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This program is only available via videoconferencing. If you are interested in participating in this program in your on-site visit, please note that this is now part of the Tools of the Trade program, incorporating American History and Industrial Technology. For questions or comments please call us at 607-547-0347.
I. Introduction
II. Objectives
III. Preparing the Students
IV. Presentation
V. Enrichment and Assessment Activities
VI. Additional Resources
VII. Relevant National Learning Standards
VIII. Planning a Videoconference?
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Wear your team colors proudly in this chronological
look back at history through the button hole of a baseball
jersey. Using textiles and clothing styles, students
will learn about many social and technological changes
since the early 1900s. Here is an exciting unit that
connects each decade of the last century by highlighting
major milestones as reflected in the ever-evolving baseball
uniform. From benchmarks to the batter's box, fashion
trends lead the way to a dyed-in-the-wool study of how
the fabric of American society has changed one stitch
at a time.
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A. Examine and observe the evolution of baseball uniforms
in the 20th century.
B. Analyze the changes in the baseball uniform and identify
historical benchmarks that coincide with these changes.
C. Understand, through dialogue and discussion, how
the evolution of baseball uniforms relate to advances
in transportation, technology, communication and significant
historical events such as World Wars, the Great Depression
and the Space Age.
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A. Background
Clothing styles often reflect what is happening in society
or a community, either by what the textile represents
or how it is produced. The cut of the pattern, an emblem
sewn on a sleeve, or the selected fabric can be an indicator
of a particular belief, mode of self expression or reaction
to something that has occurred. When studied as a type
of clothing and popular fashion, changes in baseball
uniforms provide a meaningful baseline for measuring
important events in U.S. history.
B. Necessary Classroom Materials
Teacher should provide photographs
of the following historical events and figures:
Wright Brothers' 1903 flight
Ford assembly line
Titanic
WWI trench warfare
Suffragette
Charles Lindbergh/Spirit of St. Louis
1929 stock market crash
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Jesse Owens
Pearl Harbor/USS Arizona
WWII era female factory worker
WWII/Iwo Jima
Sputnik
1960's astronauts
Neil Armstrong
Vietnam war scene or anti-war demonstration
1970's gas crisis
Space shuttle Challenger explosion
Berlin Wall being torn down
Map of the USSR
The Persian Gulf War (Desert Storm)
Historical baseball photographs referenced throughout
the lesson are available through active links.
C. Vocabulary
Assembly Line
Benchmark
Century
Chronological
Communication
Cotton
Decade
Emblem
Evolution
Fabric
Information
Manufacturing
Mass Production
Patch
Polyester
Satin
Synthetic
Technology
Textiles
Timeline
Transportation
Uniform
Wool
D. Suggested Pre-Program Activities
1) Discuss with the students the concept of chronology
and emphasize the different parts of a timeline and
how it is used. Familiarize the students with the following
words: timeline, chronological, century, decade.
2) Have students select a familiar item such as a radio,
an airplane, or an automobile. Consider how this item
may have changed over the course of time. Draw four
pictures illustrating how this item may have changed.
Students may also project what these items may look
like in the future.
3) Have students bring in clothing representing a wide
range of materials. Have students identify the materials.
Have students classify themselves according to the materials
they are wearing. Discuss the origins and characteristics
of these items. How and when were the materials used?
4) A professional baseball team will be moving to your
hometown. Create your own design of uniform to be worn
by this team. Choose the colors, fabrics, emblems as
well as a team name.
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If you are participating
in a school visit or videoconference please do not review
this section with your students. It will be taught as
part of the presentation.
A. Opening
1) Engage students in conversation about uniforms. Who
wears a uniform and why? What types of uniforms do the
students wear?
2) Engage students in conversation about emblems. Why
are they worn? What is their purpose?
INSTRUCTOR NOTE:
Instructor may want to wear a post September 11th uniform
jersey showing the American flag emblem on the neck.
