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Ferdinand Foch

Ferdinand Foch (/fɒʃ/ FOSH, French: [fɛʁdinɑ̃ fɔʃ]; 2 October 1851[1] – 20 March 1929)[2] was a French general, Marshal of France and member of the Académie Française. He distinguished himself as Supreme Allied Commander on the Western Front during the First World War in 1918.[3]

Ferdinand Foch
General Foch, c. 1914
Supreme Allied Commander
In office
26 March 1918 – 10 January 1920
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byOffice disestablished[a]
26th Chief of the Army Staff
In office
16 May 1917 – 29 December 1918
Preceded byPhilippe Pétain
Succeeded byHenri Alby
Personal details
Born(1851-10-02)2 October 1851
Tarbes, France
Died20 March 1929(1929-03-20) (aged 77)
Paris, France
Resting placeLes Invalides
SpouseJulie Bienvenüe
Children
  • Anne
  • Eugène
  • Germain
  • Marie
Parents
  • Bertrand Foch (father)
  • Marie Dupré (mother)
Alma materÉcole polytechnique
Signature
Military service
Allegiance Third Republic
Branch/serviceFrench Army
Years of service1868–1923 (55 years)
RankDivision general[b]
Unit
List
    • 24th Artillery Regiment
Commands
Battles/wars
List

A commander during the First Marne, Flanders and Artois campaigns of 1914–1916, Foch became Supreme Allied Commander in late March 1918 in the face of the all-out German spring offensive. He successfully coordinated the French, British and American efforts, deftly handling his strategic reserves. He stopped the German offensive and launched a war-winning counterattack.[4] In November 1918, Marshal Foch accepted the German cessation of hostilities and was present at the Armistice of 11 November 1918.

At the outbreak of war in August 1914, Foch's XX Corps participated in the brief invasion of Germany before retreating in the face of a German counter-attack and successfully blocking the Germans short of Nancy. Ordered west to defend Paris, Foch's prestige soared as a result of the victory at the Marne, for which he was widely credited as a chief protagonist while commanding the French Ninth Army. He was then promoted again to assistant commander-in-chief for the Northern Zone, a role which evolved into command of Army Group North, and in which role he was required to cooperate with the British forces at Ypres and the Somme. At the end of 1916, partly owing to the disappointing results of the latter offensive and partly owing to wartime political rivalries, Foch was transferred to Italy.[5] Foch was appointed "Commander-in-Chief of the Allied Armies" on 26 March 1918 following being the commander-in-chief of Western Front with the title Généralissime in 1918. He played a decisive role in halting a renewed German advance on Paris in the Second Battle of the Marne, after which he was promoted to Marshal of France. Author Larry H. Addington says, "to a large extent the final Allied strategy which won the war on land in Western Europe in 1918 was Foch's alone."[6]

On 11 November 1918, Foch accepted the German request for an armistice. Foch advocated peace terms that would make Germany unable to pose a threat to France ever again. He considered the Treaty of Versailles too lenient on Germany. Winston Churchill attributed this famous quote about the Peace Treaty of Versailles to Foch: "This is not Peace. It is an Armistice for twenty years."[7]

Early life edit

 
Foch's birthplace in Tarbes

Ferdinand Foch was born in Tarbes, a municipality in the department of Hautes-Pyrénées, in southwestern France, into a modest, devout, middle-class Catholic family.[8][9][10] His last name reflects the ancestry of his father, a civil servant from Valentine, a village in Haute-Garonne, whose lineage may trace back to 16th-century Alsace. From a young age, he loved to study and work,[11] and attended school in Tarbes, Rodez, Gourdan-Polignan and at the Jesuit Collège Saint-Michel in Saint-Étienne before attending the Jesuit Collège Saint-Clément in Metz.[12] A professor there once said of Foch, "A geometric mind, he is made for the Polytechnique."[13] His brother, Germain Foch, became a Jesuit priest, which may have hindered Foch's rise in the French Army since the Republican government of France was anti-clerical.[5]

When the Franco-Prussian War broke out in 1870, the 17-year-old Foch enlisted in the French 4th Infantry Regiment in 1868, which did not take part in combat. He remained in the army after the war. In 1871, he passed the entrance exams to the grandes écoles scientifiques and later entered the École Polytechnique.[14] There, he was an excellent student, and pursued studies in mathematics, engineering, and science.[15][16] He eventually chose the school of artillery. In 1873, he received his commission as an artillery officer and served as a lieutenant in the 24th Artillery Regiment in Tarbes, despite not having completed his course, because there was a shortage of junior officers. In 1876, he attended the cavalry school of Saumur to train as a mounted artillery officer. On 30 September 1878, he became a captain and arrived in Paris on 24 September 1879 as an assistant in the Central Personnel Service Depot of the artillery.

In 1885 Foch undertook a course at the École Supérieure de Guerre where he was later an instructor from 1895 to 1901. He was promoted lieutenant-colonel in 1898, and colonel in 1903. As a colonel he became regimental commander of the 35th Artillery Regiment (35e R.A) at Vannes. An extremely short man, Foch was known for his physical strength and his sharp mind who always maintained a highly dignified bearing.[17] Foch was a quiet man, known for saying little and when he did speak, it was a volley of words accompanied by much gesturing of his hands that required some knowledge of him to understand properly.[17] One of Foch's favourite phrases was "Pas de protocole!" as he preferred to be approachable by all officers. Foch's only rigidity was always taking his meals at noon and at 7:30; otherwise, he would work all sorts of irregular hours from dawn until well into the night.[17]

In 1907 Foch was promoted to Général de Brigade, and in the same year, he assumed command of the French War College. He held this position until 1911, the year in which he was appointed Général de Division. Foch influenced General Joseph Joffre (Chief of General Staff, 28 July 1911 – 12 December 1916) when he drafted the French plan of campaign (Plan XVII) in 1913.[18] In 1913 he took command of XX Corps at Nancy, and he had held this appointment for exactly one year when he led XX Corps into battle in August 1914.

Military thought edit

 
Regimental commander Colonel Foch in his uniform of the 35th Artillery Regiment in 1903

Foch was later acclaimed as "the most original military thinker of his generation".[19] He was a disciple of Napoleon, and made use of the lessons taught by Moltke.[20] He became known for his critical analyses of the Franco-Prussian and Napoleonic campaigns and of their relevance to military operations in the new twentieth century. His re-examination of France's defeat in 1870 was among the first of its kind. At the college, Foch was a professor of military history, strategy, and general tactics while becoming the French theorist on offensive strategies.[21]

During his time as an instructor, Foch created renewed interest in French military history, inspired confidence in a new class of French officers, and brought about "the intellectual and moral regeneration of the French Army".[22] His thinking on military doctrine was shaped by the Clausewitzian philosophy, then uncommon in France, that "the will to conquer is the first condition of victory." Collections of his lectures, which reintroduced the concept of the offensive to French military theory, were published in the volumes "Des Principes de la Guerre" ("On the Principles of War") in 1903, and "De la Conduite de la Guerre" ("On the Conduct of War") in 1904. Both "thought" and "will" were the key words of these teachings.[23] While Foch advised "qualification and discernment" in military strategy and cautioned that "recklessness in attack could lead to prohibitive losses and ultimate failure",[24] his concepts, distorted and misunderstood by contemporaries, became associated with the extreme offensive doctrines (l' offensive à outrance) of his successors. The cult of the offensive came to dominate military circles, and Foch's reputation was damaged when his books were cited in the development of the disastrous offensive that brought France close to ruin in August 1914.

Foch was seen as a master of the Napoleonic school of military thought, but he was the only one of the Military College Commandants (Maillard, Langlois, Bonnal) still serving. Their doctrines had been challenged, not only by the German school, but also since about 1911 by a new French school inspired by General Loiseau de Grandmaison, which criticised them as lacking in vigour and offensive spirit and contributing to needless dispersion of force. The French Army fought under the new doctrines, but they failed in the first battles of August 1914, and it remained to be seen whether the Napoleonic doctrine would hold its own, would give way to doctrines evolved during the war, or would incorporate the new moral and technical elements into a new outward form within which the spirit of Napoleon remained unaltered. The war gave an ambiguous answer to these questions, which remains a source of controversy among experts.[25]

World War I edit

1914 edit

On the outbreak of World War I, Foch was in command of XX Corps, part of the Second Army of General de Castelnau. On 14 August the Corps advanced towards the SarrebourgMorhange line, taking heavy casualties in the Battle of the Frontiers. The defeat of the XV Corps to its right forced Foch into retreat. Foch acquitted himself well, covering the withdrawal to Nancy and the Charmes Gap before launching a counter-attack that prevented the Germans from crossing the River Meurthe.

Foch was then selected to command the newly formed Ninth Army during the First Battle of the Marne with Maxime Weygand as his chief of staff.[26] Only a week after taking command, with the whole French Army in full retreat, he was forced to fight a series of defensive actions to prevent a German breakthrough. During the advance at the marshes at St.-Gond he is said to have declared: "My centre is yielding. My right is retreating. Situation excellent. I am attacking."[27] These words were seen as a symbol both of Foch's leadership and of French determination to resist the invader at any cost, although there is little evidence that the signal was sent.[28] Accordingly, on 4 October 1914, Foch was made the Assistant Commander-in-Chief of the Northern Zone under Joseph Joffre.

Foch's counterattack was an implementation of the theories he had developed during his staff college days and succeeded in stopping the German advance. Foch received further reinforcements from the Fifth Army and, following another attack on his forces, counter-attacked again on the Marne. The Germans dug in before eventually retreating. On 12 September, Foch regained the Marne at Châlons and liberated the city. The people of Châlons greeted as a hero the man widely believed to have been instrumental in stopping the retreat and stabilising the Allied position. Receiving thanks from the Bishop of Châlons (Joseph-Marie Tissier), Foch piously replied, "non nobis, Domine, non nobis, sed nomini tuo da gloriam" ("Not unto us, o Lord, not unto us, but to Your name give glory", Psalm 115:1).[29]

As assistant Commander-in-Chief with responsibility for co-ordinating the activities of the northern French armies and liaising with the British forces; this was a key appointment as the Race to the Sea was then in progress. General Joseph Joffre, Commander-in-Chief (C-in-C) of the French Army, had also wanted to nominate Foch as his successor "in case of accident", to make sure the job would not be given to Joseph Gallieni, but the French Government would not agree to this. When the Germans attacked on 13 October, they narrowly failed to break through the British and French lines. They tried again at the end of the month during the First Battle of Ypres, this time suffering terrible casualties. Foch had again succeeded in coordinating a defense and winning against the odds.

