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Wellington Boot




The Wellington boot, also known as a '''welly''', a '''wellie''', a '''gumboot''' or a '''rubber boot''', is a type of Boot based upon Hessian Boot s worn and popularised by Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke Of Wellington and fashionable among the British Aristocracy in the early 19th Century .

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 closer around the leg. 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 in his 1815 portrait by James Lonsdale .)

These boots quickly caught on with patriotic British gentlemen eager to emulate their war hero. Considered fashionable and foppish in the best circles, they remained the main fashion for men through the 1840s. In the 1950s they were more commonly made in the calf high version and in the 1960s they were both superseded by the ankle boot, except for riding.

These boots were at first made of leather. However in 1852, Hiram Hutchinson met Charles Goodyear who just had invented the vulcanisation 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," in honour of his home country). 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 an immediate success: farmers were finally able to come home their feet dry and mud-free.

Now 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. They are generally just below knee-high.

In Britain , there is a light-hearted sport, known as Wellie Wanging , which involves throwing Wellington boots as far as possible. The boots, especially Black Rubber, are also popular Fetish items among many people.

The boot has also given its name to the Welly Boot Dance , said to have been performed by miners in Africa 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.

Wellington boots, though invented in Britain, are very popular in Canada, particularly in springtime, when melting snows leave wet and muddy ground for a couple of months. Children can be seen wearing them to school and taking them to summer camps.

Green Wellingtons are most popular in Britain, while black Wellingtons, particularly with red or green soles, remain the favourite of Canadians. Yellow-soled black Wellingtons 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.


GUMBOOTS - NEW ZEALAND & AUSTRALIA

In New Zealand , where they are called gumboots, they are considered essential foot wear for Farmers . Gumboots are often referred to in Kiwi popular culture such as Footrot Flats . In 1976, satirist John Clarke 's alter ego Fred Dagg reworked Billy Connolly's Welly Boot song as "If it weren't for your Gumboots", and created a hit. The farming town of Taihape in New Zealand's North Island proclaims itself "Gumboot capital of the World" and has annual competitions such as Gumboot throwing. Most gumboots are black, but those used in hospitals by operating theatre staff and surgeons are white, and children's sizes come in multiple colours.

They are also called Gumboots in Australia .


TOPBOOTS - 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.


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