- Hobnail (footwear)
In
footwear , a hobnail is a short nail with a thick head used to increase the durability ofboot sole s.Hobnailed boots have been used since antiquity for inexpensive durable footwear, often by workmen and the
military . They are boots with hobnails, usually installed in a regular pattern, over the whole sole. They also usually have an ironhorseshoe -shaped insert, called aheel iron , to strengthen the heel and an iron toe-piece. They provide traction on soft or rocky ground, but they tend to slide on smooth hard surfaces.Hobnails were used in the
trench boot s ofWorld War I . [http://www.worldwar1.com/dbc/l_tanks.htm]In popular culture
*Hobnail boots were worn by the narrator's father in
Lonnie Donegan 's 1960 #1 single, "My Old Man's a Dustman".
*Lou Reed , then ofThe Velvet Underground , mentions hobnail boots ("Seasick Sarah/had a golden nose/Hobnail boots/wrapped around her toes") in the song "Run, Run, Run" featured on the 1967 album, "The Velvet Underground and Nico ".
*TheBeatles song "Happiness Is a Warm Gun ", from the 1968 'White Album ', features a description of a man with "multi-coloured mirrors on his hobnail boots".
*InNick Cave 's song "John Finn's Wife", John Finn is described to have "filed-down teeth and a hobnail boot and his fists full of pistols in his pockets."
*In 2001, hobnail boots were referenced in the Tony Award winning Musical "" in "Cop Song" as the song goes, "Certainly a season/trample out a treason/with hobnail boots".
*InHarry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Fenrir Greyback is described as wearing hobnailed boots.
*Following theGeorgia Bulldogs last minute winning touchdown against the Tennessee Volunteers in their October 6, 2001 football game Bulldogs radio announcerLarry Munson who is famous for off-beat analogies claimed that "We just stepped on their face with a hobnail boot and broke their nose!"References
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