Field Marshal Sir John French, C-in-C of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) had described Foch in August 1914 to J. E. B. Seely, a liaison officer, as "the sort of man with whom I know I can get on" and later in February 1915 described him to Lord Selbourne as "the best general in the world". By contrast, Lieutenant General William Robertson, another British officer, thought that Foch was "rather a flat-catcher,[30] a mere professor, and very talkative" (28 September 1915).[31]

On 2 December 1914, King George V appointed him an Honorary Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath.[32]

1915–16 edit

 
General Foch in 1916

In 1915, his responsibilities by now crystallised in command of the Northern Army Group, he conducted the Artois Offensive and, in 1916, the French effort at the Battle of the Somme. He was strongly criticised for his tactics and the heavy casualties that were suffered by the Allied armies during these battles, and in December 1916 was removed from command by Joffre and sent to command Allied units on the Italian front; Joffre was himself sacked days later.

1917 edit

Just a few months later, after the failure of General Robert Nivelle's offensive, General Philippe Pétain, the hero of Verdun, was appointed Chief of the General Staff; Foch hoped to succeed Pétain in command of Army Group Centre, but this job was instead given to General Fayolle. The following month Pétain was appointed C-in-C in place of Nivelle, and Foch was recalled and promoted to chief of the general staff. Like Pétain, Foch favoured only limited attacks (he had told Lieutenant General Sir Henry Wilson, another British Army officer, that the planned Flanders offensive was "futile, fantastic & dangerous") until the Americans, who had joined the war in April 1917, were able to send large numbers of troops to France.[33]

Outside of the Western Front, Foch opposed British Prime Minister David Lloyd George's plans to send British and French troops to help Italy take Trieste, but was open to the suggestion of sending heavy guns.[34] The Anglo-French leadership agreed in early September to send 100 heavy guns to Italy, 50 of them from the French army on the left of Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig, C-in-C of the BEF, rather than the 300 which Lloyd George wanted. As the guns reached Italy, Cadorna called off his offensive (21 September).[35]

Until the end of 1916, the French under Joffre had been the dominant allied army; after 1917 this was no longer the case, due to the vast number of casualties France's armies had suffered in the now three and a half-year-old struggle with Germany.[36]

The Supreme War Council was formally established on 7 November 1917, containing the Prime Minister and a Minister from each of the Western Front powers (i.e., excluding Russia), to meet at least once a month. Foch (along with Wilson and Italian general Cadorna) were appointed military representatives, to whom the general staffs of each country were to submit their plans. The French tried to have Foch as representative to increase their control over the Western Front (by contrast, Cadorna was disgraced after the recent Battle of Caporetto) and Wilson, a personal friend of Foch, was deliberately appointed as a rival to General Robertson, the British Chief of the Imperial General Staff, an ally of Haig's, who had lost 250,000 men at the battle of Ypres the same year.[37] Clemenceau was eventually persuaded to appoint Foch's protégé Weygand instead, although many already suspected that Foch would eventually become the Allied Generalissimo.[38]

Late in 1917 Foch would have liked to have seen Haig replaced as C-in-C of the BEF by General Herbert Plumer; however, Haig would remain in command of the BEF for the remainder of the war.[39]

1918 edit

 
Foch in 1918

In January 1918, in accordance with Lloyd George's wishes, an executive board was set up to control the planned Allied General Reserve, with Clemenceau's agreement being obtained by having Foch on the board rather than Maxime Weygand. Pétain agreed to release only eight French divisions and made a bilateral agreement with Haig, who was reluctant to release any divisions at all, to assist one another. The situation was worsened by Clemenceau's and Pétain's dislike of Foch. At a Supreme War Council meeting in London (14–15 March), with a German offensive clearly imminent, Foch protested to no avail for the formation of the Allied Reserve.[40][41]

On the evening of 24 March, after the German spring offensive was threatening to split apart the British and French forces, Foch telegraphed Wilson (who by now had replaced Robertson as Chief of the Imperial General Staff) "asking what [he] thought of situation & we are of one mind that someone must catch a hold or we shall be beaten". Wilson reached France the following lunchtime. Pétain had sent a dozen divisions to plug the gap and it is unclear that a committee would actually have acted any faster during the immediate crisis.[42] At the Doullens Conference (26 March) and at Beauvais (3 April), Foch was given the job of coordinating the activities of the Allied armies,[43][44] forming a common reserve and using these divisions to guard the junction of the French and British armies and to plug the potentially fatal gap that would have followed a German breakthrough in the British Fifth Army sector. Two days later, while Foch was writing in his notebook, he allowed an interview to a group of war correspondents.[45] At a later conference he was given the title Supreme Commander of the Allied Armies with the title of Généralissime ("Supreme General"). In May 1918, in the fifth session of the Supreme War Council, Foch was given authority over the Italian Front.[36]

Foch controlled the Military Board of Allied Supply (MBAS), an Allied agency for the coordination of logistical support of the Allied forces. In March 1918 Colonel Charles G. Dawes, the general purchasing agent for the American Expeditionary Forces (AEF) recommended to his commanding general John J. Pershing that a new intergovernmental agency was necessary to coordinate transportation and storage of military supplies in France. Pershing took the recommendation to French Premier Georges Clemenceau. The British were hesitant at first but finally the key players were in agreement and the Board was established in May 1918. It involved coordinating the entirely different supply systems for the American, British, and French armies, as well as the Italian and Belgian armies. It started operation from its base in Paris at the end of June. The president of the board was French general Jean-Marie Charles Payot (1868–1931), assisted by an international staff. Board decisions had to be unanimous, and once made were binding on all of the armies. However each army continued to be responsible for its own logistical system and procedures.[46]

 
Foch, Weygand, Haig, Pétain and other British and French officers with King George V, 1918

Foch was surprised by the German offensive ("Bluecher") on the Chemin des Dames (27 May). Foch believed it was a diversion to draw Allied reserves away from Flanders. This was partly true, although the planned German Flanders Offensive ("Hagen") never took place. The Allied armies under Foch's command ultimately held the advance of the German forces.[47] The celebrated phrase, "I will fight in front of Paris, I will fight in Paris, I will fight behind Paris", attributed both to Foch and Clemenceau, illustrated the Généralissime's resolve to keep the Allied armies intact, even at the risk of losing the capital. The British general Sir Henry Rawlinson, commanding the British Fourth Army, commented after meeting Foch: "I am overjoyed at his methods and far-sighted strategy. I was in close touch with him in 1916. He is a better man now than he was then, for his fiery enthusiasm has been tempered by adversity."[17] Rawlinson also noted Foch's intense Frenchness: "He knew nothing of Britain. The Rhine was for him a river of life and death."[17]

At the sixth session of the Supreme War Council on 1 June Foch complained that the BEF was still shrinking in size and infuriated Lloyd George by implying that the British government was withholding manpower.[48] At a major Allied conference at Beauvais (7 June) Lord Milner agreed with Clemenceau that Foch should have the power to order all Allied troops as he saw fit, over the protests of Haig who argued that it would reduce his power to safeguard the interests of the British Army.[49]

 
Foch and Douglas Haig inspecting the Gordon Highlanders, 1918

The British were disappointed that Foch operated through his own staff rather than through the Permanent Military Representatives at Versailles, and on 11 July 1918 British ministers resolved to remind Foch that he was an Allied, and not a French, C-in-C.[36] The Allies (mainly French and the growing American forces) counterattacked at the Second Battle of the Marne in July 1918. On 6 August 1918, Foch was made a Marshal of France. Along with the British commander, Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig, Foch planned the Grand Offensive, opening on 26 September 1918, which led to the defeat of Germany. After the war, he claimed to have defeated Germany by smoking his pipe.[50] An unintended consequence of Foch's appointment was that he sheltered Haig from British political interference.[36]

Before the armistice and after the Armistice of Villa Giusti, Foch controlled all the operations against Germany including a planned invasion from Italy into Bavaria.[36] Foch accepted the German cessation of hostilities in November from the German delegate, Matthias Erzberger, at 5:00 a.m. local time. However, he refused to accede to the German negotiators' immediate request to declare a ceasefire or truce so that there would be no more useless waste of lives among the common soldiers. By not declaring a truce even between the signing of the documents for the Armistice at 5:45 a.m.[51] and its entry into force, "at the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month", about 11,000 additional men were needlessly wounded or killed – far more than usual, according to the military statistics.[52]

On the day of the armistice, 11 November 1918, he was elected to the Académie des Sciences. Ten days later, he was unanimously elected to the Académie française. He received many honours and decorations from Allied governments.[53]

Assessments edit

In the euphoria of victory Foch was regularly compared to Napoleon and Julius Caesar. However, historians took a less favourable view of Foch's talents as commander, particularly as the idea took root that his military doctrines had set the stage for the futile and costly offensives of 1914 in which French armies suffered devastating losses. Supporters and critics continue to debate Foch's strategy and instincts as a commander, as well as his exact contributions to the Marne "miracle": Foch's counter-attacks at the Marne generally failed, but his sector resisted determined German attacks while holding the pivot on which the neighbouring French and British forces depended in rolling back the German line.[6]

After the reading of the preamble of the November 1918 armistice, Foch left the carriage, in a move that was perceived as humiliating by the defeated Germans. In 1940, after the defeat of France by Germany early in World War II, when France signed an armistice with Germany, Adolf Hitler, in a calculated gesture of disdain to the French delegates, left the carriage, as Foch had done in 1918.

