Atogrphed, authentic, how much?
  Find information on Vintage Baseball collectibles, Tips on caring for your Valued Memorabilia collection Price Guide, Dates, and more!  
  Price Guide, Collectors Guide, Worth, Date    
HOME facebook BUY/SELL FORUM CONTACT

NEWSLETTER

  Category
  ADVERTISING
  AUTOGRAPHS
  BASEBALLS
  BASEBALL BATS
  BOBBLE HEADS
  CARDS
  EQUIPMENT
  FIGURINES
  GAMES & TOYS
  GAME USED
  GLOVES & MITTS
  HATS & UNIFORMS
  PENNANTS
  PHOTOS & ART
  PINS & BUTTONS
  PLATES
  POSTERS & SIGNS
  PUBLICATIONS
  RECORDS
  S.G.A.'S
  TICKETS
  MISCELLANEOUS
  Collectors Guides
  BASEBALL CARD
CHECKLISTS
  BASEBALL BAT
DATING GUIDE
  BASEBALL GLOVE
CLEANING GUIDE
  BASEBALL GLOVE
DATING GUIDE
  COLLECTIBLE
GLOSSARY
  EXHIBIT BASEBALL
CARD DATING
  FAKE & REPRODUCTION ALERTS
  OFFICIAL MLB
BASEBALL DATING
  QUESTIONS &
ANSWERS
  PRICE GUIDES
  MICKEY MANTLE
MEMORABILIA 
  SINGLE SIGNED
BASEBALLS
  TEAM SIGNED
BASEBALLS
  WORLD SERIES
PRESS PINS
  WORLD SERIES
TICKET STUBS
  SITE FEATURES
  ABOUT THIS WEBSITE
  COLLECTORS CORNER
  CONTACT
  FACEBOOK GROUP
  FACEBOOK PAGE
  FORUM
  NEWSLETTER 
 
KeyMan Collectibles on facebook
 

1876 Catalog Ad

1884 Wright & Ditson Baseball Guide |

1903 Spalding Catalog

1926 Spalding Catalog

1915 Goldsmith catalog

7th AAF Uniform Patch

125 Years of baseball Patches Binder

 

Great Western
Pants Uniform Tag

GW Baseball Uniform Style Chart

1930 Uniform Pants Style

 

 KeyMan Collectibles  NEWSLETTER August 2021  
Collecting Vintage Baseball Uniforms
 Steven KeyMan
Steven KeyMan
  - By Steven KeyMan
Founder of Keymancollectibles.com, and a long time collector, Steven KeyMan has more than 30 years of experience in researching, and cataloging information on Baseball Memorabilia. Researching his own personal collection, and helping others find information on their collectibles, the website grew into the largest online resource for baseball memorabilia
 

   Ask Steven: Direct your questions or feedback, about Baseball Memorabilia to Steven KeyMan Steve@keymancollectibles.com You can also Send KeyMan pictures of your personal Memorabilia Display, and get your own Free  Collectors Showcase Room featured on the website..   
 

   A baseball uniform gives us identity, and belonging. Team loyalty and camaraderie. The feeling of being issued a baseball uniform at any level of play is a memory that never fades. It connects us with our heroes, Cobb, Ruth, Robinson or Clemente. A fabric of history of the game we love. 

  The Tracy Martin Collection brings us back to the beginning of time. His uniform collection is evolutionary. This 1860-1870 Civil war era Shield uniform is one of the earliest. The shield-front jersey style first gained popularity in the late-1850s. Many ball clubs of the 1860s and 1870s wore this style.

 The shirt fronts were sold by sporting goods companies with monograms or an initial letter of the club. Also known as Bibs, this style was removed from the catalogs by the turn of the centaury.

Introduced in the 1870s the laced-front style remained in catalogs until at least 1913. Some styles were offered with the lacing for the top part of the jersey. This circa 1890s Rawlings laced-front wool uniform also featured detachable sleeves. First introduced in the 1890s, detachable sleeves were popular throughout the first few decades of the 20th century.

 Buttons on the sleeve extensions attached to button holes on the jersey, eliminating the need for multiple jerseys of different sleeve lengths and allowing players to dress comfortably, whatever the weather conditions.
 
   
    Aggressive style of play and base running of the 1870s, causing wear-and-tear on the body, led to the development of padded uniform pants. Quilted padding baseball pants were offered in catalogs until about the mid 1910's when padding worn under the pants became more preferred by ball players.

 Part of the antiquebaseballuniforms.com collection, this pair of quilted baseball pants was listed in Spalding catalogs from 1911-1913.

A collector for 20 years, Mike of Antique Baseball Uniforms has an extensive collection exhibited on his newly published website. His passion for circa 1890s to Early 1930s baseball uniforms, extends  to fellow collectors and enthusiasts who appreciate the historical significance of these relics. The Antique Baseball Uniforms features a Showcase for other Collectors as well.

This circa 1890s Navy blue baseball uniform features a white full collar jersey with the team name "STARS" in white & matching trim; matching pants, and a white belt with metal loop closure, commonly used during the 1890's to early 1900s.

It is believed to have connections to the Syracuse Stars team which played one season in the American Association in 1890. The team used the same uniform colors. The Syracuse Stars was also the name of several other Minor league baseball teams that played between 1877 and 1929.

  No uniform is complete without a cap.  Spalding offered a line of baseball caps in the early 1900s and into the 1920s; which included; the No. 6 Chicago Style, No. 15 Philadelphia Style, No. 17 Brooklyn Style, No. 23 New York Style, and this No. 25 Boston Style.

