- Wellington boot
The Wellington boot, also known as a wellie, a topboot, a gumboot, or a rubber boot, is a type of
boot based uponHessian boot s. It was worn and popularised by Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington and fashionable among the Britisharistocracy in the early 19th century.Wellington boots are waterproof and are most often made from
Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC) ahalogenated polymer . They are usually worn when walking on wet or muddy ground, or to protect the wearer from heavy showers. They are generally just below knee-high.Origins
The first Duke of Wellington instructed his shoemaker, Hoby of St. James' Street, London, to modify the 18th century Hessian boot. The resulting new boot designed in soft calfskin leather had the trim removed and was cut more closely around the leg. The heels were low cut, stacked around an inch, and the boot stopped at mid-calf. It was hard wearing for battle yet comfortable for the evening. The Iron Duke didn't know what he'd started—the boot was dubbed the Wellington and the name has stuck ever since. The Duke can be seen wearing the boots, which are tasseled, in an 1815 portrait by James Lonsdale. [ [http://www.number-10.gov.uk/output/Page2951.asp James Lonsdale's portrait of Wellington] ]
The boots quickly caught on with patriotic British gentlemen eager to emulate their war hero. Considered fashionable and foppish in the best circles and worn by
dandies , such asBeau Brummell , they remained the main fashion for men through the 1840s. In the 1850s they were more commonly made in the calf high version and in the 1860s they were both superseded by the ankle boot, except for riding.These boots were at first made of leather. However in 1852,
Hiram Hutchinson metCharles Goodyear who had just invented thevulcanization process for natural rubber. While Goodyear decided to manufacture tyres, Hutchinson bought the patent to manufacture footwear and moved to France to establish "A l'Aigle" in 1853 ("To the Eagle", to honour his home country. The company today is simply called "AIGLE", "Eagle"). In a country where 95% of the population were working on fields with wooden clogs as it had been for generations, the introduction of the Wellington type rubber boot became a success: farmers will be able to come back home with clean dry feet.Production of the Wellington boot was dramatically boosted with the advent of
World War I due to the demand for a sturdy boot suitable for the conditions in floodedtrenches . Making the wellington boot a functional necessity.Again the Wellington boot played an important contribution during
World War II . At the outbreak of war inSeptember 1939 , although trench warfare was not a feature of the war, the wellington still played an important role. Those forces assigned the task of clearingHolland of the enemy had to work in terrible flooded conditions.By the end of the war the wellington had become popular among men, women and children for wear in wet weather. The boot had developed to become far roomier with a thick sole and rounded toe. Also, with the
rationing of that time, labourers began to use them for daily work.Wellington boots are waterproof and are most often made from
rubber or a synthetic equivalent. They are usually worn when walking on very wet or muddy ground, or to protect the wearer from industrial chemicals and they are traditionally knee-height.Usage and terminology in other countries
Canada and the US
Wellington boots, almost always simply called rubber boots, are popular in Canada and the northern US states, particularly in springtime when melting snows leave wet and muddy ground. Young people can be seen wearing them to school or university and taking them to summer camps.
While green Wellingtons are popular in Britain, yellow-soled black rubber boots are often seen in the US, in addition to Canadian styles. Wellingtons specifically made for cold weather, lined with warm insulating material, are especially popular during Canadian winters. In Britain "Wellington Boots" are often abbreviated simply to "Wellies".Lately designers have made rubber boots another item of fashionable footwear.
In the U.S. white mid-calf rubber boots are worn by workers on shrimp boats.
Popular alternatives to Wellington boots in the US are "gumboots" manufactured and sold by
L.L.Bean . These are based on the original "Maine Hunting Shoe" and combine a rubber shoe with stitched leather leggings of various heights.Colloquially known as shitkicker boots and shitkickers in agricultural and farm settings, due to being worn in mud and animal pens.
New Zealand
In
New Zealand , Wellingtons are called gumboots and they are considered essential foot wear forfarmers . Gumboots are often referred to in Kiwi popular culture such asFootrot Flats . The farming town ofTaihape in New Zealand'sNorth Island proclaims itself "Gumboot capital of the World" and has annual competitions and events such asGumboot Day where gumboots are thrown. Most gumboots are black, but those worn byabattoir workers, butchers, and by hospital operating theatre staff and surgeons are white, and children's sizes come in multiple colours.outhern Africa
They are also called gumboots in
Southern Africa .Australia
Though most commonly called gumboots, an alternative name "Blucher Boot" is occasionally heard there, used by some older Australians. Gummies is also a nickname used. Blücher was Wellington's colleague at
The Battle of Waterloo and there is speculation that some early emigrants to Australia, remembering the battle, may have preserved an earlier term for the boots that has died out elsewhere. The Australian poetHenry Lawson wrote a poem to a pair of Blucher Boots in 1890. [ [http://whitewolf.newcastle.edu.au/words/authors/L/LawsonHenry/verse/freemansjournal/blucherboots.html "To a Pair of Blucher Boots" by Henry Lawson] ]Ireland
In some parts of Ireland one can hear older people refer to their Wellington boots as "me topboots", usually black in colour, as this was a popular name for Wellingtons in the 1960s.
candinavia
The boots are also popular in Scandinavian countries. In fact, before its entry into the mobile phone business, rubber boots were among the best-known products of
Nokia . [ [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2005/08/07/ccshel07.xml&sSheet=/money/2005/08/07/ixcoms.html "London Telegraph"] ] [ [http://www.nokia.com/A4126378 Nokia] ] [ [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=950DE1DE113BF93BA15752C1A96F948260 "New York Times"] ]Russia
In
Russia rubber boots were first introduced in 1920s. Immediately, they became extremely popular because of Russian weather conditions. During the rule ofStalin , 17 factories which produced rubber boots were built in different parts of theUSSR . Along withvalenki in winter, rubber boots became a traditional footwear in springs and autumns.WhenNikita Khrushchev came to power, in frames of the "battle for modesty", rubber footwear was proclaimed as "Socialism style", whileleather , which was obviously more expensive, was as "Capitalism style". During the period 1961–1964 leather footwear disappeared fromSoviet shops. This process was abruptly halted byLeonid Brezhnev , who came to power in 1964. Usual footwear returned to shops, and rubber boots quickly lost their popularity.Wellingtons in sport and song
. The dance is said to have been performed by miners to keep their spirits up whilst working.
In 1974, Scottish comedian
Billy Connolly adopted a comical ode to the boot called "The Welly Boot Song" as his theme tune and it became one of his best-known songs. In 1976, satirist John Clarke's alter egoFred Dagg reworked Connolly's song as "If it weren't for your Gumboots", and created a hit. Wellies have also been used by the band,Gaelic Storm in their fifth full album "Bring Yer Wellies ," and in the song "Kelly's Wellies" on the same album.Between 1994 and 1996, the
UK 'sBBC1 created several series ofWilliam's Wish Wellingtons , about a boy named William whose magical red Wellington Boots could grant him wishes.In Britain, there is a light-hearted sport, known as
wellie wanging , which involves throwing Wellington boots as far as possible.References
ee also
*
Mackintosh
*Gumboot Day
*Beef Wellington
*Galoshes
*Gumbys
*William's Wish Wellingtons External links
* [http://firb.dreamhosters.com/ Internet Rubber Boot Archive]
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