The Ninth Ohio
First Sergeant
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2017
- Location
- Queen City of the West
Nah.It was tradition - 'wet the boot and wear it'. I learned it from my instructors in the Army Cadet Force in the 1960s. They learned it from their instructors during the War - many of whom had served in the previous conflict and learned it from their instructors.
Many on the Confederate side even marched barefoot - their boots fell apart and, since there were none available they marched barefoot - no socks visible. Look at the corpses on the field of battle - few are wearing boots - even if they were wearing them before. It was one way of getting some boots when the Quartermaster failed to supply.
Trying to prove that people did or did not do things in a traditional way, is near impossible for there will be no record. It was just 'the way we did it'. How do you prove that some soldiers roasted rabbit on their bayonets? Did the bayonets pass inspection the next morning? How they polish their boots? How do you wash and shave when there is no water?
Quartermaster records show socks were pretty widely available. Having no socks was the exception, mostly for new enlistments with no supply available, or those on campaign far away from supply.
This just reads like another one of those "aww shucks" history claims that never actually happened.