When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: ww2 combat boots reproduction shoes

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Jump boot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jump_boot

    Although there is considerable variation in the features of modern jump boots, an example of the defining characteristics can be found in the US M1942 "Boots, Parachute Jumper" (as popularized by the Corcoran Boot Company during World War II) are extended lacing from the instep to the calf and rigid, reinforced toe caps; [5] these features were intended to give greater support to the wearer's ...

  3. United States Army uniforms in World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Army...

    Excepting combat testing in the Mediterranean Theater in 1943, the Type III shoes did not appear overseas in large numbers until just before D-Day, and the composition sole combat service boots in the fall of 1944; soldiers can be seen wearing both types of service shoes with leggings, and the newer combat boot. As the war went on, soles went ...

  4. Combat boot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combat_boot

    The first true modern combat boots in the US Army, officially titled "Boots, Combat Service", were introduced in conjunction with the M-1943 Uniform Ensemble during World War II. [26] [27] They were modified service shoes, with an extended, rough-out or, more commonly, a smooth leather high-top cuff added. [26]

  5. U.S. Army M1943 uniform - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Army_M1943_Uniform

    M-43 Field Jacket M-1943 Combat Service Boots. The U.S. Army's M1943 uniform was a combat uniform manufactured in windproof cotton sateen cloth introduced in 1943 to replace a variety of other specialist uniforms and some inadequate garments, like the M1941 Field Jacket.

  6. Ammunition boot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammunition_boot

    During World War II, a pattern without the toecap was used by the Canadian Army and was issued to the Royal Air Force and the Royal Marines. As an economy measure the number of hobnails were reduced in April, 1942 to 15 hobnails, later reduced to 13 hobnails in September, 1942. Ammunitions boots are often bulled using shoe polish and beeswax

  7. Brogan (shoes) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brogan_(shoes)

    Both sides in the American Civil War issued them to their soldiers, and the U.S. Army issued hob-nailed brogans known as "trench boots" to U.S. soldiers during the First World War. [5] Pair of hobnailed boots. These replaced the 1904 Russet Service Shoe, a brogan of a construction unsuitable to trench warfare or field duty in general. [6]