Item:
ONJR24MG103

In stock

Original U.S. WWII Rare Engineer Blucher Style Leather Boots with Original Leather Laces - Dated 1942 - Size 10½

Regular price $395.00

Item Description

Original Item. Only One Available. This is an extremely scarce pair of WWII Blucher style engineer boots as worn during the Aleutian Campaign in Alaska from 1942-1943. The boots are in great shape overall with both retaining their rare leather laces.

The boots are both marked on the interior:

10½C 6524
N.A. PACKARD CO.
BOSTON JUNE 29 W155
DEPOT 1942 QM 13371 

The right boot is leaning a bit but with some proper stuffing, it will display very well. The metal grommets on both shoes have very heavy verdigris from age and storage. These are described in the Quartermaster Books as Boots, Blucher, High Top (Stock No. 72-B-128-8 - 72-B-133-18). There isn’t any serious damage to either boot and they are perfect for a display. Comes ready for further research and display!

The Aleutian Islands campaign was a military campaign fought between 3 June 1942 and 15 August 1943 on and around the Aleutian Islands in the American Theater of World War II during the Pacific War. It was the only military campaign of World War II fought on North American soil.

The islands' strategic value was their ability to control Pacific transportation routes as US General Billy Mitchell stated to the U.S. Congress in 1935, "I believe that in the future, whoever holds Alaska will hold the world. I think it is the most important strategic place in the world." The Japanese reasoned that their control of the Aleutians would prevent a possible joining of forces by the Americans and the Soviets and future attack on Japan proper via the Kuril Islands.: 19  Similarly, the US feared that the islands could be used as bases from which to launch air raids on West Coast cities such as Anchorage, Seattle, San Francisco, or Los Angeles.

Following two aircraft carrier-based attacks on the American naval base at Dutch Harbor, the Imperial Japanese Navy occupied the islands of Attu and Kiska, where the remoteness of the islands and the challenges of weather and terrain delayed a larger American-Canadian force sent to eject them for nearly a year. A battle to reclaim Attu was launched on 11 May 1943 and completed after a final Japanese banzai charge on 29 May. On 15 August 1943 an invasion force landed on Kiska in the wake of a sustained three-week barrage, only to discover that the Japanese had withdrawn from the island on 29 July. The campaign is known as the "Forgotten Battle" because it has been overshadowed by other events in the war.

Many military historians believe that the Japanese invasion of the Aleutians was a diversionary or feint attack during the Battle of Midway that was meant to draw out the US Pacific Fleet from Midway Atoll, as it was launched simultaneously under the same commander, Isoroku Yamamoto. Some historians have argued against that interpretation and believe that the Japanese invaded the Aleutians to protect their northern flank and did not intend it as a diversion.

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