Foch's pre-war contributions as a military theorist and lecturer have also been recognised, and he has been credited as "the most original and subtle mind in the French Army" of the early 20th century.[22]

Paris Peace Conference edit

In January 1919, at the Paris Peace Conference Foch presented a memorandum to the Allied plenipotentiaries in which he stated:

Henceforward the Rhine ought to be the Western military frontier of the German countries. Henceforward Germany ought to be deprived of all entrance and assembling ground, that is, of all territorial sovereignty on the left bank of the river, that is, of all facilities for invading quickly, as in 1914, Belgium, Luxembourg, for reaching the coast of the North Sea and threatening the United Kingdom, for outflanking the natural defences of France, the Rhine, Meuse, conquering the Northern Provinces and entering the Parisian area.[54]

In a subsequent memorandum, Foch argued that the Allies should take full advantage of their victory by permanently weakening German power in order to prevent her from threatening France again:

What the people of Germany fear the most is a renewal of hostilities since, this time, Germany would be the field of battle and the scene of the consequent devastation. This makes it impossible for the yet unstable German Government to reject any demand on our part if it is clearly formulated. The Entente, in its present favourable military situation, can obtain acceptance of any peace conditions it may put forward provided that they are presented without much delay. All it has to do is to decide what they shall be.[54]

Upon returning home. Foch wrote in his diary:

Watch out: suspect peace, English peace... We must have a program, a tactic, a will. We find ourselves in the presence of an England that has all it wants for the present: the German colonies and the German fleet. We lack future security because [Britain] is not interested. In the presence of an America which seeks its own peace, we must have what we need... It is on the Rhine and nowhere else that we shall find it.[55]

He later wrote:

In a word, the occupation is a lever that we have in our hand and with which we can call the tune.[56]

However, the British Prime Minister David Lloyd George and the American President Woodrow Wilson objected to the detachment of the Rhineland from Germany so that the balance of power would not be too much in favour of France, but agreed to Allied military occupation for fifteen years, which Foch thought insufficient to protect France.

Foch considered the Treaty of Versailles to be "a capitulation, a treason" because he believed that only permanent occupation of the Rhineland would grant France sufficient security against a revival of German aggression.[57] In a remarkable moment of foresight, as the treaty was being signed Foch said: "This is not peace. It is an armistice for 20 years".[58]

Post-war career and legacy edit

 
Foch and General Kazimierz Sosnkowski at Belweder Palace in Warsaw (1923). Marshall of Poland Józef Piłsudski is in the center.
 
Foch's tomb, Hôtel des Invalides

Foch was made a British field marshal in 1919,[59] and, for his advice during the Polish–Soviet War of 1920, as well as his pressure on Germany during the Greater Poland Uprising, he was awarded the title of Marshal of Poland in 1923.

On 1 November 1921 Foch was in Kansas City, Missouri, to take part in the groundbreaking ceremony for the Liberty Memorial that was being constructed there. Also present that day were Lieutenant General Baron Jacques of Belgium, Admiral David Beatty of Great Britain, General Armando Diaz of Italy and General John J. Pershing of the United States. One of the main speakers was Vice President Calvin Coolidge of the United States. The local veteran chosen to present flags to the commanders was a Kansas City haberdasher, Harry S. Truman, who would later serve as 33rd President of the United States from 1945 to 1953. In 1935, bas-reliefs of Foch, Jacques, Diaz and Pershing by sculptor Walker Hancock were added to the memorial.

Foch made a 3000-mile circuit through the American Midwest and industrial cities such as Pittsburgh and then on to Washington, D.C., which included ceremonies at Arlington National Cemetery for what was then called Armistice Day. During the tour, he received numerous honorary degrees from American Universities.[60]

In 1923, Foch retired from the French Army, having served a total of 55 years in uniform. His career began as the Lebel Model 1886 rifle had just entered service, and ended after Foch had commanded hundreds of thousands of soldiers in World War I.

Foch died on 20 March 1929. He was buried in Les Invalides, next to Napoleon and other famous French soldiers and officers. Initially he was interred in the crypt of the Saint-Louis Church, or Caveau des Gouverneurs. In 1937 his remains were transferred to a monumental tomb sculpted by Paul Landowski, with inspiration from the 15th-century tomb of Philippe Pot,[61] at the center of the Dome Church's northeastern chapel (Chapelle Saint-Ambroise).[62]

A statue of Foch was set up at the Compiègne Armistice site when the area was converted into a national memorial. This statue was the one item left undisturbed by the Germans following their defeat of France in June 1940. Following the signing of France's surrender on 21 June, the Germans ravaged the area surrounding the railway car in which both the 1918 and 1940 surrenders had taken place. The statue was left standing, to view nothing but a wasteland. The Armistice site was restored by German prisoner-of-war labour following the Second World War, with its memorials and monuments either restored or reassembled.

In the 2022 film All Quiet on the Western Front, Foch is portrayed by Thibault de Montalembert.

Military ranks edit

Private Student Artillery student Second lieutenant Lieutenant Captain
         
24 January 1871[63] 1 November 1871[63] 10 January 1873[63] 16 October 1874[63] 1 October 1875[63] 30 September 1878[63]
Squadron chief Lieutenant colonel Colonel Brigadier general Divisional general Marshal of France
           
27 February 1891[64] 10 July 1898[65] 12 July 1903[66] 20 June 1907[67] 21 September 1911[68] 6 August 1918[69]

Honours and decorations edit

Honors and awards edit

 
The aircraft carrier Foch (R99) was named in his honor.

A heavy cruiser and an aircraft carrier were named in his honor. An early district of Gdynia, Poland was also named "Foch" after the Marshal but was renamed by the communist government after the Second World War. Nevertheless, one of the major avenues of the City of Bydgoszcz, located then in the Polish corridor, holds Foch's name as sign of gratitude for his campaigning for an independent Poland. Avenue Foch, a street in Paris, was named after him. Several other streets have been named in his honor in Melbourne, Ypres, Lyon, Kraków, Chrzanów,[70] Grenoble, Quito, Beirut, New Orleans, Truth or Consequences, New Mexico, Wynnum, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Mineola, New York, Queens, New York, Milltown, Shanghai (now part of Yan'a Road) and Singapore (Foch Road). A city quarter in the former French sector of Berlin is called Cité Foch in his honor. This is where French garrison soldiers were housed while Berlin was divided. Fochville in South Africa was also named in his honour. A statue of Foch stands near Victoria railway station in London. He is the only Frenchman ever to be made an honorary field-marshal by the British.[71] A statue of Foch stands on the Bapaume-Peronne road, near the village of Bouchavesnes, at the point where Messimy's chasseurs broke through on 12 September 1916. General Debeney spoke at the statue's unveiling in 1926, praising Foch's operational concepts of 1918.[72] Foch also has a grape cultivar named after him. In the Belgian city of Leuven, one of the central squares was named after him after the First World War, but it was renamed in 2012.[73] Mount Foch in Alberta is also named after him. The position of Marshal Foch Professor of French Literature at the University of Oxford was founded in 1918 shortly after the end of the First World War.

In the late 1920s, Foch Avenue in Mount Roskill, Auckland was named after him.[74]

France edit

  Knight – 9 July 1892;
  Officer – 11 July 1908;
  Commander – 31 December 1913;
  Grand Officer – 18 September 1914;
  Grand Cross – 8 October 1915

Foreign decorations edit

 
Statue of Foch in Victoria, London

Foch received an honorary doctorate from the Jagiellonian University of Kraków in 1918. By special vote of the board of directors of the Knights of Columbus, he became the one millionth knight of that order.[75]

Books by Ferdinand Foch edit

  • Des principes de la guerre, 1903[76]
  • De la conduite de la guerre, 1904[76]
  • La bataille de Laon, mars 1814, 1909[76]
  • Préceptes et jugements, 1919[76]
  • Éloge de Du Guesclin, 1921[76]
  • Éloge de Napoléon, 1921[76]
  • Ce que j'ai appris à la guerre, 1927[76]
  • Les deux batailles de la Marne, 1928 (ouvrage collectif)[76]
  • Paroles de soldat, 1928[76]
  • Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire de la guerre de 1914-1918, 2 vol., 1931 (posthume)[76]
  • Dans La Revue de la cavalerie un article sur l'artillerie de la division de cavalerie au combat, un autre sur Mitrailleuse ou canon, une conférence sur L'Attaque décisive

