The original Pattern 1037 was made from 1887 to 1907. During the
Second Boer War (1899–1902), civilian manufacturers made a series of variants on the Pattern 1037 due to differing manufacturing techniques (like machine-sewn uppers or glued-on outer soles). soldiers in
No.3 dress and ammunition boots.An improved 1037i pattern was adopted from 1907 to 1911. It was temporarily replaced by the similar 7325 and 7326 patterns from 1911 to 1914 while they did research for a replacement boot. The experimental "A" and "HN" series were also made during this time but were obsolete by the dawn of the First World War. By 1915, the "B" series was begun, consisting chiefly of the "B2" and "B5". It was a pattern of ammunition boot with woven cotton laces, a plain-leather counter, and lacked the leather toe cap. It was created to save leather and increase production. To reinforce the boot and increase wear the B2 series had a horizontal seam between the parts of the upper and the "B5" series had rivets between the vamp and quarters. In 1918, the post-war 9902 pattern came into service. It had a "clump sole" (one-piece sole and heel), smooth leather vamp and quarters, and pebbled-leather counter and toe-cap. It came in brown leather, but was polished black. In 1924, the Pattern 4055 boot, forerunner of the
Boot, General Service (BGS) was issued. It came in brown leather and had 25 hobnails. In 1927, the later Pattern 10085 boot, the BGS, was similar except it came in black leather.
Variant patterns Vehicle drivers wore boots without
hobnails because they would damage the pedals and create sparks. This was extended to armoured vehicle crews in the
Royal Tank Regiment and
Reconnaissance Corps in 1942, as well as to the crews of waterborne craft of the
Royal Army Service Corps in 1943. Specialists and ammunition storemen were issued regular ammunition boots with rubber heels and rubber crepe soles that lacked the hobnails and steel heel- and toe-plates. This was to avoid creating sparks near flammable or explosive stores (like gunpowder or gasoline).
Commandos were issued them to make it easier for them to move silently. During the Second World War, 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. using shoe polish and
beeswax The boots were the focus of much
drill and attention. Achieving a high
polish was often the aim and required hours of
"bulling" (vigorous polishing) until it achieved a mirror like shine. Experienced soldiers would "burn-down" the dimpled surface of the boots with
beeswax and a heated spoon to make them smooth and easier to shine. Beginning in 1958, the Ammunition Boot was gradually phased out by the
Boot, Direct Moulded Sole, which was essentially the same boot with a direct moulded sole and a slightly different stitching pattern. It served the British Army until the 1980s, when it was replaced by the
Boot, Combat High. The DMS boots were derided by British soldiers, who found the boot to be uncomfortable for long periods of wear, insufficiently insulated and prone to severe waterlogging, which would cause severe cases of trench foot in wet environments. This problem was most exemplified during the
Falklands War, where British soldiers were alleged to have looted dead Argentinean soldiers for their high-leg boots. ==See also==