Publication ceased in 1831 but was revived in 1843 as a monthly review under the direction of Edmond Wilson and Victor-Amédée Waille (1798–1876).
[1] After a period of dormancy, it was relaunched in 1855 by Charles de Montalembert as a Catholic opposition organ to the Second Empire and the journal L'Univers by Louis Veuillot.
Key contributors included clergymen Félix Dupanloup and Henri Lacordaire, as well as former ministers Abel-François Villemain and Saint-Marc Girardin.
Notable publications in Le Correspondent include Lacordaire's 1856 tribute to Frédéric Ozanam, who died in 1853, and his "Letters to a Young Man on Christian Life."
Albert de Broglie contributed a study on "The Church and the Roman Empire in the Fourth Century," while Montalembert published excerpts from The Monks of the West.