Francis-Louis Closon
Francis-Louis Closon was a French Resistance member, a Companion of the Liberation, and a senior French official.
Biography
A student at Lycée Thiers in Marseille, and later a law graduate, Closon was involved in Christian-democratic movements during his youth. In 1938 he completed an internship in the United States, where he learned of France's defeat in 1940. He joined the Gaullists in London and became heavily involved in the French Resistance. He helped to bring together the internal and external resistance movements. In July 1944 he was appointed Commissaire de la République for Nord and Pas-de-Calais, while Raymond Aubrac was assigned to Marseille.He was sent on a mission in early August with Charles Luizet, newly appointed Prefect of Police in Paris, and Lazare Rachline. They were to be dropped into a resistance area near Ambérieu, but the plane was unable to land, forcing them to land in Corsica.
On their third attempt, Luizet and Closon were dropped in a resistance area near Apt in the Vaucluse on 10 August. From there they traveled to Avignon, Lyon, and finally Paris on