Note this was not the first time the American flag was
worn in response to world events. Involve students by
taking a poll about who among them is wearing a particular
type of emblem on their everyday clothing.
3) Show the 1917 Chicago White Sox uniform with the
American flag patch on the sleeve. Explain that we will
explore the past century and how uniforms often reflect
changes occurring in society.
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Show the 1917 uniform and ask students
why the flag patch was worn at that time. The flag appeared
the year that the United States became involved in WWI.
4) Discuss the 1917 wool uniform in contrast with the
present day uniforms with which the students are familiar.
From what fabric are present day uniforms made? Why
weren't they available at the beginning of the century?
What would it be like to wear a wool uniform? What changes
have occurred in the past century, which enabled us
to produce polyester uniforms?
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Be sure to reference both types of
uniforms. Involve the students by having them raise
their hands, or stand up to indicate which fabric they
are wearing.
B. Lesson*
Brief Explanation of the Game. Students will create
a timeline of events from 1900 to present that coincide
with the development of the baseball uniform.
1900-1910
Ball 1:
Elementary - "The Wright Brothers first flew in
the same decade that the baby Bear appeared on the Chicago
Cubs Uniform."
Secondary - "Who first flew in the same decade
that the baby bear appeared on the Chicago Cubs Uniform."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Show 1910 dark blue wool Chicago Cubs
Uniform, Photos: Wright Brothers, player of the decade.
Questions/Discussion (Dependent on age of students)
- Were the Wright Brother trapeze artists? Birds? (Invented
and built the first successful power engine airplane.)
- When and where did the flight take place? (1903, Kitty
Hawk, North Carolina)
- How long did the first airplane flight stay in the air?
(12 seconds)
- How far did it go? (120 ft.)
- How did baseball teams travel? (Train)
Ball 2:
Elementary - "In the same city where Ty Cobb was
playing for the Tigers, Henry Ford's Company produced
the first Model T."
Secondary - "In the same city where Ty Cobb was playing
for the Tigers, a new technological advancement helped
bring these to the masses."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Photos: Assembly Line or Player with
MVP award of new car/ Ty Cobb.
Questions/Discussion:
- Model T's original price was $850, too high for many
customers, so Ford started the assembly line to reduce
production costs. This reduced assembly time from 12.5
hrs. to 1.5 hrs.
- Model T prices dropped to $500 in 1913, and then to
$260 by 1925, so most families could afford a car.
- How much do cars cost today? How have they changed?
1910-1920
Ball 1: "This ocean liner
sank when the Highlanders played baseball in New York
City."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Show 1917 Chicago White Sox jersey. Photos:
Titanic/ New York Highlander's cap.
Questions/Discussion:
- What other type of transportation could the passengers
on the Titanic have used to travel to America? (none)
- How did the Titanic call for help? (Morse code/no radio)
- 1,517 people died; 705 were saved.
- The New York Highlanders later became the New York Yankees.
Ball 2:
Elementary - "World War I took place during a decade
when both the Dodgers and the Giants played in New York."
Secondary - "This war took place during a decade
when both the Dodgers and the Giants played in New York."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Photos: Trench warfare/ Giants or Dodgers.
Questions/Discussion:
- When was WWI? (1914-1918; U. S. entered in 1917).
- Was our country involved? Where was it fought? How did
we get there?
- Did we use airplanes in WWI? (Yes. The last time we
heard about airplanes they could barely get off of the
ground; now used for surveillance/bombs dropped from
cockpit door).
1920-1930
Ball 1:
Elementary - "Women won the right to vote the same
year that the Philadelphia Athletics wore a white elephant
on their uniforms."
Secondary - "What right did women win during the
same year that the Philadelphia Athletics wore a white
elephant on their uniforms?"
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Show Philadelphia Athletics uniform with
white elephant. Photos: Women's suffrage, Philadelphia
Athletics player. (The white elephant was worn in response
to a comment by Giants manager John McGraw that the Athletics
were nothing but a bunch of white elephants).
