Early Life, Education and Military Career
Foch was born October 2, 1851, in Tarbes, France, the son of a civil servant and grandson of a French soldier. He attended a local school and, at age 20, enlisted in the French Army, serving as a sub-lieutenant during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871, but saw no action.
Following France’s defeat, he graduated from the prestigious École Polytechnique military academy in Paris and, in 1885, continued his training by enrolling at the École Supérieure de Guerre (known as the War College), graduating as a commissioned lieutenant. Foch returned to active duty in 1901, holding commands in various French regions and steadily rising through the ranks.
He returned to the War College as a major in 1895, serving as a professor. His lectures, “On the Principles of War” and “On the Conduct of War,” were published in 1903 and 1905, respectively. By 1908, with the rank of brigadier general, he was named the school’s commandant, building on his reputation as an influential military strategy expert.
“Victory equals will," Foch wrote during his tenure, Time reported in 1926. "Victory goes always to those who deserve it by the greater force of will. . . . A battle won is a battle in which one will not acknowledge oneself beaten."
World War I
By 1914, at the outbreak of World War I, Foch, in his 60s, had already been assigned command of the French XX Corps at Nancy and led troops to stop Germany’s advance at the Battle of the Frontiers (August 1914). His success prompted General Joseph Joffre, France’s commander in chief, to appoint him to helm the Ninth Army, which helped win the First Battle of the Marne.
Joffre promoted him to assistant commander in chief, and, after coordinating strategies among the French, English and Belgian armies in battles at Ypres, Somme and others, he was named chief of the General Staff of the French Army in May 1917, a position that put him in charge of military coordinations along the Western Front. A year later, with Germany seemingly headed for victory, Foch was made commander in chief of the Allied armies.