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container, secured by a padlock or combination lock, used by soldiers or other military personnel to store their belongings. The name is derived from the fact that they are typically placed at the foot of a soldier's bunk or bed. The term "footlocker" is currently used in recruit training in the
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Depending on the nature of the troop movement, footlockers would be shipped when the military unit was deployed to a base. However, if the unit was simply on a training assignment, the footlockers would remain at the training barracks and each soldier would either be issued or procure his own
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were noticeably different (especially during the World War II era) and issued to officers and some non-commissioned officers who were lucky enough to be issued or re-issued them. They were built better than the other two designs, with metal strapping along all of the corners and edges and
204:-inch-thick (32 mm) plywood, depending on war material needs and/or desire to reduce weight and cost of manufacture and cost of shipping). The corners are reinforced with straps of metal riveted to the locker, and had thick wooden handles on both sides for lifting by hand. After
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are used today in military installations and military academies. Sometimes referred to as trunks, the use of footlockers in the military has decreased over the years. Their largest military user is the
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218:-inch-thick (6.4 mm) (or thinner) plywood tray which could store some of the smaller items used by a soldier, and the larger items were kept below the tray.
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now also make civilian models such as Two-Wheeled type footlockers, top handle style footlockers, and traditional side handle style footlockers.
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Most footlockers are made of plywood, but starting in World War II some footlockers were made out of a form of cardboard, which evolved into
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Also in the past few years or 3 decades. Companies that make footlockers for the military such as
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handles on both sides. They were also made from better materials, stronger
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footlocker for transporting his possessions. The soldier's name would be
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footlockers in that they were either made out of old
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172:are a common type of footlocker used by the
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270:on the outside, along with his
283:United States Military Academy
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318:United States Army equipment
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159:United States Marine Corps
186:-inch-thick (13 mm)
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139:National Infantry Museum
143:South Columbus, Georgia
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16:Type of trunk or chest
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240:Officer footlockers
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107:December 2009
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