LS in French, signed “Np,” one page, 7.25 x 9.5, January 30, 1808. Letter to his Minister of War, Henri-Jacques-Guillaume Clarke, in part (translated): "General Clarke, I am going to raise the conscription for 1809, it is convenient that the army is organized beforehand and that at least the location of the depots is fixed. Describe to me the organization project concerning the formation of the companies and the fifth battalion again that you have already provided [and] continue your considerations on the formation of the legions, especially since this formation can only take place next year." In fine to very fine condition.
Napoleon built directly on the Directory's conscription law of September 1798 with quotas of conscripts for every département based on communal birth registers. The annual conscription levy was a top priority for the prefects who had to deal with chronic resistance to the unpopular system. Napoleon initially set the quota at 60,000 Frenchmen annually, but by 1810 it already hit 120,000. While Napoleon could still replenish his army with conscripts following the Russian disaster in January 1813 by calling up the class of 1814 a year early and enforcing several supplementary draft calls, the decisive defeat in the Battle of Leipzig in October 1813 depleted the army beyond the capacities for compensation. A final call for the conscription of 300,000 men in November 1813 went largely unfulfilled.
Henri-Jacques-Guillaume Clarke, 1st Count of Hunebourg, 1st Duke of Feltre (1765-1818) was a French general and politician who made a career in the Revolutionary Army and under Napoleon. In 1793 he was promoted brigade general and commanded the vanguard of the Rhine Army. During the Reign of Terror, he fell under suspicion, was briefly arrested, and discharged. Lazare Carnot restored Clarke to his rank in 1794 and, in December 1795, he was made a general of division, serving under Napoleon in the Army of Italy for several years. During the War of the Third Coalition in 1805, Clarke was appointed governor of Vienna, and during the War of the Fourth Coalition in 1806 he served as governor of Erfurt and of Berlin. Napoleon called Clarke back to Paris in 1807 to serve as Minister of War, a difficult office that he administered with skill, but with a level of personal ambition that raised Napoleon's suspicion from 1812. His opportunism became most evident at Napoléon's fall in 1814, when Clarke voted to depose the emperor and was appointed Peer of France by Louis XVIII in return. Apart from the interruption of the Hundred Days from March to September 1815, Clarke served as Minister of War in the restored Bourbon Government until September 1817. Clarke was made Marshal of France on 3 July 1816 and, following the end of his term as minister, took command of the 15th Military Division until his death in 1818.
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