Questions/Discussion:
- Black men had the right to vote before women. (15th
Amendment @1869, 19th Amendment @1920). People opposing
women's suffrage thought that women's participation
in politics would lead to the end of family life.
- During WWI many women contributed to the war effort,
and this increased support for women's voting.
Ball 2:
Elementary - "Charles Lindbergh was preparing for
his historic flight when the Philadelphia Bobbies played
against men's teams."
Secondary - "Who was preparing for his historic flight
when the Philadelphia Bobbies played against men's teams."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Photos: Spirit of St. Louis, Philadelphia
Bobbies.
Questions/Discussion:
- Where did Charles Lindbergh fly? (France, near Paris)
From? (Long Island, New York)
- What year did his flight take place? (1927)
- How long did it take him? (33.5 hrs/ 3600 miles)
- How long does the average flight take today? (About
7 hrs.)
- What was the name of Lindbergh's plane? ("The Spirit
of Saint Louis")
- The plane can be seen in the National Air and Space
Museum in Washington D.C.
Ball 3:
Elementary - "The New York Yankees first wore numbers
on their uniforms the same year the stock market crashed."
Secondary - "The New York Yankees first wore numbers
on their uniforms the same year this devastating economic
event occurred."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Show uniform with a number on back. Photos:
Newspaper Headline about Stock Market/Yankee player in
numbered uniform.
Questions/Discussion:
- When did the stock market crash occur?
- What does radio broadcasting have to do with a number
on a uniform?
- Yankee Stadium was a large stadium; easier to recognize
players with numbers on their uniforms.
- First numbers were assigned according to batting order.
1930-1940
Ball 1: "Two favorite
pastimes of the American public during the Great Depression
were listening to baseball and this president on the radio."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Show 1930's uniform. Photos: FDR Radio
Fireside Chat/Player of the decade.
Questions/Discussion:
- What was the Great Depression? (A worldwide business
slump with the worst and longest period of high unemployment
in modern times).
- What caused the Great Depression? (The stock market
crashed and many people lost money and their jobs.
- Rural Electrification began this year. 1933 REA first
official action (Tennessee Valley Authority)
Ball 2: "Jesse Owens won
4 Olympic Gold medals the same year the National Baseball
Hall of Fame and Museum had its first induction ceremony."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Photos: Jesse Owens/First 5 Inductees.
Questions/Discussion:
- Who was Jesse Owens? (African-American track and field
star)
- "Where were the Olympics played in 1936? (The Olympic
games were played in Berlin, Germany. They were awarded
to Berlin before Hitler came to power).
- Who was the leader in Germany at this time? (Hitler)
- What did Hitler think of black people? What did he think
of people of Jewish descent? (He hated Negroes and Jewish
people. Hitler and the Nazi regime actively promoted
the Aryan race - white people of non-Jewish descent).
Jesse Owens fouled on his first two qualifying long
jumps. If he did so on his third jump, he would not
qualify for the final round. Hitler and Nazi officials
were in the stands throughout the stadium. In a daring
move, German long jumper Luz Long told Jesse Owens to
start his long jump earlier so he would qualify. Owens
took Long's advice and qualified for the finals. Owens
went on to win his second gold medal making a new Olympic
record. Luz Long, who received the bronze medal, was
the first to congratulate Jesse Owens after the jump.
1940-1950
Ball 1: "Around the same
time some baseball teams were wearing silk uniforms, Pearl
Harbor was bombed."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Show Brooklyn Dodgers silk uniform. Photos:
USS Arizona.
Questions/Discussion:
- Where is Pearl Harbor? Who bombed us there? (Hawaii/Japanese)
- The bombing of Pearl Harbor was the event that got the
U.S. involved in WWII, which had started in Europe in
1939.
