Edme Viala Charon, Baron Charon was a French soldier who rose to the rank of Lieutenant General. He was briefly Governor General of Algeria during the French Second Republic, and was a senator of France for most of the Second French Empire.
Early years (1794–1814)
Edme Viala Charon was born in Paris on 29 July 1794. His father was a postal employee. As a young man he was described as having light brown hair, a long nose, blue eyes, medium mouth, cleft chin, oval face and a height of. He entered the École Polytechnique on 11 November 1811. On 8 October 1813 he was appointed Sub-Lieutenant of the Metz Army Engineers. Charon participated in the defense of Metz in 1814. On 23 May 1815 he was appointed Lieutenant of Engineers in the 6th Corps of the Army of the North, and in this capacity fought at the Battle of Waterloo on 18 June 1815.
After the February Revolution of 1848 the government appointed Charon Director of Algerian Affairs on 6 June 1848, then General of Division and Governor General of Algeria on 9 September 1848. He replaced the acting governor Guillaume Stanislas Marey-Monge. Batna was the site of a military camp built by Governor General Aumale in 1844. On 19 August 1849 Viala laid the foundation stone for a city that was to be built in this location. In 2014 the stone had recently been destroyed during construction of a bus station. Charon observed that Algeria had "two distinct societies", and it was necessary to accept that the "diversity of races and nations different needs." He supported the Central Directorate's Project for the Organization of Muslim Public Instruction, although he felt it was a large concession to the Muslims and a temporary acceptance of the resilience of the indigenous cultures. In 1849 he wrote, On 24 December 1849 Charon told the Council of Government that the reports that Governor General Aumale had commissioned in 1847 had been "conceived in the most wise and liberal spirit," and confirmed that the "military chiefs who conquered Africa... were no less skillful... in the labor of peace as in the art of war." Charon was appointed President of the Fortifications Committee on 11 March 1850. He was replaced as General commanding the XIX army corps on 5 November 1850 by General Alphonse Henri d'Hautpoul. Charon was promoted to Grand Officer of the Legion of Honour on 2 December 1850. On 16 April 1850 Charon married Elfride Schneider in Paris. She was the daughter of Antoine Virgile Schneider, Chevalier de l'Empire, and Catherine, Countess Zalinska. They had a son, Olivier Charon, Baron Charon.
Charon cooperated with Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte's coup d'état of 2 December 1851. Charon was appointed President of the Consultative Committee on Algeria on 17 December 1851. On 31 December 1852 he was made a Senator of France. He was awarded the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour on 31 December 1857. He was named Baron Charon by imperial decree of 3 February 1864. He was Senator until the senate was dissolved with the fall of the empire on 4 September 1870. Charon died in Paris on 26 November 1880, at the age of 86.