Christophe-Paulin de La Poix de Fréminville

Christophe-Paulin de La Poix, chevalier de Fréminville (24 January 1787 – 12 January 1848 ) was a French Navy Commander, naturalist, archeologist and pioneer of transvestism.

Career
La Poix de Fréminville was born to a family of naval engineers, and joined the Navy in 1801. He served as an aide to Rear-Admiral Latouche-Tréville and distinguished himself on the gunboat FRENCH GUNBOAT Etna during Nelson's Raids on Boulogne.

At the age of 15, Fréminville was appointed to the 74-gun FRENCH SHIP Intrépide as a midshipman and took part in the Saint-Domingue expedition, in which he witnessed and condemned the massacres perpetrated by General de Rochambeau.

Returned to France in January 1803 on HMS Swiftsure (1787) with Pauline Bonaparte and the body of General Leclerc, he was promoted to Ensign, and distinguished himself again in a battle between his gunboat and a British frigate, where he was wounded.

In 1806, he was appointed to the frigate FRENCH FRIGATE Sirène on which he took part in a naval division under Captain Amand Leduc, also comprising the frigates Guerrière and FRENCH FRIGATE Revanche, and sent near the North Pole to prey on British whalers. During the campaign, he served as signals major, adjudant to the division, and hydrographer. He notably rediscovered the island of Enckuysen, which Bellin had placed at 65°N 12°W in maps in 1751 and 1767 and whose existence had been doubted, but which were spotted at 65°54'N 12°48'W.

The frigates sailed up to Spitsbergen, capturing a number of prizes, and returned to Iceland, where Fréminville measured several point of the coast. The squadron then cruised off Ireland and returned to France in September 1807, except Guerrière, captured by HMS Blanche on 19 July 1806.

Seeing little action in the seven following years, Fréminville achieved the rank of Lieutenant only in 1811. A royalist at heart, he welcomed the Bourbon Restoration, but his career did not accelerate; he served on the fluyt FRENCH FLUYT Rhône in the Baltic Sea and the frigate FRENCH FRIGATE Néréide off Western Africa.

In mid-1822, Néréide was in the Caribbean, and Fréminville fell in love with a Creole girl named "Caroline C." at the Îles des Saintes; Néréide was sent to Martinique and then to Guadeloupe meanwhile sailed along the coast of Saintes without stopping with Fréminville aboard. Caroline was misled, thinking that her lover was heading to Europe and would never return, and she committed suicide.

In 1824, Fréminville took command of the fluyt FRENCH FLUYT Bonite. The year after, he commanded the fluyt FRENCH FLUYT Adour in America. Constantly performing archeology and natural history surveys, he requested in vain command of an exploration mission. It was not until 1827 that he was promoted to Commander. In 1829, Fréminville was appointed to evaluate a chip log invented by Pierre Bouguer, which he deemed unsuitable.

Fréminville retired from the Navy in 1831. The same year, he pseudonymously authored an "Essay on the physical and moral influence of the female costume", in which he stated that female clothes have a delicious effect on the nervous system of a delicate being and make it undergo inner delights unknown to those whose organisation is more coarse The pseudonym "Caroline de L." that Fréminville used was later interpreted as a hommage to the Creole of the Saintes.

In his later years, he devoted himself to archeology and natural history, and his credited with founding the archeology of Lower Brittany. In 1836, he donated a luxurious model of a fictitious galley, Minerve, made by famed modelist Augustin Pic, to the Musée national de la Marine. He died on 12 January 1848.

Honours

 * Knight of the Order of Saint-Louis
 * Knight of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta

Legacy
Fréminville is commemorated in the scientific name of a species of Central American snake, Stenorrhina freminvillei.

Works

 * (pseudonymous work)
 * (pseudonymous work)
 * (pseudonymous work)
 * (pseudonymous work)
 * (pseudonymous work)