Baseball uniform history
A baseball uniform is a type of uniform worn by baseball players. Most
baseball uniforms have the names and uniform numbers of players who wear them,
usually on the backs of the uniforms to distinguish players from one other.
Baseball shirts, pants, shoes, socks, caps, and glove are parts of baseball
uniforms. Most uniforms have different logos and colors to tell which team is
which. Uniforms are also worn to identify the two teams and officials apart.
Most baseball uniforms include the player's name and uniform number, usually on
the back (and sometimes the front) of the shirt, which helps the spectators
identify the different participants within a team. Uniform items typically
include shirts, pants, shoes, socks, caps, and gloves.
Baseball uniforms were first worn by the New York Knickerbockers Baseball Club
in 1849. Today, sales of replica uniforms and derivative branded products
generate large amounts of income for Major League teams through merchandising.
History
Early developments
The New York Knickerbockers were the first baseball team to use uniforms, taking
the field on April 4, 1849 in pants made of blue wool, white flannel shirts and
straw hats.[4] The practice of wearing a uniform soon spread, and by 1900, all
Major League Baseball teams had adopted them.[10] By 1882 most uniforms included
stockings, which covered the leg from foot to knee, and were used to
differentiate one club from another. The uniforms themselves had different
colors and patterns that reflected the different baseball positions. In the late
1880s, the Detroit Wolverines and Washington Nationals of the National League
and the Brooklyn Bridegrooms of the American Association were the first to
utilize striped uniforms.
Home and road uniforms
Jeff Tesreau, wearing a New York Giants' pinstriped baseball uniform, c.1912–18
By the end of the 19th century, teams began the practice of wearing one of two
different uniforms, one when they played in their own baseball stadium and a
different one when they played on the road. It became common to wear white at
home and one of gray, solid dark blue, or black on the road.[14] An early
examples of this is the Brooklyn Superbas, who started to use a blue pattern for
their road uniforms in 1907.
In 1916, on the Giants' road uniforms, purple lines gave their uniforms a
tartan-like effect and another kind of road uniform was a solid dark blue or
black material with white around this time. The Kansas City Athletics home and
road uniforms were changed by Charles O. Finley in 1963, to the colors of gold
and green.[15] Some teams used light blue for their road uniforms in the 1970s.
Early striped patterns developed into long stripes along the length of the
uniforms, called pin striping. This was first worn on some major league baseball
team's uniforms in 1907, and the pinstripes were then widened in 1912, so that
the crowd could see them more clearly.
The Brooklyn Bridegrooms started to use pinstriping in 1907, 1916 and 1917.
Satin and other items were added soon after pinstripes were added.[16][4][13]
Pinstripes were commonly worn on the uniforms of the New York Yankees. Legend
had it that the stripes were adopted to make Babe Ruth look slimmer,[17] but
since the Yankees had already been wearing pinstripes a few years before Ruth
played for them in 1912, the legend was found to be a myth.[18] The Yankees'
pinstripes on their home uniforms soon became a symbol of them and the team.
In 1916, the Cleveland Indians became the first team to add numbers on their
uniforms, positioned on the left sleeve of the home uniforms only. (Okkonen,
p.36, p.120) In 1929, numbers were first added on the backs of uniforms by the
New York Yankees and the Cleveland Indians. By 1932, all major league baseball
teams had numbers on their players' uniforms. The Brooklyn Dodgers, in 1952,
became the first baseball team to add numbers to the fronts of their uniforms.
Cap styles
A baseball team and their uniforms in the 1870s.
Caps, or other types of headgear with eyeshades, have been a part of baseball
uniforms from the beginning. Baseball teams often wore full-brimmed straw hats
or no cap at all since there was no official rule regrding headgear.
From the 1840s to the 1870s, baseball players various types of hats, such as
straw hats, boating caps, jockey caps, and even cycling caps. Caps, or other
types of headgear with eyeshades, have been a part of baseball uniforms since
the beginning.The Brooklyn Excelsiors were the first team to wear what would
later become the baseball cap, with its distinctive rounded top and peak, in the
1860s.
By the early years of the twentieth century, it became common for players to
wear hats with rounded tops, but some persisted with flat-topped caps, such as
the Giants in 1916, and the Pittsburgh Pirates as recently as during the 1979
World Series.In recent years, baseball caps have changed very little, although
over time, the peak has enlarged slightly to further protect the player's eyes
from the sun.
The Philadelphia Athletics in 1874 wearing their baseball uniforms
Shoes
In the late 19th century, soft but durable leather shoes were the preferred
choice of baseball players.
In the 1970s, as artificial turf became prominent on baseball fields,
modifications to footwear became necessary. Detachable spikes became popular in
the 20th century, as they helped players to avoid slipping, especially on turf,
but they were banned in 1976.
In the 19th century and the first part of the 20th, baseball shoes were commonly
black in color. In the 1960s, the Kansas City Athletics began wearing
revolutionary white shoes.
Stockings and pants
Alfonso Soriano wearing traditional knee-breeches.
Inspired by the Cincinnati Red Stockings, the stocking colors of teams in the
1860s onward were a principal device in distinguishing one team from another
(hence team names such as Chicago White Stockings, St. Louis Brown Stockings (or
Browns), etc.). Except for a few "candy-cane” varieties (particularly by the
Giants, St. Louis Cardinals and Washington Senators), striping was quite minimal
during the 1920s and, in contrast, a revival of other sorts in the early
'30s.[33]
By the 1990s, new styles of close-trimmed pants legs made it possible for
players to wear pants that ran clear to the shoetops, in lieu of the traditional
knee-breeches style that had prevailed for generations. This led to a violation
of the literal concept of a "uniform", in that different players on a given team
might wear knee-length and full-length pants on the field at the same time.
Players such as Manny Ramirez have taken this fashion trend to an extreme,
wearing loose-fitting pants whose legs nearly lap under the heels of the shoes.
Meanwhile, players such as Alfonso Soriano continue to wear the traditional
knee-breeches, though most of these players still lack the traditional stirrups.
Manny Ramirez wearing loose-fitting pants
Graphics and logos
Jim Creighton sporting an Old English "E" for his team, Excelsior, ca.1860-1862.
From the beginning, graphic designs were used to identify teams. Often an Old
English letter was worn on the chest. This style survives with the Detroit
Tigers and their gothic style "D" on their home shirts. Road jerseys were more
likely to identify the city, as with the Tigers wearing the word "Detroit" on
their road shirts. The Oakland Athletics, who used to feature an Old English "A"
on their jerseys, currently have the logo on their caps.
As official nicknames gained prominence in the early 1900s (in contrast to
media-generated and unofficial nicknames of prior generations), pictorial logos
began emerging as part of the team's marketing. Some early examples include a
small red tiger on the black cap of the 1901 Detroit Tigers, as they were
officially the Tigers from the beginning; and a bear cub logo on the Chicago
Cubs shirts by 1907, as that unofficial nickname was then adopted officially by
the club.
In another famous example, the Boston Americans (an unofficial designation that
merely distinguished them from their across-the-tracks rivals) adopted the
Nationals' abandoned red stockings in 1908, and have been the Boston Red Sox
officially ever since then.
By the 1930s, nearly every team had distinctive logos, letters or the team
nickname on their home shirts, as part of the team's marketing. The trend of the
city name on the road jerseys continued. In recent years, with team nicknames
being so strongly associated with the clubs, logos that were once only used at
home also turned up on road jerseys, in place of city names.
Modern merchandising
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