- Lights in the stadiums were dim compared to today's
stadiums. Why didn't we use Halogen lights then? (Didn't
have the technology).
- Players wore silk uniforms because the silk reflected
light, and made it easier to see the players during
night games.
Ball 2: "American women
were working in factories and playing professional baseball
while American men were fighting overseas."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Photos: Woman working in factory/Rockford
Peaches.
Questions/Discussion:
- Which war was being fought? (WWII)
- Who fought whom? (The "Allies" chiefly: the
United States, England, and USSR fought the "Axis"
powers chiefly: Germany, Italy, and Japan).
- Did we use airplanes in WWII? (Bombers, especially B-17's
"Flying Fortresses", with heavy armor and
guns).
- While airplanes improved so did radar, guided missiles,
and aircraft carriers.
Ball 3: "Major leagues
wore the Health Patch on their uniforms to honor the men
and women serving in WWII."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Photos: Iwo Jima/Player with Health Patch
on sleeve.
Questions/Discussion:
- Showed support for men and women serving in the Red
Cross.
- Now 10 million volunteers.
- During WWII the Red Cross collected more than 13 million
pints of blood.
1950-1960
Ball 1: "The last year
the Giants were a New York team, Sputnik was launched."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Show Giants Uniform. Photos: Sputnik/Willie
Mays.
Questions/Discussion:
- What was Sputnik? (A series of unmanned Soviet satellites).
- It was launched in October 1957. The US launched its
first satellite, Explorer 1, in January 1958.
- This is an appropriate time to mention that we were
in the "Cold War" with the Soviet Union during
this decade, leading to the "Space Age."
- Where did the Giants go? (California)
- How did they get there? (Last planes we discussed were
WWII bombers; commercial airliners were developed right
after WWII).
Ball 2: "This medium revolutionized
the way Americans viewed the game."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Photos: Baseball card with TV motif/
uniform with name on back.
Questions/Discussion:
- Why would uniforms soon need names on them if we already
had numbers? (So fans watching this new technology TV
could identify players).
- What were the first TV's like? (black and white)
1960-1970
Ball 1: "Man goes into
space in the same decade that the Astros first appear."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Show Colt 45 Jersey. Photos: 1960's Astronauts/Houston
Astros on Astroturf.
Questions/Discussion:
- What is a person called
that goes into space? (Astronaut)
- What team sounds like the Astronauts? (Astros)
- The Houston Astros were formerly the Colt 45's, but
changed their name to show support for the space program
based in Houston.
- What country did we race to get into space? (Soviet
Union)
- Who won the race? (Soviet Union)
- Why did we want to be the first in space? (Surveillance)
Ball 2: "Apollo 11 landed
on the moon the same year this miracle team won the World
Series."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Photos: Neil Armstrong/Miracle Mets.
Questions/Discussion:
- Who won the race to walk on the moon? (United States)
- Who was the first person to walk on the moon? (Neil
Armstrong)
- Computers, materials, and foods all changed dramatically
to keep pace with the space technology.
1970-1980
Ball 1: "The Pirates wore
the first knit uniform while American troops were fighting
in Vietnam."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Photos: Vietnam War soldier or anti-war
demonstration/Roberto Clemente.
Questions/Discussion:
- Vietnam War started in 1957, ended 1975. American troops
were there from 1965-1973.
- Controversy about our involvement in the war sparked
protests all over America in the late 60's to early
70's.
- Approximately 58,000 Americans died in Vietnam.
- Technological advancements in machines that produced
clothing, led to first knit uniforms in 1970.
Ball 2: "While the Houston
Astros wore bright orange and yellow striped uniforms,
Americans were experiencing an energy crisis."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Show a double-knit uniform. Photos: Lines
at gasoline stations/Houston Astro in uniform with orange/yellow
wide stripes.
Questions/Discussion:
- How did uniforms change after we had color TV? (Added
color to uniforms).
