her out of her condition. In the drawing, she is accompanied by
a guard to ensure she behaves while in court. The guard's presence is
almost laughable next to the docile, submissive depiction of Henriette
Caillaux. Le Petit Journal's drawing emphasized Henriette's
gentle and weak femininity that posed no threat to traditional gender
roles.
In contrast to Henriette, Berthe Gueydan appeared
on the stand as a strong and forceful woman in papers sympathetic to
Mme. Caillaux. The above series of drawings were printed in Le
Matin the day following Mme. Gueydan's testimony on the witness
stand. The drawings cast her in an aggressive, confident, and
assertive attitude. In three of the four drawings, Mme. Gueydan stands
with a casual and easy lean and holds her head high. Berthe Gueydan is
alone in a man's world, surrounded by men in the background, and yet
her stance suggests that she is comfortable and at ease in this
environment. Unlike Henriette, Berthe's body language depicted in
Le Matin is aggressive, strong, and not distressed by being alone
in a masculine environment. Berthe's confidence is matched by
defensive and harsh body language in the final drawing. Even while
sitting, Berthe keeps her head up and her elbow out. Her manner of
sitting is far from the delicate, passive sketches of Mme. Caillaux
bowing her head before the men in the court. Berthe's attitude in
these drawings is assertive in a man's world and could easily be read
as threatening masculine power.
Le Petit Parisien's depiction of Berthe
Gueydan also differed markedly from the timid and weak drawings of
Henriette Caillaux. On July 25, the newspaper printed a pair of
sketches showing Berthe Gueydan in profile. These images contrasted
drastically with the images of Henriette, captioned "Mme. Caillaux's
various attitudes during yesterday's hearing," that were printed
directly above them. In the photo to the left, Berthe appears old and
haggard with her drooping mouth, dark eyes, and slightly sagging head.
Rather than seeming soft and feminine, Berthe is depicted as a tired,
hardened, and unapproachable woman. Whereas the newspaper portrayed
Henriette overcome with emotion and her handkerchief in hand, it
represented Berthe as stern and emotionless. Le Petit Parisien
paired the picture on the left with the drawing to its right. This
second sketch conveyed a different image of Berthe Gueydan, but one
equally unwomanly. In the second image, Berthe is shown tight lipped
and glaring at the reader with her straining neck aggressively
thrusting her head forward. Her aggressive and hostile depiction is
again at odds with the submissive, feminine ideal valued by more
conservative elements of French society. Through this somewhat hostile
representation, Le Petit Parisien distanced Berthe from
feminine emotions and stereotyped gender norms.
Ironically, these two images depict Berthe wearing
a hat reminiscent of the red Phrygian cap of the French Revolution.
The deeply symbolic Phrygian cap was at once a symbol of national
liberty and of the violent overthrow of the ancien régime.
The French Third Republic was well familiar with this symbolism: Paris
had erected a statue of Marianne, a symbol of the French Republic,
wearing such a hat in 1883 in the Place de la République. Rather than
emitting a sense of patriotism, Berthe wearing Marianne's Phrygian cap
only reinforced her threatening character. Berthe's unwomanly and
hardened image aligned her with masculine characteristics. Her image
subverted traditional gender roles and thereby undermined a core
element of the family. In the minds of many of the French press's
readers, as previously demonstrated, a threat to the family was by
nature a threat to the national strength. Therefore, Le Petit
Parisien's sketches of Berthe wearing a patriotic Phrygian cap
were more of a mocking caricature than a move to bestow patriotic
valor on Joseph Caillaux's former wife.
Unsurprisingly, Le Figaro strongly opposed
the binary depiction that favored Henriette as submissively feminine
and Berthe as aggressively masculine. The conservative newspaper
described Mme. Caillaux as "cold-blooded" and marked by "impatience,"
"disappointed ambition," and "disheartened snobbery."
In contrast, Le Figaro sympathetically
cast Mme. Gueydan as a woman plagued by the hardship of a "sad picture
of a household, where, after love was lost, the husband had nothing
left but hate and wanted to throw the woman he once loved to the
street." Yet Le Figaro's slant was expected as Henriette had
shot its editor, and does not accurately reflect the majority of
newspapers's characterization of the two women. In fact, as Berenson
notes, "commentators outside Le Figaro's orbit – even those
quite hostile to Henriette Caillaux – presented Berthe Gueydan as
tough, aggressive, and capable of caring for herself."
