Jean-Baptiste Lebas is the son of Félicité Delattre and Jean-Hippolyte Lebas.[3] He was born at home in a humble house in Roubaix, an industrial city where his mother was a housekeeper and his father a textile worker.[4] A Republican under the Second Empire and a syndicalist, Jean-Baptiste Lebas's father was a socialist who had become member of the Parti Ouvrier Français (POF) at its foundation in 1880.[5] Altogether, it was observable that Jean-Baptiste Lebas had been brought up in a working class family and steeped in a left-wing milieu in his birth town.
In 1896, following his father at the age of eighteen, he joined the POF. In 1900 he wrote under the pen nameJacques Vingtras a brochure premised by Jules Guesde and entitled: Socialisme et patriotisme.[6] He entered a career as accountant for the cooperative society La Paix in 1901. In 1906 he became assistant secretary for the local branch of the SFIO.[7]
Mayor of Roubaix
In 1908 Lebas was elected to the municipal council of Roubaix. Then he came to be the mayor of the city in 1912.[8]
German troops invaded the city of Roubaix at the beginning of World War I. Lebas refused to grant the German forces the list of inhabitants in the prime of life whom occupiers wanted for compulsory labour. Therefore, he was arrested on 7 March 1915 and imprisoned in the fortress of Rastatt.[9] After he was released, he has been awarded the Legion of Honour in October 1916 for his courage.
Between the two world wars, Lebas developed and implemented a social policy for his city aimed at constructing decent and salubrious housing and providing access to education.[10]
Deputy and minister of the Popular Front government
Lebas was elected deputy for the first time in 1919 alongside Jules Guesde.[8] Afterwards, he was re-elected in 1924, 1932 and 1936.[1]
In 1936 he rejoined the first Blum's government as Minister of Labour. Following the Matignon Agreements he introduced a law that granted the first annual leave of two weeks for workers and employees as well as a forty-hour work week.[11]
After liberation, a large monument was erected by the municipal council to honour one of its most famous mayors in 1949.[14] On 31 August 1951, his body was repatriated to France alongside that of his son and those of six other Roubaisians who died in concentration camps.[15][16]
^Le Marois, Jacques (ed.). "Jean Baptiste LEBAS". Geneanet (in French). Paris, F: Claranet. Retrieved 1 May 2019.
^Lepagnol, Agathe; Bouquet, Marie (2018). "Qui sont les Lebas ?" [Who are the Lebas?]. Bibliothèque numérique de Roubaix (in French). Archives municipales de Roubaix. Retrieved 18 December 2019. Son père, Jean Hyppolite, est un tisserand originaire de l'Eure. Sa mère, Félicité Delattre, est ménagère.
^Thierry Delattre, Jean-Pierre Popelier, Philippe Waret: Roubaix de A à Z. Éditions Alain Sutton, Saint-Cyr-sur-Loire 2006, p. 65
^ abcDavid Gordon: Liberalism and Social Reform: Industrial Growth and Progressiste Politics in France, 1880-1914 (Contributions to the Study of World History). Greenwood Press 1996, p. 81
^Philippe Nivet: La France occupée 1914-1918. Armand Colin, Paris 2011, p. 178
^Le corps de Jean Lebas celui de son fils Raymond et ceux de six autres Roubaisiens morts dans les camps de concentration sont revenus hier dans leur ville natale, Jules Delignies, Nord Matin 1951
Further reading
Thierry Delattre, Jean-Pierre Popelier, Philippe Waret: Roubaix de A à Z. Éditions Alain Sutton, Saint-Cyr-sur-Loire 2006, ISBN2-84910-459-0.
Alain Guérin: Chronique de la Résistance. Omnibus 2000, Paris 2002, ISBN2-25807-816-4.
Jean Piat: Jean Lebas: de la Belle Époque à la Résistance. Maison du livre, Roubaix 1994, ISBN2-95087-110-0.
Marc Sadoun, Maurice Duverger: Les Socialistes sous l'Occupation. Presses de la Fondation nationale des sciences politiques, Paris 1982, ISBN2-72460-460-1.