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Government of the French Republic. "Birth certificate of Foch, Ferdinand". culture.gouv.fr (in French). Retrieved 13 April 2020.
  2. ^ Government of the French Republic. "Death certificate of Foch, Ferdinand". culture.gouv.fr (in French). Retrieved 13 April 2020.
  3. ^ Atteridge, Andrew Hilliard (1919). Marshal Ferdinand Foch, His Life and His Theory of Modern War. Dodd, Mead.
  4. ^ Charles Messenger, ed., Reader's Guide to Military History (2001) pp. 170–171.
  5. ^ a b Greenhalgh, 2011
  6. ^ a b Addington, Larry H. (1994). The Patterns of War Since the Eighteenth Century. Indiana UP. pp. 167–168. ISBN 0253208602.
  7. ^ Winston Churchill (1948). The Gathering Storm. Houghton Mifflin. p. 7.
  8. ^ B. H. Liddell Hart (2013). Foch – The Man of Orleans. Read Books Limited. pp. 16–. ISBN 978-1-4733-8483-5.
  9. ^ "Ferdinand Foch | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  10. ^ MacMillan, Margaret (18 December 2007). Paris 1919: Six Months That Changed the World. Random House Publishing Group. p. 167. ISBN 978-0-307-43296-4.
  11. ^ Baussan, Charles (1918). "General Foch". Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review. 7 (25): 65–79. ISSN 0039-3495.
  12. ^ René Puaux (1919). Foch: Sa vie. Sa doctrine. Son œuvre. La foi en la victoire (in French). Payot. p. 14.
  13. ^ Baussan, Charles (1918). "General Foch". Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review. 7 (25): 65–79. ISSN 0039-3495.
  14. ^ "FOCH Ferdinand (X1871) - Bibliothèque Centrale". www.polytechnique.edu (in French). Retrieved 26 February 2024.
  15. ^ Edu, World History (21 April 2023). "Ferdinand Foch: Biography, World War I & Accomplishments". World History Edu. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  16. ^ Atteridge, Andrew Hilliard (1919). Marshal Ferdinand Foch, His Life and His Theory of Modern War. Dodd, Mead. pp. 9–10.
  17. ^ a b c d e Winter, Denis Haig's Command: A Reassessment, New York: Viking, 1991 p. 275.
  18. ^ Jan Palmowski (2008). A Dictionary of Contemporary World History: From 1900 to the present day. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-929567-8.
  19. ^ Michael Carver (editor), The War Lords: Military Commanders of the Twentieth Century, (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1976), p. 123. ISBN 0-297-77084-5
  20. ^ Baussan, Charles (1918). "General Foch". Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review. 7 (25): 65–79. ISSN 0039-3495.
  21. ^ Ferdinand Foch. W. D. Jordan Special Collections and Music Library Queen's University Library. Montreal, G. Inglis. 1919.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  22. ^ a b Shirer, p. 81
  23. ^ "Ferdinand Foch | Biography, World War I, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 15 July 2023.
  24. ^ Shirer, p. 80
  25. ^ Atkinson, Charles Francis (1922). "Foch, Ferdinand" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica (12th ed.). London & New York: The Encyclopædia Britannica Company.
  26. ^ Barnett Singer, Maxime Weygand: A Biography of the French General in Two World Wars (2008).
  27. ^ Raymond Recouly, Foch: Le Vainqueur de la Guerre [Foch: The victor of the war] (Paris, France: Hachette, 1919), page 121 : "Mon centre céde, ma droite recule, situation excellente, j'attaque." (My centre is giving way, my right is retreating, situation excellent, I am attacking.)
  28. ^ Cowley, Robert; Parker, Geoffrey, eds. (1996). The Reader's Companion to Military History. sponsored by the Society for Military History (1st ed.). Houghton Mifflin. pp. 164–165. ISBN 0-395-66969-3.
  29. ^ "Nouvelles de Rome: S. G. Mgr. Tissier à Rome (Rome, 19 janvier 1917)" [News from Rome: S. G. Monsignor Tissier in Rome], Le Croix (French Catholic newspaper), 25 January 1917 5 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine, p. 7: "On sent ... qu'il n'oubliera plus jamais le réponse du général Foch à ses félicitions, au lendemain de la victoire: Non nobis, Domine, non nobis; sed nomini tuo da gloriam." (One feels ... that he will never forget the reply of General Foch to his congratulations in the aftermath of the victory: Not to us, Lord, not to us; but to Your name give glory.)
  30. ^ Flat-catcher (British racing slang) a horse that looks good but is not. See: Merriam-Webster on-line dictionary.
  31. ^ Holmes 2004, p. 243
  32. ^ "No. 29044". The London Gazette. 19 January 1915. p. 601.
  33. ^ Woodward, 1998, p. 135
  34. ^ Woodward, 1998, p. 139
  35. ^ Woodward, 1998, pp. 144–146
  36. ^ a b c d e Woodward, 1998, pp. 187–189
  37. ^ Whelan, B. (2010). "War in History". British Library Serials. 4. 17: 526.
  38. ^ Jeffery 2006, pp. 206–208, 210–211
  39. ^ Jeffery 2006, pp. 212–213
  40. ^ Jeffery 2006, pp. 214–215, 219–220
  41. ^ Callwell, MG C.E., Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson, His Life And Diaries, Vol. II, pp. 69–70
  42. ^ Jeffery 2006, pp. 220–221
  43. ^ Keegan, John, The First World War (Vintage Books, 1998), p. 403.
  44. ^
    • Foch the Man at Project Gutenberg
  45. ^ Laughlin, Clara Elizabeth (1918). Foch the Man: A Life of the Supreme Commander of the Allied Armies. Fleming H. Revell Company. p. 150. ISBN 978-1-4219-7064-6.
  46. ^ Edward A. Goedeken, "Charles Dawes and the Military Board of Allied Supply" Military Affairs (1986) 50#1 pp. 1–6 online
  47. ^ Harris 2008, p. 477
  48. ^ Harris 2008, p. 478
  49. ^ Harris 2008, p. 479
  50. ^ "'How did I win the war?' Foch will say chaffingly to André de Marincourt, many months later. 'By smoking my pipe. That is to say, by not getting excited, by reducing everything to simple terms, by avoiding useless emotions, and keeping all my strength for the job.'" Frank H. Simonds, History of the World War, Vol. 5, Ch. 3, III. Doubleday, Page & Co., 1920.
  51. ^ . EyeWitness to History. Archived from the original on 26 November 2018. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  52. ^ Persico, Joseph E. (2004). Eleventh Month, Eleventh Day, Eleventh Hour: Armistice Day, 1918: World War I and Its Violent Climax. New York: Random House. p. 378. ISBN 0-375-50825-2.
  53. ^ "Foch Ferdinand". cths.fr. le site du Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques (CTHS). Retrieved 24 October 2013..
  54. ^ a b Ernest R. Troughton, It's Happening Again (John Gifford, 1944), p. 17.
  55. ^ Neiberg, Michael S. (14 May 2014). Foch: Supreme Allied Commander in the Great War. Potomac Books, Inc. p. 8. ISBN 978-1-61234-057-9.
  56. ^ Nelson, Keith L. (28 April 2023). Victors Divided: America and the Allies in Germany, 1918-1923. Univ of California Press. p. 66. ISBN 978-0-520-33726-8.
  57. ^ Anthony Adamthwaite, Grandeur and Misery: France's Bid for Power in Europe, 1914–40 (Hodder Arnold, 1995), p. 57.
  58. ^ Ruth Henig, Versailles and After, 1919–33 (Routledge, 1995), p. 52.
  59. ^ "No. 31481". The London Gazette (Supplement). 29 July 1919. p. 9809.
  60. ^ The New York Times, 10 November 1921 "Foch Sees Ingots Rolled into Plates".
  61. ^ Michèle Lefrançois (2009). Paul Landowski: l'œuvre sculpté. Creaphis editions. p. 64.
  62. ^ "Les tombeaux et monuments funéraires" (PDF). Musée de l'Armée.
  63. ^ a b c d e f Government of the French Republic. "Services records of Foch, Ferdinand". culture.gouv.fr. Retrieved 27 July 2019.
  64. ^ Government of the French Republic (27 February 1891). "Decree on promotions in the active army". gallica.bnf.fr (in French). Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  65. ^ Government of the French Republic (10 July 1898). "Decree on promotions in the active army". gallica.bnf.fr (in French). Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  66. ^ Government of the French Republic (12 July 1903). "Decree on promotions in the active army". gallica.bnf.fr (in French). Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  67. ^ Government of the French Republic (20 June 1907). "Decree on promotions in the active army". gallica.bnf.fr (in French). Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  68. ^ Government of the French Republic (21 September 1911). "Decree on promotions in the active army". gallica.bnf.fr (in French). Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  69. ^ Government of the French Republic (6 August 1918). "Decree appointing Divisional General Foch Ferdinand as Marshal of France". legifrance.gouv.fr (in French). Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  70. ^ Chrzanovia Patria Parva 11 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine Street chart of Chrzanów
  71. ^ Palmowski, Jan (2008). Foch, Ferdinand (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199295678. Retrieved 9 October 2012. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  72. ^ Philpott 2009, p. 441, p. 555
  73. ^ 1[permanent dead link] Fochsquare gets new name
  74. ^ Reidy, Jade (2013). Not Just Passing Through: the Making of Mt Roskill (2nd ed.). Auckland: Puketāpapa Local Board. p. 154. ISBN 978-1-927216-97-2. OCLC 889931177. Wikidata Q116775081.
  75. ^ "Marshal Foch made a Knight of Columbus". The Billings Weekly Gazette. Billings, Montana. 10 November 1921. p. 3 – via newspapers.com.  
  76. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Ferdinand FOCH | Académie française". www.academie-francaise.fr (in French). Retrieved 26 December 2023.

General references edit

  • Les Principes de la guerre. Conférences faites à l'Ecole supérieure de guerre (On the Principles of War), Berger-Levrault, (1903)
  • La Conduite de la guerre (On the Conduct of War), Berger-Levrault, 1905
  • Foch, F. (1931). The Memoirs of Marshal Foch [Les souvenirs du maréchal Foch, 1914–1918]. Translated by T Bentley Mott (Heinemann ed.). London: William Heinemann. OCLC 86058356. Retrieved 15 October 2020.
  • Porte, Rémy, and F Cochet. Ferdinand Foch, 1851–1929: Apprenez À Penser : Actes Du Colloque International, École Militaire, Paris, 6–7 November 2008. Paris: Soteca, 2010. ISBN 978-2-916385-43-3

Further reading edit

  • DiDomenico, Joseph J. "Rise and Fall of a Coalition: The Supreme War Council and Marshal Foch, 1917–1919" (US Army School for Advanced Military Studies Fort Leavenworth United States, 2017) online 27 September 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • Doughty, Robert A. Pyrrhic Victory: French Strategy and Operations in the Great War (Harvard U.P. 2005)
  • Falls. Cyril. Marshall Foch (1939) online
  • Greenhalgh, Elizabeth. Foch in Command. The Forging of a First World War General (Cambridge University Press, 2011); 550 pp. online review in H-France
  • Greenhalgh, Elizabeth. Victory Through Coalition. Britain and France During the First World War (2005)
  • Greenhalgh, Elizabeth. "General Ferdinand Foch and the French Contribution to the Battle of the Somme". British Journal for Military History 2.3 (2016). online 28 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  • Greenhalgh, Elizabeth. "General Ferdinand Foch and United Allied Command in 1918". Journal of Military History 79.4
  • Greenhalgh, Elizabeth. "Marshal Ferdinand Foch versus Georges Clemenceau in 1919". War in History 24.4 (2017): 458–497 online
  • Harris, J.P. Douglas Haig and the First World War. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2008. ISBN 978-0-521-89802-7
  • Holmes, Richard (2004). The Little Field Marshal: A Life of Sir John French. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-84614-0.
  • Jeffery, Keith (2006). Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson: A Political Soldier. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-820358-2.
  • King, Jere Clemens. Foch versus Clemenceau (Harvard UP, 1960), in 1918–1919. online
  • Liddell-Hart, B.H. Foch, the Man of Orleans 1914–1924 (2 vol 1937). online
  • Neiberg, Michael S. Foch: Supreme Allied Commander in the Great War (Brassey's Inc., 2003), short popular biography; online free to borrow
  • Philpott, W. (2009). Bloody Victory: The Sacrifice on the Somme and the Making of the Twentieth Century (1st ed.). London: Little, Brown. ISBN 978-1-4087-0108-9.
  • Singer, Barnett. Maxime Weygand: A Biography of the French General in Two World Wars (2008); he was Foch's wartime chief of staff.
  • Woodward, David R. Field Marshal Sir William Robertson Westport, Connecticut & London: Praeger, 1998, ISBN 0-275-95422-6

Notes edit

  1. ^ The position of Supreme Allied Commander was re-established during the Second World War.
  2. ^ Marshal of France is a dignity and not a rank.