While Le Figaro's representation of the
two women opposed that of the majority of Paris's popular press, the
conservative newspaper also drew from stereotypes to advance its
biases. In the image above, Le Figaro depicted Henriette
Caillaux as the most prominent figure in the male-dominated courtroom.
Unlike the submissive qualities emphasized in sympathetic newspapers,
Henriette is drawn as the dominant figure, towering over the men in
the courtroom. Her prominent placement endows her with a sense of
authority as she looks down on the bowed heads of lawyers and guards.
Both lawyers and guards are responsible for preserving order; however,
in Le Figaro's sketch of Henriette, she has ironically
usurped the order by defying the authority and dominance given to
these men by their traditional gender roles.
Le Figaro contrasted Henriette with its
sketches of Berthe Gueydan. Far from the aggressive, masculine
caricature found in rival newspapers, Le Figaro fashioned
Mme. Gueydan into an emotional, distraught, and helpless woman who had
been betrayed by an unfaithful husband and usurped by his mistress. In
the image printed on the front page of Le Figaro's July 24
issue, the image of Berthe Gueydan appears soft and delicate. Her
sense of fragility is intensified by her raised eyebrows and parted
lips, which create a helpless, lost image of Mme. Gueydan. Le
Figaro's image personifies the themes of betrayal and injustice
the newspaper bestowed on Berthe in its columns. In doing so, Le
Figaro played on the divorce controversy to ignite pity amongst
its readership to further the newspaper's bias against Henriette
Caillaux.
On the sixth day of the trial, M. Labori stood
before the courtroom overflowing with reporters and spectators and
began to read aloud the notorious lettres intimes, for which
Henriette Caillaux had reportedly been willing to kill to prevent
their publication. Le Matin had described Henriette as she
entered the court that morning as "more pale than ever and, already,
giving signs of extreme distress." Despite the "almost super human
effort…not to give vent to her feelings and scream," Mme. Caillaux,
overcome with emotions, fainted as M. Labori finished his readings,
having experienced what Le Petit Parisian termed, "an attack of
nerves."
The trial was suspended until Henriette Caillaux
was able to return, but even then, according to reports from The
New York Herald, "she was frightfully pale," and "a helpless,
semi-inanimate form" for the remainder of the hearings. Yet not all
journalists present had the same interpretation of the notorious
letters and Henriette's climatic fainting spell. In contrast to the
sympathetic tones taken by many newspapers, the conservative Le
Figaro dismissed the hype surrounding the letters, claiming that
they contained "nothing. Absolutely nothing" and asserted that "the
letters were an alibi for her."
Instead of a woman ashamed and frightened that her
affair would be publically exposed, Le Figaro claimed that
the hype surrounding the letters was merely an act. The paper implied
that Henriette hid behind a feminine disguise to appear as an adherent
of social rules that permitted women to have private love affairs when
trapped in an unhappy marriage, so long as they guarded against their
public exposure.
Final Remarks
French newspapers had found their success in the
Third Republic, but along with it they also found their notorious
reputation for bias reporting. In the case of Henriette Caillaux's
trial, Parisian newspapers slanted their descriptions of the trial in
terms of the integrity of the family and the affirmation of
traditional gender roles. For many newspapers, the image of Henriette
Caillaux as a weak and feminine woman was manipulated by editors and
reporters favorable to Henriette Caillaux. By situating Henriette in
the context of family and gender, the newspapers appealed to the
existing social framework in Belle Epoque society. Newspapers that
hoped for her acquittal described a woman subject to her own emotions,
who, despite all efforts, was unable to master the emotional distress
the public exposure of her scandalous affair caused her. Her weak,
frail nature was the antithesis of masculine strength, and as such,
her character appeared to pose no threat to male authority.
Extreme biases did exist in the press, and not all
newspapers shared the same biases in Henriette Caillaux's trial. Yet,
while French dailies were divided in the biases they had toward
Henriette Caillaux and Berthe Gueydan, they were unified in their use
of femininity and gender roles to cast the two women as opposing
characters. Sympathetic and hostile newspapers alike drew from themes
of family and femininity existent in 1914 Parisian society to bias
their papers and influence their readers. Headlines, section titles,
commentary, and images carried the undercurrents of overarching social
questions of femininity, feminism, changing gender roles, and how they
fit within the context of the family. The gender question took a
prominent place in the coverage of Henriette Caillaux's trial and was
used as leverage to support or oppose her acquittal.
SelonCarrie.com
Books of The Times; A Belle Epoque Killing That
Wasn't a Murder
By herbert Mitgang - The New York Times
March 11, 1992
The Trial of Mme. Caillaux By Edward Berenson
Illustrated. 296 pages. University of California Press. $25.
