Pierre-Joseph Grangier
Pierre-Joseph Grangier (born on March 12th 1758 with Sancerre, Expensive - died on January 25th 1821 with Bourges, Expensive), notary, lawyer and politician French, wire of Etienne-Antoine Grangier, prosecutor in the county of Sancerre, and Anne-Suzanne Simon.
Lawyer and subdelegated intendance of the Berry to Sancerre before the Revolution, Pierre-Joseph Grangier was elected, on March 27th 1789, by the Bailliage of Berry, appointed of the Third-State to the General states of 1789. He voted constantly with the minority and belonged to the Reports Committee. He protested personally against the acceptance of the Constitution by the king and signed the general protests of September 1791. He ceased, little time after, his functions of deputy on September 30th, 1791.
In 1796, he became administrator of the department Cher and was elected by this same department the 22 germinal year V (April 11th 1797) appointed with the Conseil of the Five hundred with 119 votes (139 voters) but its election was cancelled on September 4th 1797, following the Coup d'etat of the 18 fructidor year V, because of a suspicion of Royalisme.
The consular government named it the 22 floréal year X (May 12th 1802) General adviser of Expensive, then, in 1804, adviser of prefecture with Bourges, function which it preserved under the Empire and both Restaurations until his death in 1821, except during the Hundred Days. In 1810, Grangier makes party of the Council of Prefecture of Expensive, composed of three Members, with Sirs Gravet-la-Buffière and Leblanc-Lespinasse. It accepted the Légion of honor.
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