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1880's extended length glove
I was unaware that there were any photos showing such a glove being used for baseball - surprised we haven't seen any documented examples at auction:
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Isn't that similar to a workman's glove? I think that is what I have seen similar ones called(?), or are they smaller than this one?
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I'm no expert at old gloves of any type, baseball or otherwise, so the above is all conjecture or based on what I remember from reading other people's research. |
Also, I thought that in the late 1880's (OJ period) it was still considered to be kind of 'sissy' to wear any type of glove, and that only catchers were immune from criticism for doing so. Even the fielders leaned toward the fingerless gloves, but were moving toward bigger ones.
I love this glove image: Doc Bushong OJ with fingerless glove This Bushong image makes it more obvious that he is wearing a full glove on his left hand, and a fingerless on his right - I'm sure it's the same on the previous image. Reach was selling gloves in sets back then - full glove for the left hand, fingerless for the right. The evolution from two to one makes total sense to me: fielders caught barehanded using both hands. They then moved to using minimalist gloves, so still catching with two hands, they needed two gloves, and the fingerless right one allowed them to throw better. Doc Bushong OJ showing full-finger left-hand glove I'm going to verify the above through my Spalding and Reach Guides, then edit this post again - it's all from memory and could be full of errors. |
thanks for sharing that!
always fun to learn something new. Of course my next biggest challenge is remembering anything. I've wanted a fingerless glove to go with my old orbs - but pricewise even before availability - they're out of "reach" to me. Never thought they might wear two.........
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don't know about an extended glove but here is an early Spalding ad
http://i6.photobucket.com/albums/y20...ps2629bcc9.jpg |
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Here's my cover from 1884. The mitt on the left looks kind of similar.
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That's very interesting. I don't think that glove is as long as the one in the initial pic I posted, but could just be the angle. If I can get off the recliner, I'll go through my 1800's Reach and Spalding Guides tonight and see if I can trace the evolution of their gloves.
I'm guessing most of Reach and Spalding's customers at that time were still kids. I have an 1885 Spalding 'How to Field' Guide that I believe gives all of its instructions based on bare hands, but will double-check that as well tonight. |
Yeah that one in your pic Scott looks like a welders glove. Very long.
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