This is how Edward Berenson's fascinating "Trial of
Mme. Caillaux" -- the unfolding of a crime of passion that captivated
all France on the eve of World War I -- begins:
"On 16 March 1914 at 6 o'clock in the evening
Henriette Caillaux was ushered into the office of Gaston Calmette,
editor of Le Figaro. . . . Mme. Caillaux wore a fur coat over a gown
strangely formal for a late afternoon business call. Her hat was
modest, and a large furry muff linked the two sleeves of her coat.
Henriette's hands were hidden inside the muff.
"Before Calmette could speak she asked, 'You know
why I have come?' 'Not at all, Madame,' responded the editor, charming
to the end. Without another word, Henriette pulled her right hand from
the mass of fur protecting it. In her fist was a small weapon, a
Browning automatic. Six shots went off in rapid succession, and
Calmette fell to the floor clutching his abdomen. Figaro workers from
the surrounding offices rushed in and seized Mme. Caillaux. . . . 'Do
not touch me,' she ordered her captors. 'Je suis une dame!'"
Here was no case that might have required the
sleuthing services of Hercule Poirot or Inspector Maigret. The society
woman held a smoking gun in her hand and never denied that she had
committed the deed. It was a murder in cold blood, punishable under
French law by life imprisonment or even death.
Henriette Caillaux shot the editor because he had
conducted a campaign of vilification against her husband, Joseph, a
wealthy former prime minister affiliated with the center-left Radical
Party. Or was her motive more a familiar affair of the heart? She had
been one of Joseph Caillaux's mistresses; it was a second marriage for
both. The Figaro editor, a rightist political enemy, had broken an
unwritten Parisian rule by publishing a love letter written to a
gentleman's mistress. Joseph Caillaux, a notorious boulevardier, had
sent the letter 13 years before the trial to another woman, who later
became his first wife, and it had been leaked to Figaro.
Political and social mores, the Napoleonic Code
that discriminated against women legally and the venality of the press
all came together in the affaire Caillaux.
Her celebrated lawyer, Fernand Labori, had
represented Emile Zola and successfully defended Capt. Alfred Dreyfus
against false charges of treason in the notorious, anti-Semitic
Dreyfus affair. In her clever defense on the witness stand, Henriette
Caillaux made two points. She evoked the romantic and idealized notion
that women were ruled by their passions; hers was simply a "crime
passionnel." She also used new scientific language that stressed the
nervous system and the unconscious mind.
Henriette Caillaux's testimony shifted back and
forth between literary and scientific images. It was intended to make
her appear a heroine of uncontrollable emotions to the jury, and a
victim of deterministic laws to the experts. Literature made a woman
of ungovernable passions sympathetic, even attractive; criminal
psychology placed her beyond the law.
After a seven-day trial in the Cour d'Assises in
Paris, Henriette Caillaux walked out free. In less than an hour of
deliberations, the all-male jury decided the homicide was committed
without premeditation or criminal intent. The jurors accepted her
testimony that when she pulled the trigger, she was a temporary victim
of (as her lawyer put it) "unbridled female passions."
By digging deeply into the transcripts of the case
and newspaper files, Mr. Berenson, a professor of history at the
University of California at Los Angeles, has unearthed and
reconstructed a highly readable story that touches upon many aspects
of life during the so-called Belle Epoque in France.
Under one infamous article of the 1804 Napoleonic
Code, "The husband owes protection to his wife, the wife obedience to
her husband." The author emphasizes that French attitudes toward women
were an important part of the trial and its coverage in the press.
Describing the newspaper illustrations, Professor Berenson writes,
"Mme. Caillaux stands out starkly as a lone woman speaking to a sea of
mustachioed male faces, as a woman subject to their gaze, open to
their scrutiny."
Going beyond the trial itself -- and giving his
book a modern feminist twist -- Professor Berenson notes that during
the Belle Epoque men claimed the existence of natural and hierarchical
differences between the sexes. After France's defeat by Prussia in
1870, some commentators attributed a decline in French power to moral
decay and to changing relations between the sexes. The author says
these commentators attributed France's weaknesses to the emancipation
of women, the legalization of divorce and the emasculation of men.
What distinguishes "The Trial of Mme. Caillaux" is
its portrait of society before the guns of August 1914 destroyed the
illusions of the Belle Epoque. In an epilogue, Professor Berenson
writes that World War I gave women important responsibilities on the
home front and greater recognition. Even so, it took a second World
War before French women won the right to vote.