| Gouraud,
Henri-Joseph-Étienne. (1867 - 1946). Born Paris. The future general
entered Saint-Cyr in 1888 and had his early experience in the colonial
army in Africa where he got to know both Joffre and Mangin. He also
served with Lyautey in Morocco.
Gouraud was still in Morocco at the
outbreak of war, having just been promoted brigadier general. He led the
10 Division in 1914 and the following year (15 May) was appointed to
take over command of the French expeditionary force to the Dardanelles.
The French troops occupied the Asiatic
side of the southern tip of the Gallipoli peninsula, alongside the
British, and Gouraud led several attacks against the Turkish positions
on Kereves Spur. Although the Dardanelles expedition was a British
affair under command of Sir Ian Hamilton, the British general considered
the French commander 'more as a coadjutor than as a subordinate'
(Hamilton's diary, 14 June 1915, cited in C.F. Aspinall-Oglander, Military
operations, Gallipoli , vol. 2, London, Heinemann 1932, p 71 ).
After an attack on the Turkish strongpoint called the Quadrilateral on
the Kereves Spur, Gouraud was severely wounded on 30 June, losing his
right arm and suffering two broken legs. He was held in such high regard
that King George V sent a telegram of regret to Sir Ian Hamilton.
Despite his injuries, Gouraud was back in command of Fourth Army in
Champagne by December.
When Lyautey became War Minister in
December 1916, General Gouraud took over from him as Resident-General of
Morocco and, after Lyautey's resignation and return, he returned to
France, to his former army command. His Fourth Army faced the final
German attack in July 1918. One of the units of his army had been
fortunate enough to capture some German prisoners the day before the
attack. They confirmed that the attack was to be launched, and Gouraud
was able to apply the new elastic method of defence that the French
commander-in-chief, General Pétain, had instituted. Thus the front line
was only lightly held, and the German attack exhausted itself on the
main defensive position, further back. The French were able to mount a
counter-offensive around Villers-Cotterêts and the Germans were pushed
back continuously from then on until the Armistice.
Gouraud's Fourth Army pursued the
retreating Germans as far as Alsace, crossing the Meuse between Sedan
and Mézières on 10 November 1918. He occupied northern Alsace until
October 1919. Later he became the French High Commissioner in Syria and
Commander-in-Chief of the Army of the Levant. He reached retirement age
only in 1937.
Text from http://www.lib.byu.edu/~rdh/wwi/bio/g/gouraud.html |