External links edit

Honorary titles
New title Honorary Commander of The American Legion
1926
Served alongside: General John J. Pershing
Title abolished
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Cover of Time magazine
16 March 1925
Succeeded by

ferdinand, foch, this, article, about, french, military, commander, other, uses, foch, disambiguation, fosh, french, fɛʁdinɑ, fɔʃ, october, 1851, march, 1929, french, general, marshal, france, member, académie, française, distinguished, himself, supreme, allie. This article is about the French military commander For other uses see Foch disambiguation Ferdinand Foch f ɒ ʃ FOSH French fɛʁdinɑ fɔʃ 2 October 1851 1 20 March 1929 2 was a French general Marshal of France and member of the Academie Francaise He distinguished himself as Supreme Allied Commander on the Western Front during the First World War in 1918 3 GeneralissimeMarshalFerdinand FochGeneral Foch c 1914Supreme Allied CommanderIn office 26 March 1918 10 January 1920Preceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byOffice disestablished a 26th Chief of the Army StaffIn office 16 May 1917 29 December 1918Preceded byPhilippe PetainSucceeded byHenri AlbyPersonal detailsBorn 1851 10 02 2 October 1851Tarbes FranceDied20 March 1929 1929 03 20 aged 77 Paris FranceResting placeLes InvalidesSpouseJulie BienvenueChildrenAnneEugeneGermainMarieParentsBertrand Foch father Marie Dupre mother Alma materEcole polytechniqueSignatureMilitary serviceAllegianceThird RepublicBranch serviceFrench Army ArtilleryYears of service1868 1923 55 years RankDivision general b UnitList 24th Artillery RegimentCommandsList Army Group North Ninth Army 20th Army Corps Moroccan Division Detachment 35th Artillery RegimentBattles warsList Franco Prussian War First World War Battle of the Frontiers Battle of the Somme German spring offensive Hundred Days Offensive A commander during the First Marne Flanders and Artois campaigns of 1914 1916 Foch became Supreme Allied Commander in late March 1918 in the face of the all out German spring offensive He successfully coordinated the French British and American efforts deftly handling his strategic reserves He stopped the German offensive and launched a war winning counterattack 4 In November 1918 Marshal Foch accepted the German cessation of hostilities and was present at the Armistice of 11 November 1918 At the outbreak of war in August 1914 Foch s XX Corps participated in the brief invasion of Germany before retreating in the face of a German counter attack and successfully blocking the Germans short of Nancy Ordered west to defend Paris Foch s prestige soared as a result of the victory at the Marne for which he was widely credited as a chief protagonist while commanding the French Ninth Army He was then promoted again to assistant commander in chief for the Northern Zone a role which evolved into command of Army Group North and in which role he was required to cooperate with the British forces at Ypres and the Somme At the end of 1916 partly owing to the disappointing results of the latter offensive and partly owing to wartime political rivalries Foch was transferred to Italy 5 Foch was appointed Commander in Chief of the Allied Armies on 26 March 1918 following being the commander in chief of Western Front with the title Generalissime in 1918 He played a decisive role in halting a renewed German advance on Paris in the Second Battle of the Marne after which he was promoted to Marshal of France Author Larry H Addington says to a large extent the final Allied strategy which won the war on land in Western Europe in 1918 was Foch s alone 6 On 11 November 1918 Foch accepted the German request for an armistice Foch advocated peace terms that would make Germany unable to pose a threat to France ever again He considered the Treaty of Versailles too lenient on Germany Winston Churchill attributed this famous quote about the Peace Treaty of Versailles to Foch This is not Peace It is an Armistice for twenty years 7 Contents 1 Early life 2 Military thought 3 World War I 3 1 1914 3 2 1915 16 3 3 1917 3 4 1918 4 Assessments 5 Paris Peace Conference 6 Post war career and legacy 7 Military ranks 8 Honours and decorations 9 Honors and awards 9 1 France 9 2 Foreign decorations 10 Books by Ferdinand Foch 11 See also 12 References 12 1 General references 12 2 Further reading 12 3 Notes 13 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Foch s birthplace in Tarbes Ferdinand Foch was born in Tarbes a municipality in the department of Hautes Pyrenees in southwestern France into a modest devout middle class Catholic family 8 9 10 His last name reflects the ancestry of his father a civil servant from Valentine a village in Haute Garonne whose lineage may trace back to 16th century Alsace From a young age he loved to study and work 11 and attended school in Tarbes Rodez Gourdan Polignan and at the Jesuit College Saint Michel in Saint Etienne before attending the Jesuit College Saint Clement in Metz 12 A professor there once said of Foch A geometric mind he is made for the Polytechnique 13 His brother Germain Foch became a Jesuit priest which may have hindered Foch s rise in the French Army since the Republican government of France was anti clerical 5 When the Franco Prussian War broke out in 1870 the 17 year old Foch enlisted in the French 4th Infantry Regiment in 1868 which did not take part in combat He remained in the army after the war In 1871 he passed the entrance exams to the grandes ecoles scientifiques and later entered the Ecole Polytechnique 14 There he was an excellent student and pursued studies in mathematics engineering and science 15 16 He eventually chose the school of artillery In 1873 he received his commission as an artillery officer and served as a lieutenant in the 24th Artillery Regiment in Tarbes despite not having completed his course because there was a shortage of junior officers In 1876 he attended the cavalry school of Saumur to train as a mounted artillery officer On 30 September 1878 he became a captain and arrived in Paris on 24 September 1879 as an assistant in the Central Personnel Service Depot of the artillery In 1885 Foch undertook a course at the Ecole Superieure de Guerre where he was later an instructor from 1895 to 1901 He was promoted lieutenant colonel in 1898 and colonel in 1903 As a colonel he became regimental commander of the 35th Artillery Regiment 35e R A at Vannes An extremely short man Foch was known for his physical strength and his sharp mind who always maintained a highly dignified bearing 17 Foch was a quiet man known for saying little and when he did speak it was a volley of words accompanied by much gesturing of his hands that required some knowledge of him to understand properly 17 One of Foch s favourite phrases was Pas de protocole as he preferred to be approachable by all officers Foch s only rigidity was always taking his meals at noon and at 7 30 otherwise he would work all sorts of irregular hours from dawn until well into the night 17 In 1907 Foch was promoted to General de Brigade and in the same year he assumed command of the French War College He held this position until 1911 the year in which he was appointed General de Division Foch influenced General Joseph Joffre Chief of General Staff 28 July 1911 12 December 1916 when he drafted the French plan of campaign Plan XVII in 1913 18 In 1913 he took command of XX Corps at Nancy and he had held this appointment for exactly one year when he led XX Corps into battle in August 1914 Military thought edit nbsp Regimental commander Colonel Foch in his uniform of the 35th Artillery Regiment in 1903 Foch was later acclaimed as the most original military thinker of his generation 19 He was a disciple of Napoleon and made use of the lessons taught by Moltke 20 He became known for his critical analyses of the Franco Prussian and Napoleonic campaigns and of their relevance to military operations in the new twentieth century His re examination of France s defeat in 1870 was among the first of its kind At the college Foch was a professor of military history strategy and general tactics while becoming the French theorist on offensive strategies 21 During his time as an instructor Foch created renewed interest in French military history inspired confidence in a new class of French officers and brought about the intellectual and moral regeneration of the French Army 22 His thinking on military doctrine was shaped by the Clausewitzian philosophy then uncommon in France that the will to conquer is the first condition of victory Collections of his lectures which reintroduced the concept of the offensive to French military theory were published in the volumes Des Principes de la Guerre On the Principles of War in 1903 and De la Conduite de la Guerre On the Conduct of War in 1904 Both thought and will were the key words of these teachings 23 While Foch advised qualification and discernment in military strategy and cautioned that recklessness in attack could lead to prohibitive losses and ultimate failure 24 his concepts distorted and misunderstood by contemporaries became associated with the extreme offensive doctrines l offensive a outrance of his successors The cult of the offensive came to dominate military circles and Foch s reputation was damaged when his books were cited in the development of the disastrous offensive that brought France close to ruin in August 1914 Foch was seen as a master of the Napoleonic school of military thought but he was the only one of the Military College Commandants Maillard Langlois Bonnal still serving Their doctrines had been challenged not only by the German school but also since about 1911 by a new French school inspired by General Loiseau de Grandmaison which criticised them as lacking in vigour and offensive spirit and contributing to needless dispersion of force The French Army fought under the new doctrines but they failed in the first battles of August 1914 and it remained to be seen whether the Napoleonic doctrine would hold its own would give way to doctrines evolved during the war or would incorporate the new moral and technical elements into a new outward form within which the spirit of Napoleon remained unaltered The war gave an ambiguous answer to these questions which remains a source of controversy among experts 25 World War I edit1914 edit On the outbreak of World War I Foch was in command of XX Corps part of the Second Army of General de Castelnau On 14 August the Corps advanced towards the Sarrebourg Morhange line taking heavy casualties in the Battle of the Frontiers The defeat of the XV Corps to its right forced Foch into retreat Foch acquitted himself well covering the withdrawal to Nancy and the Charmes Gap before launching a counter attack that prevented the Germans from crossing the River Meurthe Foch was then selected to command the newly formed Ninth Army during the First Battle of the Marne with Maxime Weygand as his chief of staff 26 Only a week after taking command with the whole French Army in full retreat he was forced to fight a series of defensive actions to prevent a German breakthrough During the advance at the marshes at St Gond he is said to have declared My centre is yielding My right is retreating Situation excellent I am attacking 27 These words were seen as a symbol both of Foch s leadership and of French determination to resist the invader at any cost although there is little evidence that the signal was sent 28 Accordingly on 4 October 1914 Foch was made the Assistant Commander in Chief of the Northern Zone under Joseph Joffre Foch s counterattack was an implementation of the theories he had developed during his staff college days and succeeded in stopping the