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

IF 0.1 Q4 ECONOMICS
R. Maines
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Abstract

Abstract 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.
战争中的袜子:世界大战中的美国手织和军用鞋类生产
摘要在两次世界大战中,包括美国、英国和德国在内的作战国家都了解到,不足或维护不善的鞋类会导致战壕脚和冻伤造成昂贵且可预防的伤亡。虽然向部队提供鞋子和靴子是早期冲突中的主要问题,但在第一次世界大战之前,没有一个国家充分意识到温暖、干燥、合身的袜子对士兵在战场上的效力的重要性。第一次世界大战中战壕脚的大量伤亡,尤其是法国和英国的伤亡,使政策制定者相信,在军事生产计划中,这种至关重要的商品必须得到更高的优先考虑,但很少有国家能在战时迅速将生产转移到针织厂,从而有所作为。因此,在英国和美国,最好的政策选择是在第一次战争中招募妇女和儿童平民为军队手工编织袜子,在第二次战争中为难民、囚犯和平民手工编织袜子。本文讨论了这项工作的经济和军事重要性,包括生产的对数,以及该计划在补充工业生产中的作用。这种技术含量低但至关重要的军用服装的生产是女性在全面动员作战的条件下执行的以细节为导向的任务的典型,因为它们对战场和前线的表现和士气有很大影响,但作为对国防的重大贡献,其知名度非常低。通常,无论是在紧急情况期间还是之后,这些努力都被嘲笑为微不足道和/或浪费。与女飞行员或工业工人不同,基本用品的手工艺人被视为她们作为服装和食品制造商和看护人的家庭角色的延伸。在第二次世界大战期间和之后的美国尤其如此,这个富裕的工业化国家以其现代的、完全是男性主义的军工复合体而自豪。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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