242:" who had recently been accused of treason and executed. In October, another mission took him to the Western army; in November, he was back to the Army of the Ardennes and the Moselle and the North. He returned to Paris in late November 1793 and left immediately for the northern army, where he remained until mid-January 1794.
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in
Pennsylvania, where he appears in the 1830 census with his wife, Theresa, and one of his sons. He died after 1 July 1830. Before he died, he wrote a short treatise on "Danton, Robespierre and Marat" in which he maintained "Behold, these three men, who have been erected into a 'detestable
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The year 1794 marks the downfall of Hentz's career as an influential French politician. Hentz was with the
Western army from February to May where the tragic shootings in the Vendee were blamed on his "reckless zeal." Hentz left the
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in 1815, Hentz was ordered to leave France with his family within thirty days, otherwise he would be imprisoned for life. Nicolas Hentz and his family then sailed for the United States. He settled in
469:. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005. National Archives at New York City; Court of Common Pleas for the City and County of New York (077-079); ARC Number: 5324244; ARC Title:
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in
December 1792, he voted for the guilt of the king, the ratification of the judgment against the people, against the stay and for the death penalty. In the year 1793, he was sent as a
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triumvirate.' I have believed it my duty... to attempt to recover the fellow-citizens of my adopted country from the abyss of error into which the
English ministry has plunged them."
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314:(1797–1856). The latter was known in the United States under the name of Nicholas Marcellus Hentz, became a painter, professor and was one of the founders of the
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to ensure the reform of the army and the military's compliance with the revolution. From April to July, he was sent as commissioner to the
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Year: 1840; Census Place: Towanda, Bradford, Pennsylvania; Roll: 443; Page: 315; Image: 638; Family
History Library Film: 0020537
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1830; Census Place: Wilkes Barre, Luzerne, Pennsylvania; Series: M19; Roll: 145; Page: 496; Family
History Library Film: 0020619.
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during the French
Revolution. He became a member of the Legislation Committee, where he proposed a limitation of inheritances.
162:, Pennsylvania) was a French revolutionary and politician. After fleeing France in 1815, he assumed the name Charles Arnould.
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178:, France on 5 June 1753. In 1780 he became a lawyer at the Parliament of Metz. He was elected Justice of the Peace of
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This article is about the French revolutionary and politician. For his son, the educator and arachnologist, see
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1789 after which he was elected MP for the
Moselle in September 1792. Hentz belonged to the party of the
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Hentz married
Therese d'Aubree in France. They had two sons, Nicholas Richard Hentz (1786–1850) and
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December 1790, and embraced the revolutionary ideas. As Justice of the Peace, he made arrests of
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Record Group Title: Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service; Record Group Number: 85
345:(1806–1815) before he fled with his father to the United States. Initially the family settled in
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after being accused of overzealous violence and the burning of the town of
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History of Bradford County, Pennsylvania: With Biographical Selections.
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History of Bradford County, Pennsylvania: With Biographical Selections
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The oldest son, Richard, was born in Metz in 1786. He served in the
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https://en.wikipedia.org/Battle_of_Kaiserslautern_(1794)
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145:Nicholas Marcellus Hentz, Nicholas Richard Hentz
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170:Coming from a family of nineteen children of a
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349:. In 1830, Richard moved with his family to
539:Deputies to the French National Convention
186:on the road to Trier. He was a deputy for
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471:Petitions for Naturalization, 1793-–1906;
353:, in Bradford County, and from there to
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549:French emigrants to the United States
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445:Bradsby, Henry C. (1 January 1891).
467:Massachusetts, Marriages, 1633–1850
16:French revolutionary and politician
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559:Members of Parliament for Moselle
501:Bradsby, Henry C. (1891-01-01).
289:Emigration to the United States
152:Nicholas Charles Arnould Hentz
158:, France – after 1 July 1830,
32:Nicholas Charles Arnould Hentz
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513:Danton, Robespierre and Marat
508:"Nicholas Hentz" (in French).
376:Danton, Robespierre and Marat
174:, Nicolas Hentz was born in
200:National Assembly of France
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299:Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
72:Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
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574:Exiled French politicians
216:representative on mission
108:representative on mission
544:Représentants en mission
21:Nicholas Marcellus Hentz
487:(subscription required)
475:(subscription required)
425:(subscription required)
262:additional commentary
206:Regicide and revolution
564:Regicides of Louis XVI
405:Cite journal requires
569:Justices of the peace
554:Politicians from Metz
463:College Student Lists
318:. He was educated at
210:At the trial of King
190:to the Revolutionary
461:Ancestry.com. U.S.,
343:French Imperial Army
336:Caroline Lee Whiting
220:Army of the Ardennes
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295:Bourbon Restoration
269:Work under Napoleon
192:National Convention
320:Harvard University
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332:Northampton
316:arachnology
275:Robespierre
246:Controversy
95:Citizenship
79:Nationality
67:1 July 1830
53:Disappeared
41:5 June 1753
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