Reenactor Lessons: How to Measure Your Feet

"Fort Belvoir, Va. Sept. 1942. Issuing shoes to George Camblair at the clothing warehouse at camp"

“Fort Belvoir, Va. Sept. 1942. Issuing shoes to George Camblair at the clothing warehouse at camp”

Based off of Combat Lessons, Rank and File In Combat: What They’re Doing, How They Do It series from World War II, this series will offer guides for reenactors for fairly common problems. The topics are drawn from questions that we have received, mostly from new reenactors, over the years. This one will cover how one should go about getting their feet properly measured so they can have well-fitting shoes.

During World War II the US Army was keenly aware of the importance of properly fitted footwear in regards to the health and comfort of its soldiers and because of this they Army stocked over 90 different sizes of their service shoe and would special order sizes for soldiers as needed. In order to facilitate the issuing of well-fitted shoes the Army established a detailed shoe fitting regime that utilized special machinery, well-trained soldiers of the Quartermaster Corps, and personal checks by commissioned officers.Technical Manual (TM) 10-228: Fitting of Shoes and Socks dated February 15, 1946, states the following in regards to a correctly fitted shoe:
“The correctly fitted shoe holds the foot securely but not too firmly. It allows sufficient room in all of its dimensions for each component of the foot to function normally and with complete freedom from discomfort. It does not interfere with the proper position and functional spread of the weight-bearing portion of the foot, since there is no congestion at any point, and no strain or pressure which will cause distress or foot injury. In a correctly fitted shoe, there is no slipping at the heel and no backward pressure which prevents the normal gripping of the toes or tends to weaken the bones of the arch. For a foot to function as it should, the shoes worn must comply with the basic principles of proper shoe fitting. To violate materially any of these essentials is to invite foot trouble.” This is as true for soldiers in 1944 as it is for reenactors today. We will be using a mixture of wartime Army Manuals and Regulations in order to best illustrate and explain the best way for you to find your proper shoe size for World War II era US Army Boots and Shoes at home. Those Regulations and Manuals are:
-Army Regulations (AR) 850-125 Miscellaneous: Foot Measuring and Shoe Fitting dated July 6, 1942
-AR 850-125 Miscellaneous: Foot Measuring and Fitting of Shoes and Socks dated June 9, 1943
-TM 10-228: Fitting of Shoes and Socks dated February 15, 1946.

As such we will be using the standard men’s Brannock Device. A special “Brannock double unit foot-measuring machine” first started being issued for use at reception centers at the start of the war. It differed from the standard men’s Brannock Device principally in that it was double footed and had a toe slider. Because of the rarity and expense of all World War II US Army foot measuring machines, we will be substituting the standard men’s Brannock Device do to its availability and being inexpensive while still being functionally the same of the US Army issue version.