German advance Foch received further reinforcements from the Fifth Army and following another attack on his forces counter attacked again on the Marne The Germans dug in before eventually retreating On 12 September Foch regained the Marne at Chalons and liberated the city The people of Chalons greeted as a hero the man widely believed to have been instrumental in stopping the retreat and stabilising the Allied position Receiving thanks from the Bishop of Chalons Joseph Marie Tissier Foch piously replied non nobis Domine non nobis sed nomini tuo da gloriam Not unto us o Lord not unto us but to Your name give glory Psalm 115 1 29 As assistant Commander in Chief with responsibility for co ordinating the activities of the northern French armies and liaising with the British forces this was a key appointment as the Race to the Sea was then in progress General Joseph Joffre Commander in Chief C in C of the French Army had also wanted to nominate Foch as his successor in case of accident to make sure the job would not be given to Joseph Gallieni but the French Government would not agree to this When the Germans attacked on 13 October they narrowly failed to break through the British and French lines They tried again at the end of the month during the First Battle of Ypres this time suffering terrible casualties Foch had again succeeded in coordinating a defense and winning against the odds Field Marshal Sir John French C in C of the British Expeditionary Force BEF had described Foch in August 1914 to J E B Seely a liaison officer as the sort of man with whom I know I can get on and later in February 1915 described him to Lord Selbourne as the best general in the world By contrast Lieutenant General William Robertson another British officer thought that Foch was rather a flat catcher 30 a mere professor and very talkative 28 September 1915 31 On 2 December 1914 King George V appointed him an Honorary Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath 32 1915 16 edit nbsp General Foch in 1916 In 1915 his responsibilities by now crystallised in command of the Northern Army Group he conducted the Artois Offensive and in 1916 the French effort at the Battle of the Somme He was strongly criticised for his tactics and the heavy casualties that were suffered by the Allied armies during these battles and in December 1916 was removed from command by Joffre and sent to command Allied units on the Italian front Joffre was himself sacked days later 1917 edit Just a few months later after the failure of General Robert Nivelle s offensive General Philippe Petain the hero of Verdun was appointed Chief of the General Staff Foch hoped to succeed Petain in command of Army Group Centre but this job was instead given to General Fayolle The following month Petain was appointed C in C in place of Nivelle and Foch was recalled and promoted to chief of the general staff Like Petain Foch favoured only limited attacks he had told Lieutenant General Sir Henry Wilson another British Army officer that the planned Flanders offensive was futile fantastic amp dangerous until the Americans who had joined the war in April 1917 were able to send large numbers of troops to France 33 Outside of the Western Front Foch opposed British Prime Minister David Lloyd George s plans to send British and French troops to help Italy take Trieste but was open to the suggestion of sending heavy guns 34 The Anglo French leadership agreed in early September to send 100 heavy guns to Italy 50 of them from the French army on the left of Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig C in C of the BEF rather than the 300 which Lloyd George wanted As the guns reached Italy Cadorna called off his offensive 21 September 35 Until the end of 1916 the French under Joffre had been the dominant allied army after 1917 this was no longer the case due to the vast number of casualties France s armies had suffered in the now three and a half year old struggle with Germany 36 The Supreme War Council was formally established on 7 November 1917 containing the Prime Minister and a Minister from each of the Western Front powers i e excluding Russia to meet at least once a month Foch along with Wilson and Italian general Cadorna were appointed military representatives to whom the general staffs of each country were to submit their plans The French tried to have Foch as representative to increase their control over the Western Front by contrast Cadorna was disgraced after the recent Battle of Caporetto and Wilson a personal friend of Foch was deliberately appointed as a rival to General Robertson the British Chief of the Imperial General Staff an ally of Haig s who had lost 250 000 men at the battle of Ypres the same year 37 Clemenceau was eventually persuaded to appoint Foch s protege Weygand instead although many already suspected that Foch would eventually become the Allied Generalissimo 38 Late in 1917 Foch would have liked to have seen Haig replaced as C in C of the BEF by General Herbert Plumer however Haig would remain in command of the BEF for the remainder of the war 39 1918 edit nbsp Foch in 1918 In January 1918 in accordance with Lloyd George s wishes an executive board was set up to control the planned Allied General Reserve with Clemenceau s agreement being obtained by having Foch on the board rather than Maxime Weygand Petain agreed to release only eight French divisions and made a bilateral agreement with Haig who was reluctant to release any divisions at all to assist one another The situation was worsened by Clemenceau s and Petain s dislike of Foch At a Supreme War Council meeting in London 14 15 March with a German offensive clearly imminent Foch protested to no avail for the formation of the Allied Reserve 40 41 On the evening of 24 March after the German spring offensive was threatening to split apart the British and French forces Foch telegraphed Wilson who by now had replaced Robertson as Chief of the Imperial General Staff asking what he thought of situation amp we are of one mind that someone must catch a hold or we shall be beaten Wilson reached France the following lunchtime Petain had sent a dozen divisions to plug the gap and it is unclear that a committee would actually have acted any faster during the immediate crisis 42 At the Doullens Conference 26 March and at Beauvais 3 April Foch was given the job of coordinating the activities of the Allied armies 43 44 forming a common reserve and using these divisions to guard the junction of the French and British armies and to plug the potentially fatal gap that would have followed a German breakthrough in the British Fifth Army sector Two days later while Foch was writing in his notebook he allowed an interview to a group of war correspondents 45 At a later conference he was given the title Supreme Commander of the Allied Armies with the title of Generalissime Supreme General In May 1918 in the fifth session of the Supreme War Council Foch was given authority over the Italian Front 36 Foch controlled the Military Board of Allied Supply MBAS an Allied agency for the coordination of logistical support of the Allied forces In March 1918 Colonel Charles G Dawes the general purchasing agent for the American Expeditionary Forces AEF recommended to his commanding general John J Pershing that a new intergovernmental agency was necessary to coordinate transportation and storage of military supplies in France Pershing took the recommendation to French Premier Georges Clemenceau The British were hesitant at first but finally the key players were in agreement and the Board was established in May 1918 It involved coordinating the entirely different supply systems for the American British and French armies as well as the Italian and Belgian armies It started operation from its base in Paris at the end of June The president of the board was French general Jean Marie Charles Payot 1868 1931 assisted by an international staff Board decisions had to be unanimous and once made were binding on all of the armies However each army continued to be responsible for its own logistical system and procedures 46 nbsp Foch Weygand Haig Petain and other British and French officers with King George V 1918 Foch was surprised by the German offensive Bluecher on the Chemin des Dames 27 May Foch believed it was a diversion to draw Allied reserves away from Flanders This was partly true although the planned German Flanders Offensive Hagen never took place The Allied armies under Foch s command ultimately held the advance of the German forces 47 The celebrated phrase I will fight in front of Paris I will fight in Paris I will fight behind Paris attributed both to Foch and Clemenceau illustrated the Generalissime s resolve to keep the Allied armies intact even at the risk of losing the capital The British general Sir Henry Rawlinson commanding the British Fourth Army commented after meeting Foch I am overjoyed at his methods and far sighted strategy I was in close touch with him in 1916 He is a better man now than he was then for his fiery enthusiasm has been tempered by adversity 17 Rawlinson also noted Foch s intense Frenchness He knew nothing of Britain The Rhine was for him a river of life and death 17 At the sixth session of the Supreme War Council on 1 June Foch complained that the BEF was still shrinking in size and infuriated Lloyd George by implying that the British government was withholding manpower 48 At a major Allied conference at Beauvais 7 June Lord Milner agreed with Clemenceau that Foch should have the power to order all Allied troops as he saw fit over the protests of Haig who argued that it would reduce his power to safeguard the interests of the British Army 49 nbsp Foch and Douglas Haig inspecting the Gordon Highlanders 1918 The British were disappointed that Foch operated through his own staff rather than through the Permanent Military Representatives at Versailles and on 11 July 1918 British ministers resolved to remind Foch that he was an Allied and not a French C in C 36 The Allies mainly French and the growing American forces counterattacked at the Second Battle of the Marne in July 1918 On 6 August 1918 Foch was made a Marshal of France Along with the British commander Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig Foch planned the Grand Offensive opening on 26 September 1918 which led to the defeat of Germany After the war he claimed to have defeated Germany by smoking his pipe 50 An unintended consequence of Foch s appointment was that he sheltered Haig from British political interference 36 Before the armistice and after the Armistice of Villa Giusti Foch controlled all the operations against Germany including a planned invasion from Italy into Bavaria 36 Foch accepted the German cessation of hostilities in November from the German delegate Matthias Erzberger at 5 00 a m local time However he refused to accede to the German negotiators immediate request to declare a ceasefire or truce so that there would be no more useless waste of lives among the common soldiers By not declaring a truce even between the signing of the documents for the Armistice at 5 45 a m 51 and its entry into force at the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month about 11 000 additional men were needlessly wounded or killed far more than usual according to the military statistics 52 On the day of the armistice 11 November 1918 he was elected to the Academie des Sciences Ten days later he was unanimously elected to the Academie francaise He received many honours and decorations from Allied governments 53 Assessments editIn the euphoria of victory Foch was regularly compared to Napoleon and Julius Caesar However historians took a less favourable