![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#21
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
R wrote:
"vincent p. norris" wrote in message ... Once upon a time all the Navy and Marines wore brown shoes. More precisely, at least when I was in, 1946-47 and 51-54, marines wore cordovan shoes. So dark brown they could pass for black. Worn with dress blues as well a greens and khakis. When I became a Midshipman, V-5 (aviation cadet) in 1949, we were issued black shoes to wear with khakis, whites, and blues. I believe in late 1963/early 1964 the Marines changed to black shoes. Last marine I saw, a couple of years ago, was wearing cordovan shoes. vince norris During my time in the USMCR (57-59) enlisted wore brown, officers wore cordovan and all wore brown boots. Sharp dressed Marines enlisted personnel would put a light coat of black polish on their dress shoes occasionally, to make them look better with a kind of "highlighted effect", but if you overdid it, the Gunny would see that you were occupied after hours with saddle soap taking it down to bare leather and starting over again. I am pretty sure that they changed to all black in late 63. During my time in the Navy, I spent a year (actually 16 months) with the Marines in ANLICO and all the Marines at Camp Lejeune NC wore black shoes and boots, and dirty boots in Vietnam (1966) . From 73-94, I didn't really look that close, but the Marines around the Navy Annex, and Pentagon wore black shoes. Sometime in the 90's they started wearing brown boots again. I have seen Marines almost every day since I retired from DOD in 94, and they all wear black shoes. Today boots can be black with the old style Woodland camo uniform or brown with the new type computer generated camo pattern uniform. I haven't asked, so I don't know if black bots can be worn with the new camo, or if brown boots can be worn with old camo. And I have no idea what color boots are appropriate to wear with the new camo, and the Gor-Tex Woodland Extreme Weather Parka. Red Rider Sh*t! the next thing you know a person in the US Armed Forces will have to have a butler to get properly dressed. Some of the Air Force officers I work with have told me that the large number of unifornms required of a Naval Officer was one of the factors that led them to join the Air Force. Joe -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#22
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Peter - Are you sorry that you asked your question? g
This uniform was also worn during the Veracruz affair of 1914 and is the beginnings of khaki use in the USN. FADM Halsey's autobiography speaks of his ship's company boiling their whites in coffee to supplement the Vera Cruz landing force with gobs in uniforms appropriate to the task. (Halsey was a blackshoe destroyerman at the time, and his ship was a part of the Vera Cruz operation.) During the war Fleet Admiral EJ King designed a grey uniform that he proposed to be all purpose, eliminating khaki and the service dress blues (which he felt, reportedly, were too much like the Royal Navy). An additional reason posited for the grey uniform - somewhat hokey IMHO - was that personnel would blend in with grey-painted hull and not stand out as they would in blues, khakis or whites. -- Mike Kanze 436 Greenbrier Road Half Moon Bay, California 94019-2259 USA 650-726-7890 "When I read about the evils of drinking, I gave up reading." - Henny Youngman "Rich" wrote in message om... "Justin Broderick" wrote in message k.net... "R" wrote in message m... [rest snipped] |
#23
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Peter Twydell wrote:
Certainly unforgettable, an extremely clever and talented man, but he was never a Goon. Somebody must have dropped a great heavy lump of coal on my head. Not a Goon after all, even though he appeared *on* the show, didn't he? I was under the impression that he was the Goons' pianist. -- John Miller My email address: domain, n4vu.com; username, jsm Cats, no less liquid than their shadows, offer no angles to the wind. |
#24
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#26
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I haven't seen anyone wearing Aviation Greens since the mid 80's. They are
still in the Uniform Regs though. (As someone stated earlier, we have enough uniforms to drag around with us.) JD "Doug "Woody" and Erin Beal" wrote in message ... On 10/27/03 3:34 PM, in article , "Justin Broderick" wrote: (Rich) wrote in message . com... During the war Fleet Admiral EJ King designed a grey uniform that he proposed to be all purpose, eliminating khaki and the service dress blues (which he felt, reportedly, were too much like the Royal Navy). Never a popular uniform and generally only worn in King's presence or in East Coast commands where he was likely to appear, it barely survived his tenure and was no longer authorized after 1948. Working gray was supposed to replace working khaki, but not service dress blue. After early '43 blues could be "dress," which was the basic pre-war SD blues (A, B or C), or "service" which could have stripes only halfway round the sleeves and could be worn with the "service" combination cap (black chinstrap instead of gold and no scambled eggs) or blue garrison cap. Service blues could also be worn with the gray shirt and collar insignia, another of King's ideas that didn't really catch on. Gray short-sleeved shirts and shorts were also supposed to replace tropical khaki, but I don't know if anyone ever actually wore it. Grays were considered something of an abomination in the PTO. For a brief time in the 1980's aviation greens were not authorized and the use of brown shoes with khakis was likewise done away with, but in recent years greens have made a comeback and are authorized to be worn with brown shoes. Did Lehman bring back the aviation greens? --Justin They never went away. It's just that most folks choose not to buy them, and since their a working uniform, no aviation skipper I know of has ever required their wear. --Woody |
#27
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
During my time in the USMCR (57-59) enlisted wore brown,
Could you give me a little more info? "Brown" covers a lot of territory. Was it a very dark brown, that could be mistaken for black, or a lighter brown? officers wore cordovan and all wore brown boots. By "boots" I assume you mean something that sort of resembled the paratrooper boots of WW II? We had nothing like that when I was in. We had ankle-high "field shoes," which we called "boondockers," that were made of inside-out (suede) leather that was very light brown when new. I can't recall ever hearing them called "boots." They were nice in a cold drafty airplane in winter; we could tuck the legs of the flight suit into them. vince norris Sharp dressed Marines enlisted personnel would put a light coat of black polish on their dress shoes occasionally, to make them look better with a kind of "highlighted effect", but if you overdid it, the Gunny would see that you were occupied after hours with saddle soap taking it down to bare leather and starting over again. I am pretty sure that they changed to all black in late 63. During my time in the Navy, I spent a year (actually 16 months) with the Marines in ANLICO and all the Marines at Camp Lejeune NC wore black shoes and boots, and dirty boots in Vietnam (1966) . From 73-94, I didn't really look that close, but the Marines around the Navy Annex, and Pentagon wore black shoes. Sometime in the 90's they started wearing brown boots again. I have seen Marines almost every day since I retired from DOD in 94, and they all wear black shoes. Today boots can be black with the old style Woodland camo uniform or brown with the new type computer generated camo pattern uniform. I haven't asked, so I don't know if black bots can be worn with the new camo, or if brown boots can be worn with old camo. And I have no idea what color boots are appropriate to wear with the new camo, and the Gor-Tex Woodland Extreme Weather Parka. Red Rider Sh*t! the next thing you know a person in the US Armed Forces will have to have a butler to get properly dressed. |
#28
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I haven't seen anyone wearing Aviation Greens since the mid 80's.