 Only the Philadelphia Style, and Brooklyn Style caps made it into the 1928 catalog. Each cap was offered in different qualities to match a uniform. The circa 1925 uniform tag on the sweatband of this Boston Style cap indicates the No. "M" Quality, colors same as No. M Quality Baseball uniforms.

  Zippered uniform jerseys hit the playing field in the 1930s. The 1937 Chicago Cubs were the first major league team to zipper up. By 1940 and ’41, half of all big league clubs had zippered jerseys. But, only a handful of teams wore them into the 1970s.

The last major league club to wear a zipper-front jersey was the Philadelphia Phillies in 1986.

 

Shawn Hennesey's Chevrons and Diamonds collection focuses on baseball and military history. His uniform collection can field an Armed Forces All-Star team. This Seventh Army Air Force team road uniform is what Staff Sergeant Joe DiMaggio would have worn in 1944.

 DiMaggio and other major league players were transferred to Hawaii in the Spring of 1944. Big names like; Joe Gordon, Pee Wee Reese and Red Ruffing, along with Joe, were split into different teams.  This 7th AAF grey with blue trim Road jersey features a Sun-Collar, and the Seventh Army Air Force uniform patch on the sleeve

Uniform patches worn on the jersey front, or sleeve has it's own niche in the collecting community. The Chevrons and Diamonds collection features four uniform patches that were worn on the jersey front.

 Pictured here; 1955 Kunsan Air Base Manager, FAD Naval Aviation '51 Champs, 1950s 212th Artillery Group Gunners, 1944 Naval Aviation uniform insignia Letter.

 Authorized by Major League baseball, in 1993 Willabee & Ward issued the "125 Years of Official Baseball Patches." The complete set of 40 patches came with a binder. Each uniform patch was secured in plastic, and mounted to a 9"x 12" information card in a plastic binder sleeve.

 Below the uniform patch is a "Patch Fact" information box with a short summary. The information card gives a detailed history that continues on the other side. The front bottom of the card illustrates where the patch was worn, home and away, jersey front, or sleeve.

  In general baseball uniforms can be dated to an era by particular fashions, styles, fabric, patterns, etc. But, with 1000s of styles used since the 19th century, dating a vintage uniform could be a daunting task. Even with catalogs in hand.
 
   
   Joe of the Antique Sports Collector website, features a Baseball Uniform Manufacturer Tag Database to help date uniforms from about 1890-1942. Manufacturers include; Spalding, Victor, Wright & Ditson, Draper & Maynard, Horace Partridge, Goldsmith and more.

 The website is dedicated to displaying and sharing his vintage sports equipment and memorabilia with other collectors, as well as those interested in starting a collection. The Antique Sports Collector Showcase shares pictures of the collections of fellow vintage sports collectors.

 This rare style 1890s early 1900 baseball jersey; with full collar, full length cuffed sleeves, and a breast pocket is amongst the more than 100 vintage baseball uniforms in his collection.

Sporting Goods catalogs are a great source for dating vintage baseball uniforms. They are also highly sought after by collectors. This catalog issued by Great Western in 1938 is filled with information on baseball uniforms, and style descriptions.

 Great Western Athletic Goods of Chicago was primarily a uniform manufacturer. To establish a niche in the uniform market, Thomas E. Wilson & Co. Athletic Goods merged with Great Western in 1925 and renamed Wilson-Western Sporting Goods. Then in 1931, Wilson Sporting Goods Co. Wilson also produced Great Western branded baseball equipment for their catalog.

Uniform pants have gone through many style changes and trends with how players wore their pants. During the first half of the 20th century, ballplayers wore their pants so that their stockings showed to the bottom of their knee.

 This 1930s Great Western uniform pants features elastic at the bottom to be worn around the knee, so the baggy fit pant legs would hang over, and hide the elastic. A trend toward lowering the pant leg crept into baseball fashion. The trend of ballplayers lowering their pant legs became more popular with each passing decade.

 In the early 1950s, longtime umpire Bill Stewart called for an end to the long pants, citing difficulties in determining the location of a batter’s knee, and thus the bottom of the strike-zone. By the 1990s, the height of the pant leg dropped to the "No-Sock" look, with some players even tucking the pant legs into their shoes.

  This glamorous gold and blue satin uniform, manufactured by Powers Athletic Wear was made for the PBSW Arizona Ramblers women's softball team. The Ramblers won the National American Softball championships in 1940, 1948 and 1949. The team played their home games at Phoenix Municipal Stadium until July of 1950 when the team moved to Rambler Field.

 National Softball Hall of Famers that played for the Arizona Ramblers include; 11 x all-star, Margie Law, Thelma Keith, Betty “Butch” Hamman, and Dot Wilkinson.
 
 
 
 
  KEYMAN COLLECTIBLES RELATED RESOURCES  
     
  KeyMan Collectibles Collectors Corner - Keep up with the latest collecting news, announcements, and articles of interest on the webs best resource for baseball memorabilia.  
  KeyMan Collectibles Baseball Memorabilia Facebook Group - Post Questions and comments relating to Baseball Collectibles and Memorabilia. Interact with other collectors or show off your collection.  
  KeyMan Collectibles Forum - A great option for those that "Don't do facebook"  Post Questions and comments relating to Baseball Collectibles and Memorabilia  
 
 
  Home | Auctions | Message Board | Newsletter | About this Site  
Link Directory | Links Page | Collectors Corner | Contact | Site Map