- Why were we waiting in long lines (Energy Crisis) "
How did the gasoline shortage change automobiles? (Became
smaller/more efficient).
- Are we having an energy crisis now? Will we see changes
in technology?
- What part of the world controls most of the oil supplies?
(Middle East)
- What country uses the most oil? (U.S.)
1980-1990
Ball 1: "Roger Clemens
won his first Cy Young award, and the MVP award the same
year this disaster occurred."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Show Polyester Uniform. Photos: Challenger
Explosion/Roger Clemens.
Questions/Discussion:
- What is the Cy Young Award? (Prestigious award given
to best pitcher in the National and American Leagues).
- What is the MVP Award? (Prestigious award given to most
valuable player in the National and American Leagues).
- Improvements in medical technology have extended the
number of years that players like Roger Clemens (in
his 20th season that year) could play the game. He went
on to win a total of six Cy Young Awards in his career.
- Who was aboard the Challenger Space Shuttle? (7 people,
including a school teacher).
- Are we still going up into space? (Yes, for much longer
periods of time).
- 100th space shuttle was recently launched.
Ball 2: "The year the
cold war ended, the San Francisco Giants experienced an
earthquake during the World Series."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Berlin Wall/1989 World Series Headlines.
Questions/Discussion:
- Germany was divided in two in 1949.
- The Berlin Wall symbolically divided East and West Germany
for 28 years.
- Berlin Wall came down November 9-11, 1989, contributing
to the demise of Soviet control of Eastern Europe
- Live broadcasting of the World Series game brought the
events of the earthquake into the homes of millions
of Americans as it was happening.
1990-2000
Ball 1: "In the same decade
that Desert Storm was fought, baseball expanded by adding
four new teams."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Show Expansion Team Jersey. Photos: Desert
Storm /Wade Boggs in Tampa Bay uniform.
Questions/Discussion:
- When and where was Desert Storm fought? (1991, Middle
East: Iraq and Kuwait)
- Why are we concerned about conflicts in the Mid East?
(oil interests)
- "The Persian Gulf War" is the official name
of the conflict.
- Four new expansion teams are: Arizona Diamondbacks,
Colorado Rockies, Florida Marlins, Tampa Bay Devil Rays.
Ball 2:
Elementary - "In the same decade that women returned
to professional baseball the Soviet Union dissolved into
many small countries."
Secondary - "In the same decade that women returned
to professional baseball this country dissolved into many
small countries."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Photos: Map of USSR/Silver Bullet Uniform.
Questions/Discussion:
- How many years between women playing professional baseball?
(40 years)
- Which team was playing? (Colorado Silver Bullets)
- Are they still playing? (No, they lost sponsorship).
- USSR President Mikhail Gorbachev resigned, ending the
USSR, as it existed.
- Leaders of eleven former Soviet republics signed a declaration
forming the Commonwealth of Independent States.
- Boris Yeltsin becomes President of Russia.
Ball 3: "Improvements
in information technology and the internet changed the
way we experience the game."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Photos: Screen capture of website such
as <mlb.com>.
Questions/Discussion:
- Baseball more global (both players and where the game
is played).
- Satellites made this possible (refer to 1957 Sputnik,
Explorer 1).
- People all over the world can now watch baseball on
television.
2000-2010
Ball 1: "Baseball and
the world grieve events of September 11, 2001."
INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Photos: First post 9/11 Dodgers game.
Questions/Discussion:
- Baseball play suspended for one week.
- Baseball continues to honor our American heritage.
C. Conclusion
1) Walk through the century
asking students to identify one key event from each
decade. Recap the highlights of the century by decade.
2) Review how changes in the baseball uniform over the
past century reflect events that have happened in history.
If you are participating in a school visit or videoconference
please do not review this section with your students.
It will be taught as part of the presentation.
Return to top
A. Discuss evolution of transportation,
communication, and a sequence of historical events over
the century and make a poster, or power point presentation.
