UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — For a special military appreciation Throwback Thursday, we take a look at the life of Penn State alumna and veteran Cora Marie Foster, who was one of the first women to command Women’s Army Corps troops overseas during World War II.
Born March 6, 1906, in State College, Pennsylvania, Foster graduated from Penn State in 1927 with a degree in mathematics, and in 1937 earned a master's degree in education from Columbia University. Foster was working as a high school teacher when, in December 1941, the United States entered the Second World War.
The Women’s Army Corps
In June 1942, at the age of 36, Foster enlisted in the U.S. Army, intending to be a part of the aviation cadet program — and instead was transferred to the newly formed Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC). Foster attended WAAC’s first officers’ training course at Fort Des Moines, Iowa, and commissioned later that year.
In July 1943, the Women’s Army Corps (WAC) was created and made an active-duty branch of the U.S. Army. As the first contingents of WAC troops were deployed overseas, Foster was assigned to the 5th Army in Casablanca, Morocco, North Africa, in August of 1943.
Just four months later, when Lt. Gen. Mark Clark moved his 5th Army headquarters to the Italian mainland, his WAC component — the 6669th W.A.C. Headquarters Platoon — was commanded by none other than 1st Lt. Cora M. Foster.
A successful ‘experiment’
As the official history of the Women's Army Corps states, "this unit became the Army's 'experiment' in the use of female units in the field,” and under Foster's leadership the 6669th performed in an extraordinarily outstanding manner, so much so that it received the Meritorious Service Unit Commendation.
Further proof of the unit's unequaled performance of duty is reflected in the fact that 27 enlisted members of Foster’s platoon were awarded individual Bronze Star Medals for "meritorious service in a combat zone." As Lt. Gen. Mark Clark himself stated in an article appearing in the June 1944 Penn State Alumni News, in referring to Cora's platoon, "we honestly couldn't and wouldn't do without them.”
After the War