Background
Jules Pams was born on 14 August 1835 in Perpignan, Pyrénées-Orientales, to a leading family in that city.
jurist lawyer minister politician senator
Jules Pams was born on 14 August 1835 in Perpignan, Pyrénées-Orientales, to a leading family in that city.
Jules Pams attended the lycée Charlemagne and then the Faculty of Law of Paris.
He was Minister of Agriculture from 1911 to 1913 and Minister of the Interior from 1917 to 1920. In 1913 he was a candidate for the presidency of France. He is known for the "Hôtel Pams", a mansion in Perpignan that was redesigned and decorated to his taste, and is now a conference center.
After graduating he became an attorney in Perpignan.
In 1889 Pams ran for election to the legislature on the Radical list but was not elected. In 1888 Jules Pams married Jeanne Bardou, one of the heiresses of the JOB cigarette paper company founded by Jean Bardou.
The renovation in 1894-1897 added gold, marble and onyx throughout, with marquetry furniture. The "Hôtel Pams" became the social focus of the wealthy elite of the city.
Jeanne died in 1916. Pams married Marguerite Holtzer in 1918.
Pams ran again for election as a deputy in 1893 and was elected in the first round. He was reelected in 1898 and 1902. He was elected to the Senate on 25 December 1904, and was reelected in 1909, 1920 and 1927.
He was mainly involved in issues related to wine and the marine.
Pams was appointed Minister of Agriculture on 2 March 1911 in the cabinet of Ernest Monis, and retained this portfolio in the subsequent cabinets of Joseph Caillaux and Raymond Poincaré, leaving office on 17 January 1913. Pams was the originator of the appellation d"origine contrôlée of the sweet wines of his region.
On 2 March 1913 he inaugurated the new road from Banyuls to Cerbère. In 1913 Georges Clemenceau encouraged Pams to stand for election as President of France, but he was beaten in the second round of voting by Poincaré.
Pams was relatively obscure by comparison to the very experienced Poincaré.
In April 1919 Pams circulated instructions to prefects that interpreted the 1905 law of separation of church and state as meaning crosses were allowed in monuments in cemeteries, but not on monuments on public roads. After retiring from the ministry on 20 January 1920 Pams went into semi-retirement, although in 1927 he was a delegate to the 8th meeting of the League of Nations. Jules Pams died at the age on 95 on 12 May 1930 in Paris after a long illness.
He arranged the great naval review on 15 September 1911 in Portuguese-Vendres. As the Socialist Jean Jaurès said, "In these difficult times, how can the Radicals offer France and the Republic a man who has never revealed, either in opposition of in office, either in debate or in action, any real measure of ability?" On 16 November 1917 Pams was appointed Minister of the Interior by Clemenceau.
He became a member of the general council of the Pyrénées-Orientales department in 1892, representing the canton of Argelès-sur-Mer. He was a member of the general council for thirty six years, and its president for fifteen years.