Knickerbocker BBC Adopts 1st Uniform
The fifth annual meeting was held at Abell’s, 474 Broadway, on the 7th of April, 1849. The officers elected for the year, were : D. L. Adams, President ; Ed. W. Talman, Vice-President; Eugene Plunkett, Secretary; F. C. Niebuhr, Treasurer. Directors—E. E. Dupignac, A. H. Drummond, B. C. Lee. At a meeting held April 24, 1849, a uniform was adopted for the club, viz. blue woolen pantaloons, white flannel shirt, chip (straw) hats ; and it may here be mentioned that the blue and white has ever since remained the costume of the club. The straw hats were abolished some years later.
1849
In 1845, the New York Knickerbockers became the first organized baseball club. Four years later, at a meeting held April 24, 1849, the club adopted an official uniform: blue woolen pantaloons, white flannel shirts and chip (straw) hats. Though the straw hats were abandoned a few years later, the Knickerbockers retained blue and white as the team colors for decades to come.
It is likely that the blue-and-white color scheme was more than just the result of a random decision on the part of the Knickerbockers. As late as the 1860s, baseball clubs were more than happy to associate themselves with well-established, manly organizations, such as fire departments and volunteer military companies. Indeed, early baseball uniforms often looked identical to those worn by these other longstanding fraternal clubs. At the same time, however, antebellum ball playing organizations consciously chose to distance themselves from lower class, disorderly, juvenile or small-town clubs. These less respectable groups tended to wear uniforms highlighted by bright red, and thus the color was shunned by up-and-coming baseball clubs seeking to present themselves as respectable, gentlemanly organizations.
The choice of wool is also telling. While cotton would have made for less expensive and more comfortable uniforms, the fabric was at the time associated with work clothing, not fashionable and respectable dress. By donning wool uniforms, early baseball clubs distanced themselves from the working class and aligned themselves with organizations of a higher status.
Meanwhile …
On September 10, 1846, one year after the Knickerbocker Club was formed, Elias Howe patented his sewing machine. The advances in sewing would eventually allow for mass production of clothing and, of course, baseball uniforms.
“Dressed to the Nines: A History of the Baseball Uniform“, National Baseball Hall of Fame
On the 13th of August (1855), the uniform of the club was again regulated. Blue woolen pants, white flannel shirt, with narrow blue braid, mohair cap, and belt of patent leather. With the exception of a change of cap, the uniform has ever since remained the same.
“The Book of American Pastimes”, Charles Peverelly (1866)
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