spur-leather
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]spur-leather (plural spur-leathers)
- A leather strap for attaching a spur to a boot.
- 1598, Ben Jonson, edited by Percy Simpson, Every Man in His Humour[1], Oxford: Clarendon Press, published 1919, act II, scene 1, page 26:
- ’Sdeath, he mads me, I could eate my very spur-lethers, for anger!
- 1643, William Davenant, The Unfortunate Lovers[2], London: Francis Coles, act III, scene 1, page 26:
- I have a brother lives there, Sir, he is
A Shoe-maker, and lately sent me post
A patterne of the finest Spur-leather;
I was so admir’d at Court.
- 1862, The Groom, London: Houlston & Wright, The Industrial Library, Chapter 4, p. 44,[3]
- […] the groom should see that […] the spur leathers [are] attached as soon as the spurs are cleaned. It is very annoying to have a general hunt for spur-leathers five minutes before mounting.
- 1907, Stewart Edward White, chapter 9, in Camp and Trail[4], New York: Doubleday, Page & Co., page 154:
- The wide spur leathers are to protect the boot from chafing on the stirrups.