Socks at War: American Hand Knitters and Military Footwear Production for the World Wars

In both World Wars, combatant nations, including the United States, Britain, and Germany, learned that inadequate or poorly-maintained footwear produced costly and preventable casualties from trench foot and frostbite. While provision of shoes and boots to troops were major issues in earlier confli...

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Main Author: Rachel P. Maines
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan 2019-12-01
Series:Studia Historiae Oeconomicae
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pressto.amu.edu.pl/index.php/sho/article/view/29048
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author Rachel P. Maines
author_facet Rachel P. Maines
author_sort Rachel P. Maines
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description In both World Wars, combatant nations, including the United States, Britain, and Germany, learned that inadequate or poorly-maintained footwear produced costly and preventable casualties from trench foot and frostbite. While provision of shoes and boots to troops were major issues in earlier conflicts, no nation before World War I had fully appreciated the significance of warm, dry, well-fitting socks to the effectiveness of soldiers in the field. The large numbers of trench foot casualties in World War I, especially among the French and British, convinced policymakers that this vital commodity must receive a higher priority in military production planning, but few nations in wartime could shift production to knitting mills rapidly enough to make a difference. Thus, in Britain and the U.S, the best policy option proved to be recruiting women and children civilians to knit socks by hand for the military in the first war, and for refugees, prisoners and civilians in the second. This paper discusses the economic and military importance of this effort, including the numbers of pairs produced, and the program’s role in supplementing industrial production. The production of this low-technology but crucial item of military apparel is typical of detail-oriented tasks performed by women under conditions of full mobilization for war, in that they have a high impact on battlefield and home front performance and morale, but very low visibility as significant contributions to national defense. Often, both during and after the emergency, these efforts are ridiculed as trivial and/or wasteful. Unlike women pilots or industrial workers, handcrafters of essential supplies are regarded as performing extensions of their domestic roles as makers and caretakers of clothing and food. This was especially true in the U.S. in and after World War II, a wealthy industrialized nation that took pride in its modern - and thoroughly masculinist - military industrial complex.
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spelling doaj.art-878ed1efd3a84f479e227c717db1eb4b2023-07-31T08:50:17ZengAdam Mickiewicz University, PoznanStudia Historiae Oeconomicae0081-64852353-75152019-12-013710.2478/sho-2019-0005Socks at War: American Hand Knitters and Military Footwear Production for the World WarsRachel P. Maines0Columbia University in the City of New York In both World Wars, combatant nations, including the United States, Britain, and Germany, learned that inadequate or poorly-maintained footwear produced costly and preventable casualties from trench foot and frostbite. While provision of shoes and boots to troops were major issues in earlier conflicts, no nation before World War I had fully appreciated the significance of warm, dry, well-fitting socks to the effectiveness of soldiers in the field. The large numbers of trench foot casualties in World War I, especially among the French and British, convinced policymakers that this vital commodity must receive a higher priority in military production planning, but few nations in wartime could shift production to knitting mills rapidly enough to make a difference. Thus, in Britain and the U.S, the best policy option proved to be recruiting women and children civilians to knit socks by hand for the military in the first war, and for refugees, prisoners and civilians in the second. This paper discusses the economic and military importance of this effort, including the numbers of pairs produced, and the program’s role in supplementing industrial production. The production of this low-technology but crucial item of military apparel is typical of detail-oriented tasks performed by women under conditions of full mobilization for war, in that they have a high impact on battlefield and home front performance and morale, but very low visibility as significant contributions to national defense. Often, both during and after the emergency, these efforts are ridiculed as trivial and/or wasteful. Unlike women pilots or industrial workers, handcrafters of essential supplies are regarded as performing extensions of their domestic roles as makers and caretakers of clothing and food. This was especially true in the U.S. in and after World War II, a wealthy industrialized nation that took pride in its modern - and thoroughly masculinist - military industrial complex. https://pressto.amu.edu.pl/index.php/sho/article/view/29048socksknittingmilitary clothingproducer logisticsworld wartrenchfoot
spellingShingle Rachel P. Maines
Socks at War: American Hand Knitters and Military Footwear Production for the World Wars
Studia Historiae Oeconomicae
socks
knitting
military clothing
producer logistics
world war
trenchfoot
title Socks at War: American Hand Knitters and Military Footwear Production for the World Wars
title_full Socks at War: American Hand Knitters and Military Footwear Production for the World Wars
title_fullStr Socks at War: American Hand Knitters and Military Footwear Production for the World Wars
title_full_unstemmed Socks at War: American Hand Knitters and Military Footwear Production for the World Wars
title_short Socks at War: American Hand Knitters and Military Footwear Production for the World Wars
title_sort socks at war american hand knitters and military footwear production for the world wars
topic socks
knitting
military clothing
producer logistics
world war
trenchfoot
url https://pressto.amu.edu.pl/index.php/sho/article/view/29048
work_keys_str_mv AT rachelpmaines socksatwaramericanhandknittersandmilitaryfootwearproductionfortheworldwars