view of Foch s talents as commander particularly as the idea took root that his military doctrines had set the stage for the futile and costly offensives of 1914 in which French armies suffered devastating losses Supporters and critics continue to debate Foch s strategy and instincts as a commander as well as his exact contributions to the Marne miracle Foch s counter attacks at the Marne generally failed but his sector resisted determined German attacks while holding the pivot on which the neighbouring French and British forces depended in rolling back the German line 6 After the reading of the preamble of the November 1918 armistice Foch left the carriage in a move that was perceived as humiliating by the defeated Germans In 1940 after the defeat of France by Germany early in World War II when France signed an armistice with Germany Adolf Hitler in a calculated gesture of disdain to the French delegates left the carriage as Foch had done in 1918 Foch s pre war contributions as a military theorist and lecturer have also been recognised and he has been credited as the most original and subtle mind in the French Army of the early 20th century 22 Paris Peace Conference editIn January 1919 at the Paris Peace Conference Foch presented a memorandum to the Allied plenipotentiaries in which he stated Henceforward the Rhine ought to be the Western military frontier of the German countries Henceforward Germany ought to be deprived of all entrance and assembling ground that is of all territorial sovereignty on the left bank of the river that is of all facilities for invading quickly as in 1914 Belgium Luxembourg for reaching the coast of the North Sea and threatening the United Kingdom for outflanking the natural defences of France the Rhine Meuse conquering the Northern Provinces and entering the Parisian area 54 In a subsequent memorandum Foch argued that the Allies should take full advantage of their victory by permanently weakening German power in order to prevent her from threatening France again What the people of Germany fear the most is a renewal of hostilities since this time Germany would be the field of battle and the scene of the consequent devastation This makes it impossible for the yet unstable German Government to reject any demand on our part if it is clearly formulated The Entente in its present favourable military situation can obtain acceptance of any peace conditions it may put forward provided that they are presented without much delay All it has to do is to decide what they shall be 54 Upon returning home Foch wrote in his diary Watch out suspect peace English peace We must have a program a tactic a will We find ourselves in the presence of an England that has all it wants for the present the German colonies and the German fleet We lack future security because Britain is not interested In the presence of an America which seeks its own peace we must have what we need It is on the Rhine and nowhere else that we shall find it 55 He later wrote In a word the occupation is a lever that we have in our hand and with which we can call the tune 56 However the British Prime Minister David Lloyd George and the American President Woodrow Wilson objected to the detachment of the Rhineland from Germany so that the balance of power would not be too much in favour of France but agreed to Allied military occupation for fifteen years which Foch thought insufficient to protect France Foch considered the Treaty of Versailles to be a capitulation a treason because he believed that only permanent occupation of the Rhineland would grant France sufficient security against a revival of German aggression 57 In a remarkable moment of foresight as the treaty was being signed Foch said This is not peace It is an armistice for 20 years 58 Post war career and legacy edit nbsp Foch and General Kazimierz Sosnkowski at Belweder Palace in Warsaw 1923 Marshall of Poland Jozef Pilsudski is in the center nbsp Foch s tomb Hotel des Invalides Foch was made a British field marshal in 1919 59 and for his advice during the Polish Soviet War of 1920 as well as his pressure on Germany during the Greater Poland Uprising he was awarded the title of Marshal of Poland in 1923 On 1 November 1921 Foch was in Kansas City Missouri to take part in the groundbreaking ceremony for the Liberty Memorial that was being constructed there Also present that day were Lieutenant General Baron Jacques of Belgium Admiral David Beatty of Great Britain General Armando Diaz of Italy and General John J Pershing of the United States One of the main speakers was Vice President Calvin Coolidge of the United States The local veteran chosen to present flags to the commanders was a Kansas City haberdasher Harry S Truman who would later serve as 33rd President of the United States from 1945 to 1953 In 1935 bas reliefs of Foch Jacques Diaz and Pershing by sculptor Walker Hancock were added to the memorial Foch made a 3000 mile circuit through the American Midwest and industrial cities such as Pittsburgh and then on to Washington D C which included ceremonies at Arlington National Cemetery for what was then called Armistice Day During the tour he received numerous honorary degrees from American Universities 60 In 1923 Foch retired from the French Army having served a total of 55 years in uniform His career began as the Lebel Model 1886 rifle had just entered service and ended after Foch had commanded hundreds of thousands of soldiers in World War I Foch died on 20 March 1929 He was buried in Les Invalides next to Napoleon and other famous French soldiers and officers Initially he was interred in the crypt of the Saint Louis Church or Caveau des Gouverneurs In 1937 his remains were transferred to a monumental tomb sculpted by Paul Landowski with inspiration from the 15th century tomb of Philippe Pot 61 at the center of the Dome Church s northeastern chapel Chapelle Saint Ambroise 62 A statue of Foch was set up at the Compiegne Armistice site when the area was converted into a national memorial This statue was the one item left undisturbed by the Germans following their defeat of France in June 1940 Following the signing of France s surrender on 21 June the Germans ravaged the area surrounding the railway car in which both the 1918 and 1940 surrenders had taken place The statue was left standing to view nothing but a wasteland The Armistice site was restored by German prisoner of war labour following the Second World War with its memorials and monuments either restored or reassembled In the 2022 film All Quiet on the Western Front Foch is portrayed by Thibault de Montalembert Military ranks editPrivate Student Artillery student Second lieutenant Lieutenant Captain nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 24 January 1871 63 1 November 1871 63 10 January 1873 63 16 October 1874 63 1 October 1875 63 30 September 1878 63 Squadron chief Lieutenant colonel Colonel Brigadier general Divisional general Marshal of France nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 27 February 1891 64 10 July 1898 65 12 July 1903 66 20 June 1907 67 21 September 1911 68 6 August 1918 69 Honours and decorations edit6 August 1918 Marshal of France 19 July 1919 Field Marshal of the United Kingdom 25 March 1921 Honorary Colonel the first of the Royal 22nd Regiment of the Canadian Army 13 April 1923 Marshal of PolandHonors and awards edit nbsp The aircraft carrier Foch R99 was named in his honor A heavy cruiser and an aircraft carrier were named in his honor An early district of Gdynia Poland was also named Foch after the Marshal but was renamed by the communist government after the Second World War Nevertheless one of the major avenues of the City of Bydgoszcz located then in the Polish corridor holds Foch s name as sign of gratitude for his campaigning for an independent Poland Avenue Foch a street in Paris was named after him Several other streets have been named in his honor in Melbourne Ypres Lyon Krakow Chrzanow 70 Grenoble Quito Beirut New Orleans Truth or Consequences New Mexico Wynnum Cambridge Massachusetts Mineola New York Queens New York Milltown Shanghai now part of Yan a Road and Singapore Foch Road A city quarter in the former French sector of Berlin is called Cite Foch in his honor This is where French garrison soldiers were housed while Berlin was divided Fochville in South Africa was also named in his honour A statue of Foch stands near Victoria railway station in London He is the only Frenchman ever to be made an honorary field marshal by the British 71 A statue of Foch stands on the Bapaume Peronne road near the village of Bouchavesnes at the point where Messimy s chasseurs broke through on 12 September 1916 General Debeney spoke at the statue s unveiling in 1926 praising Foch s operational concepts of 1918 72 Foch also has a grape cultivar named after him In the Belgian city of Leuven one of the central squares was named after him after the First World War but it was renamed in 2012 73 Mount Foch in Alberta is also named after him The position of Marshal Foch Professor of French Literature at the University of Oxford was founded in 1918 shortly after the end of the First World War In the late 1920s Foch Avenue in Mount Roskill Auckland was named after him 74 France edit Legion of Honour nbsp Knight 9 July 1892 nbsp Officer 11 July 1908 nbsp Commander 31 December 1913 nbsp Grand Officer 18 September 1914 nbsp Grand Cross 8 October 1915 dd nbsp Medaille militaire 21 December 1916 nbsp Croix de Guerre 1914 1918 nbsp Commemorative medal of the 1870 1871 War nbsp Officer of the Order of Academic Palms Foreign decorations edit nbsp Statue of Foch in Victoria London nbsp Order of Merit United Kingdom nbsp Honorary Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath United Kingdom nbsp Distinguished Service Order United Kingdom nbsp Order of the White Eagle Poland 15 April 1923 nbsp Grand Cross of the Order of Virtuti Militari 15 April 1923 Poland nbsp Grand Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta Poland nbsp Grand Cross of the Order of Leopold Belgium nbsp Grand Cross of the Order of Ouissam Alaouite Morocco nbsp Distinguished Service Medal United States Army nbsp Grand Cross of the Order of the Redeemer Greece nbsp Order of Lacplesis 3rd Class Latvia nbsp Order of Saint George Second Class Orden Svyatogo Georgiya 1916 Russian Empire nbsp Knight Grand Commander First Class of the Order of Rama Senangapati 16 November 1918 Thailand Foch received an honorary doctorate from the Jagiellonian University of Krakow in 1918 By special vote of the board of directors of the Knights of Columbus he became the one millionth knight of that order 75 Books by Ferdinand Foch editDes principes de la guerre 1903 76 De la conduite de la guerre 1904 76 La bataille de Laon mars 1814 1909 76 Preceptes et jugements 1919 76 Eloge de Du Guesclin 1921 76 Eloge de Napoleon 1921 76 Ce que j ai appris a la guerre 1927 76 Les deux batailles de la Marne 1928 ouvrage collectif 76 Paroles de soldat 1928 76 Memoires pour servir a l histoire de la guerre de 1914 1918 2 vol 1931 posthume 76 Dans La Revue de la cavalerie un article sur l artillerie de la division de cavalerie au combat un autre sur Mitrailleuse ou canon une conference sur L Attaque decisiveSee also editJean de Lattre de Tassigny List of French paratrooper units Pierre Segretain Pierre Jeanpierre Marcel Bigeard 35th Parachute Artillery Regiment Moroccan Division Lafayette Escadrille Russian Expeditionary Force in France Marching Regiment of the Foreign Legion Army Manoeuvres of 1912 Foch Line Marshal Foch Professor of French Literature a chair at the University of Oxford established in Foch s honour in 1918 Non U S recipients of U S gallantry awards List