Bobbysoxers
The white anklets known as bobby sox (socks) rocked the
conservative world when teenagers began wearing the socks with
saddle shoes as a form of adolescent rebellion in the late 40s.
During the war years, rationing of silk and nylon prohibited
women from wearing their stockings. Improvising, the British made
a short ankle sock to replace nylons, and the bobby sock was born.
American women preferred either to go barelegged or to paint
their legs with makeup the colour of stockings (complete with back
seam painted on), so young girls were left to adopt the short sock
for themselves. They called it the "bobby" sock, after
the British slang for police officers.
Bobby socks started as a rebellious fad, but soon became the
quintessential teen fashion of the 50s. Girls who couldn't get the
original anklet made their own bobby socks by folding down a white
calf sock into a thick cuff.
The short socks were made visible by cuffing up the denim
trouser leg to mid-calf height. The girls who wore these anklets
were dubbed "bobby soxers", and the trend spread to high
school girls across the USA.
The socks received even more attention when they starred in
"sock hops" - dance gatherings wherein the kids would
take off their shoes and dance in their socks. While dancing in
socks might have seemed rebellious, it was actually to prevent the
polished gymnasium floor from being scuffed by the black soles of
the popular saddle shoes.
Innocent as they seemed, these white socks set teens on the
path of rebellion, or at least that was what parents believed.
While the bobby sock was not necessarily responsible for
teenage angst and rebellion, it was a strong expression of it,
commonly linked with the real plague against conservativism: rock
and roll. Parents didn't stand a chance.
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