They were pretty expensive- You could blow about $650 on the whole set real fast. I located my jacket and pants in a thrift shop, so all I had to get was a few long sleeve shirts at the uniform shop. I made it a point to wear mine for the 50th anniversary of the bombing of Pearl Harbor when I was stationed at Barbers Point, Hawaii. I was amazed how many folks had never seen it before. I always thought it was a really cool looking uniform and I enjoyed the "nostalgia". Yes, the wool was kinda warm during the day- oh well :-) Larry AECS (AW/SW/MTS) Disabled Combat Veteran USN Retired 20 years of Navy in my rear view mirror and getting further away every day ;-) "Jake Donovan" wrote in message news:dahnb.1208$Re.840@lakeread06... I haven't seen anyone wearing Aviation Greens since the mid 80's. They are still in the Uniform Regs though. (As someone stated earlier, we have enough uniforms to drag around with us.) JD "Doug "Woody" and Erin Beal" wrote in message ... On 10/27/03 3:34 PM, in article , "Justin Broderick" wrote: (Rich) wrote in message . com... During the war Fleet Admiral EJ King designed a grey uniform that he proposed to be all purpose, eliminating khaki and the service dress blues (which he felt, reportedly, were too much like the Royal Navy). Never a popular uniform and generally only worn in King's presence or in East Coast commands where he was likely to appear, it barely survived his tenure and was no longer authorized after 1948. Working gray was supposed to replace working khaki, but not service dress blue. After early '43 blues could be "dress," which was the basic pre-war SD blues (A, B or C), or "service" which could have stripes only halfway round the sleeves and could be worn with the "service" combination cap (black chinstrap instead of gold and no scambled eggs) or blue garrison cap. Service blues could also be worn with the gray shirt and collar insignia, another of King's ideas that didn't really catch on. Gray short-sleeved shirts and shorts were also supposed to replace tropical khaki, but I don't know if anyone ever actually wore it. Grays were considered something of an abomination in the PTO. For a brief time in the 1980's aviation greens were not authorized and the use of brown shoes with khakis was likewise done away with, but in recent years greens have made a comeback and are authorized to be worn with brown shoes. Did Lehman bring back the aviation greens? --Justin They never went away. It's just that most folks choose not to buy them, and since their a working uniform, no aviation skipper I know of has ever required their wear. --Woody |
#29
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , John Miller writes
Peter Twydell wrote: Certainly unforgettable, an extremely clever and talented man, but he was never a Goon. Somebody must have dropped a great heavy lump of coal on my head. Not a Goon after all, even though he appeared *on* the show, didn't he? I was under the impression that he was the Goons' pianist. Are you sure it wasn't a batter pudding that hit you? Dud was born in 1935, which makes him a bit young. AFAIK he never appeared in a Goon Show. The musicians were a BBC outfit led by Wally Stott, the Ray Ellington Quartet, and Max Geldray. -- Peter Ying tong iddle-i po! |
#30
|
|||
|
|||
![]() We had nothing like that when I was in. We had ankle-high "field shoes," which we called "boondockers," that were made of inside-out (suede) leather that was very light brown when new. I can't recall ever hearing them called "boots." They were nice in a cold drafty airplane in winter; we could tuck the legs of the flight suit into them. vince norris That doesn't make sense, because somehow, the first sentence of the second paragraph got lost in the shuffle. It should read: Some of us (pilots) wore half-Wellingtons, which we did call "boots." They were nice in a cold drafty airplane in winter; we could tuck the legs of the flight suit into them. vince norris |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
AOPA Stall/Spin Study -- Stowell's Review (8,000 words) | Rich Stowell | Aerobatics | 28 | January 2nd 09 02:26 PM |
bush rules! | Be Kind | Military Aviation | 53 | February 14th 04 04:26 PM |
us air force us air force academy us air force bases air force museum us us air force rank us air force reserve adfunk | Jehad Internet | Military Aviation | 0 | February 7th 04 04:24 AM |
PC flight simulators | Bjørnar Bolsøy | Military Aviation | 178 | December 14th 03 12:14 PM |
Wearing a G-1 flight jacket off base? | Michael | Naval Aviation | 31 | October 25th 03 08:29 AM |