of streets named after Ferdinand FochReferences edit Government of the French Republic Birth certificate of Foch Ferdinand culture gouv fr in French Retrieved 13 April 2020 Government of the French Republic Death certificate of Foch Ferdinand culture gouv fr in French Retrieved 13 April 2020 Atteridge Andrew Hilliard 1919 Marshal Ferdinand Foch His Life and His Theory of Modern War Dodd Mead Charles Messenger ed Reader s Guide to Military History 2001 pp 170 171 a b Greenhalgh 2011 a b Addington Larry H 1994 The Patterns of War Since the Eighteenth Century Indiana UP pp 167 168 ISBN 0253208602 Winston Churchill 1948 The Gathering Storm Houghton Mifflin p 7 B H Liddell Hart 2013 Foch The Man of Orleans Read Books Limited pp 16 ISBN 978 1 4733 8483 5 Ferdinand Foch Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved 11 December 2023 MacMillan Margaret 18 December 2007 Paris 1919 Six Months That Changed the World Random House Publishing Group p 167 ISBN 978 0 307 43296 4 Baussan Charles 1918 General Foch Studies An Irish Quarterly Review 7 25 65 79 ISSN 0039 3495 Rene Puaux 1919 Foch Sa vie Sa doctrine Son œuvre La foi en la victoire in French Payot p 14 Baussan Charles 1918 General Foch Studies An Irish Quarterly Review 7 25 65 79 ISSN 0039 3495 FOCH Ferdinand X1871 Bibliotheque Centrale www polytechnique edu in French Retrieved 26 February 2024 Edu World History 21 April 2023 Ferdinand Foch Biography World War I amp Accomplishments World History Edu Retrieved 11 December 2023 Atteridge Andrew Hilliard 1919 Marshal Ferdinand Foch His Life and His Theory of Modern War Dodd Mead pp 9 10 a b c d e Winter Denis Haig s Command A Reassessment New York Viking 1991 p 275 Jan Palmowski 2008 A Dictionary of Contemporary World History From 1900 to the present day OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 929567 8 Michael Carver editor The War Lords Military Commanders of the Twentieth Century Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 1976 p 123 ISBN 0 297 77084 5 Baussan Charles 1918 General Foch Studies An Irish Quarterly Review 7 25 65 79 ISSN 0039 3495 Ferdinand Foch W D Jordan Special Collections and Music Library Queen s University Library Montreal G Inglis 1919 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Shirer p 81 Ferdinand Foch Biography World War I amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 15 July 2023 Shirer p 80 Atkinson Charles Francis 1922 Foch Ferdinand In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica 12th ed London amp New York The Encyclopaedia Britannica Company Barnett Singer Maxime Weygand A Biography of the French General in Two World Wars 2008 Raymond Recouly Foch Le Vainqueur de la Guerre Foch The victor of the war Paris France Hachette 1919 page 121 Mon centre cede ma droite recule situation excellente j attaque My centre is giving way my right is retreating situation excellent I am attacking Cowley Robert Parker Geoffrey eds 1996 The Reader s Companion to Military History sponsored by the Society for Military History 1st ed Houghton Mifflin pp 164 165 ISBN 0 395 66969 3 Nouvelles de Rome S G Mgr Tissier a Rome Rome 19 janvier 1917 News from Rome S G Monsignor Tissier in Rome Le Croix French Catholic newspaper 25 January 1917 Archived 5 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine p 7 On sent qu il n oubliera plus jamais le reponse du general Foch a ses felicitions au lendemain de la victoire Non nobis Domine non nobis sed nomini tuo da gloriam One feels that he will never forget the reply of General Foch to his congratulations in the aftermath of the victory Not to us Lord not to us but to Your name give glory Flat catcher British racing slang a horse that looks good but is not See Merriam Webster on line dictionary Holmes 2004 p 243 No 29044 The London Gazette 19 January 1915 p 601 Woodward 1998 p 135 Woodward 1998 p 139 Woodward 1998 pp 144 146 a b c d e Woodward 1998 pp 187 189 Whelan B 2010 War in History British Library Serials 4 17 526 Jeffery 2006 pp 206 208 210 211 Jeffery 2006 pp 212 213 Jeffery 2006 pp 214 215 219 220 Callwell MG C E Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson His Life And Diaries Vol II pp 69 70 Jeffery 2006 pp 220 221 Keegan John The First World War Vintage Books 1998 p 403 Foch the Man at Project Gutenberg Laughlin Clara Elizabeth 1918 Foch the Man A Life of the Supreme Commander of the Allied Armies Fleming H Revell Company p 150 ISBN 978 1 4219 7064 6 Edward A Goedeken Charles Dawes and the Military Board of Allied Supply Military Affairs 1986 50 1 pp 1 6 online Harris 2008 p 477 Harris 2008 p 478 Harris 2008 p 479 How did I win the war Foch will say chaffingly to Andre de Marincourt many months later By smoking my pipe That is to say by not getting excited by reducing everything to simple terms by avoiding useless emotions and keeping all my strength for the job Frank H Simonds History of the World War Vol 5 Ch 3 III Doubleday Page amp Co 1920 Armistice The End of World War I 1918 EyeWitness to History Archived from the original on 26 November 2018 Retrieved 26 November 2018 Persico Joseph E 2004 Eleventh Month Eleventh Day Eleventh Hour Armistice Day 1918 World War I and Its Violent Climax New York Random House p 378 ISBN 0 375 50825 2 Foch Ferdinand cths fr le site du Comite des travaux historiques et scientifiques CTHS Retrieved 24 October 2013 a b Ernest R Troughton It s Happening Again John Gifford 1944 p 17 Neiberg Michael S 14 May 2014 Foch Supreme Allied Commander in the Great War Potomac Books Inc p 8 ISBN 978 1 61234 057 9 Nelson Keith L 28 April 2023 Victors Divided America and the Allies in Germany 1918 1923 Univ of California Press p 66 ISBN 978 0 520 33726 8 Anthony Adamthwaite Grandeur and Misery France s Bid for Power in Europe 1914 40 Hodder Arnold 1995 p 57 Ruth Henig Versailles and After 1919 33 Routledge 1995 p 52 No 31481 The London Gazette Supplement 29 July 1919 p 9809 The New York Times 10 November 1921 Foch Sees Ingots Rolled into Plates Michele Lefrancois 2009 Paul Landowski l œuvre sculpte Creaphis editions p 64 Les tombeaux et monuments funeraires PDF Musee de l Armee a b c d e f Government of the French Republic Services records of Foch Ferdinand culture gouv fr Retrieved 27 July 2019 Government of the French Republic 27 February 1891 Decree on promotions in the active army gallica bnf fr in French Retrieved 22 May 2020 Government of the French Republic 10 July 1898 Decree on promotions in the active army gallica bnf fr in French Retrieved 22 May 2020 Government of the French Republic 12 July 1903 Decree on promotions in the active army gallica bnf fr in French Retrieved 22 May 2020 Government of the French Republic 20 June 1907 Decree on promotions in the active army gallica bnf fr in French Retrieved 22 May 2020 Government of the French Republic 21 September 1911 Decree on promotions in the active army gallica bnf fr in French Retrieved 22 May 2020 Government of the French Republic 6 August 1918 Decree appointing Divisional General Foch Ferdinand as Marshal of France legifrance gouv fr in French Retrieved 22 May 2020 Chrzanovia Patria Parva Archived 11 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine Street chart of Chrzanow Palmowski Jan 2008 Foch Ferdinand 3rd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199295678 Retrieved 9 October 2012 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Philpott 2009 p 441 p 555 1 permanent dead link Fochsquare gets new name Reidy Jade 2013 Not Just Passing Through the Making of Mt Roskill 2nd ed Auckland Puketapapa Local Board p 154 ISBN 978 1 927216 97 2 OCLC 889931177 Wikidata Q116775081 Marshal Foch made a Knight of Columbus The Billings Weekly Gazette Billings Montana 10 November 1921 p 3 via newspapers com nbsp a b c d e f g h i j Ferdinand FOCH Academie francaise www academie francaise fr in French Retrieved 26 December 2023 General references edit Les Principes de la guerre Conferences faites a l Ecole superieure de guerre On the Principles of War Berger Levrault 1903 La Conduite de la guerre On the Conduct of War Berger Levrault 1905 Foch F 1931 The Memoirs of Marshal Foch Les souvenirs du marechal Foch 1914 1918 Translated by T Bentley Mott Heinemann ed London William Heinemann OCLC 86058356 Retrieved 15 October 2020 Porte Remy and F Cochet Ferdinand Foch 1851 1929 Apprenez A Penser Actes Du Colloque International Ecole Militaire Paris 6 7 November 2008 Paris Soteca 2010 ISBN 978 2 916385 43 3 Further reading edit DiDomenico Joseph J Rise and Fall of a Coalition The Supreme War Council and Marshal Foch 1917 1919 US Army School for Advanced Military Studies Fort Leavenworth United States 2017 online Archived 27 September 2020 at the Wayback Machine Doughty Robert A Pyrrhic Victory French Strategy and Operations in the Great War Harvard U P 2005 Falls Cyril Marshall Foch 1939 online Greenhalgh Elizabeth Foch in Command The Forging of a First World War General Cambridge University Press 2011 550 pp online review in H France Greenhalgh Elizabeth Victory Through Coalition Britain and France During the First World War 2005 Greenhalgh Elizabeth General Ferdinand Foch and the French Contribution to the Battle of the Somme British Journal for Military History 2 3 2016 online Archived 28 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine Greenhalgh Elizabeth General Ferdinand Foch and United Allied Command in 1918 Journal of Military History 79 4 Greenhalgh Elizabeth Marshal Ferdinand Foch versus Georges Clemenceau in 1919 War in History 24 4 2017 458 497 online Harris J P Douglas Haig and the First World War Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 521 89802 7 Holmes Richard 2004 The Little Field Marshal A Life of Sir John French Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 0 297 84614 0 Jeffery Keith 2006 Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson A Political Soldier Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 820358 2 King Jere Clemens Foch versus Clemenceau Harvard UP 1960 in 1918 1919 online Liddell Hart B H Foch the Man of Orleans 1914 1924 2 vol 1937 online Neiberg Michael S Foch Supreme Allied Commander in the Great War Brassey s Inc 2003 short popular biography online free to borrow Philpott W 2009 Bloody Victory The Sacrifice on the Somme and the Making of the Twentieth Century 1st ed London Little Brown ISBN 978 1 4087 0108 9 Singer Barnett Maxime Weygand A Biography of the French General in Two World Wars 2008 he was Foch s wartime chief of staff Woodward David R Field Marshal Sir William Robertson Westport Connecticut amp London Praeger 1998 ISBN 0 275 95422 6 Notes edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ferdinand Foch The position of Supreme Allied Commander was re established during the Second World War Marshal of France is a dignity and not a rank External links editWorks by or about Ferdinand Foch at Internet Archive Unjustly Accused Marshal Ferdinand Foch and the French Cult of the Offensive Biography on FirstWorldWar com Foch s Biography in French on the Immortals page of the Academie francaise permanent dead link Foch the Man at Project Gutenberg by Clara E Laughlin Newspaper clippings about Ferdinand Foch in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Honorary titles New title Honorary Commander of The American Legion1926 Served alongside General John J Pershing Title abolished Awards and achievements Preceded byNicholas Longworth Cover of Time magazine16 March 1925 Succeeded byEduard Benes Portals nbsp Biography nbsp France Ferdinand Foch at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ferdinand Foch amp oldid 1223405882, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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