B. Student travels through time to a particular decade
in the 20th century. Write a story or skit exploring
how their lives would be different. Use as many vocabulary
words as possible.
C. Divide students into groups and assign them a decade
in which they have to establish a baseball team. Students
must decide which type of marketing, mode of communication,
transportation, uniform, and location for each team.
Provide evidence to support your decisions in each one
of these areas. Each team will present their conclusions
to the class.
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A. Literature
Garner, Joe. "Jesse
Owens Wins Four Gold Medals." And the Crowd Goes
Wild. Sourcebooks, Inc., 1999.
Lucent Books, eds. A Cultural History of the United
States. Lucent Books, 1999.
National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Baseball
As America. National Geographic Books, 2002.
Okkonen, Marc. Baseball Uniforms in the 20th Century.
Sterling Publishing Co, Inc., 1991.
B. Web Links
http://villagevoice.com/news/0123,lukas,25337,3.html
Uni Watch by Paul Lukas "Hosiery History"
ssur.org
The Society for Sports Uniforms Research
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A. U.S. History
1) Students understand how the US changed from the end
of WWI to the eve of the Great Depression.
2) Students understand that the United States has influenced
other nations and other nations have influenced American
politics and society.
3) Students understand how the American role changed
in the early twentieth century.
4) Students understand how a modernist capital economy
emerged in the 1920s.
5) Explain how principles of scientific management and
technological innovations, including assembly lines,
rapid transit, household appliances and radio continued
to transform production, work and daily life.
6) Students can assess the effects of women's suffrage
on politics.
7) Students understand the crash of 1929 and the Great
Depression.
8) Students understand the international background
of WWII.
9) Students understand the effects of WWII at home
10) Explain how the US mobilized its economic and military
resources during WWII.
11) Explore how the war fostered cultural exchange and
interaction while promoting nationalism and American
identity.
12) Evaluate how minorities organized to gain to wartime
jobs and how they confronted discrimination.
13) Students understand the women's movement for civil
rights and equal opportunities.
14) Identify the major social and economic, and political
issues affecting women and explain the conflicts these
issues engendered.
15) Students understand contemporary American culture.
16) Explore the international influence of American
culture.
17) Explain the reasons for the increased popularity
of pro sports and examine its influence on popular culture.
18) Students understand major foreign policy initiatives.
19) Examine the US role in political struggles in the
Middle East, Africa, and Latin America.
B. Language Arts
1) Students apply a wide range of strategies to comprehend,
interpret, evaluate, and appreciate texts. They draw
on their prior experience, their interactions with other
readers and writers, their knowledge of word meaning
and of other texts, their word identification strategies
and their understanding of textual features (e.g., sound-letter
correspondence, sentence structure, context, graphics).
2) Students employ a wide range of strategies as they
write and use different writing process elements appropriately
to communicate with different audiences for a variety
of purposes.
3) Students use a variety of technological and information
resources (e.g., libraries, databases, computer networks,
video) to gather and synthesize information and to create
and communicate knowledge.
4) Students use spoken, written and visual language
to accomplish their own purposes (e.g., for learning,
enjoyment, persuasion and the exchange of information).
C. Technology
1) Students demonstrate a sound understanding of the
nature and operation of technology systems.
2) Students are proficient in the use of technology.
3) Students understand the ethical, cultural and societal
issues related to technology.
4) Students practice responsible use of technology systems,
information and software.
5) Students develop positive attitudes toward technology
uses that support lifelong learning, collaboration,
personal pursuits and productivity.
6) Students use technology tools to enhance learning,
increase productivity and promote creativity.
7) Students use technology to locate, evaluate and collect
information from a variety of sources.
8) Students use technology tools to process data and
report results.
9) Students evaluate and select new information resources
and technological innovations based on the appropriateness
for specific tasks.
A. Videoconference
Checklist (PDF)
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