Babe Phelps, a catcher.
The value of a game used Jersey will rely on the weight of the provenance that accompanies the jersey, and the player it belonged to. Provenance is the history of ownership of a particular item. It allows the buyer to secure additional insight as to the origin or chain of custody of the item. A letter of provenance from a a team official, a family member or party close to the source will hold more weight than a letter from a collector that will hold little weight if any. Without provenance tagging on the Jersey, and player characteristics will have to be used by a professional authenticator to determine if the Jersey is Game used, evaluated, and graded as to the probability of being game used. Game used Jersey's with this type of authentication will sell at a lower value depending on the grade given. Professional baseball Jerseys from the time period you mentioned were not made of Satin. They were made of flannel. You are either mistaken of what material the jersey is made of or the Jersey is not Game Used. In the late 1940's and into the 1950's the Brooklyn Dodgers sponsored a "Brooklyn vs. The World tour which matched ametuer teams at Ebbets Field. The team from Brooklyn that played wore white satin uniforms with "Brooklyn" accross the chest. I believe the jerseys were made by Rawlings. After 1945 the Brooklyn Dodgers no longer used "Brooklyn" on the jerseys. If the jersey you have says "Brooklyn" and is made of satin, it likely came from the ametuer baseball team tour and is not an actual Brooklyn Dodgers jersey. One of these jerseys would still be quite valuable if in good, unaltered condition. Many future pro players played in this tour and the possibility exist that perhaps the jersey was worn by a future major leaguer. If the jersey says "Dodgers" then you may have something altogether different. The Dodgers were a very popular team during that era and went on many traveling tours and could of likely worn flamboyant, satin uniforms. I seem to remember once seeing a powder-blue Dodgers jersey that was used in one these traveling exhibitions.
Newspapers dating back to 1912 and possibly farther, have numerous sports articles where the sports writers of the time would refer to the Brooklyn National League Baseball Club as the "DODGERS". The name actually became OFFICIAL during a meeting at Ebbets Field where the PRESS had been gathered to VOTE on an official team name. There were a few names that were discussed, but the name DODGERS was clearly the choice. The name DODGERS first appeared on the jersey in 1932 in BLOCK FONT style. In 1938, the DODGERS SCRPIT style font replaced the block style. With a few variations here and there over the years, the scrpt style has remained the same for 80 plus years.
The Kansas City Royals looks alot like the dodgers by cap, jersey, and logo. And the jersey script.
Brooklyn
how far is brooklyn new york from bridgeton new jersey
He never played for the Dodgers. In 1938 as a marketing gimmick the Dodger hired Babe Ruth to be a 1st Base Coach. Babe Ruth wore uniform Number 35. Dodgers infielder Pete Coscarart wore number 3. The Babe would occasionally take batting practice and excite the crowd at Ebbets Field.
It wasn't
As a matter of fact, they did. The white jersey that says "Dodgers" is their home jersey. However, the grey jersey that says "Los Angeles" is their away jersey. The teammates wear their home jersey when they are chosen as home team in a baseball game. They wear the away jersey when they are chosen as away team in a baseball game. The problem is, though, you'll see the "Dodgers" outfit only on the Dodger Stadium. If they are on a game somewhere else like Angel Stadium of Anehiem, for instance, which the Dodgers won 5-3, you'll see "Los Angeles" instead of "Dodgers". Therefore? Both of the jerseys you were talking about were official Dodgers uniform. It just depends on where they are playing at. Did you know that every MLB team are supposed to have two kinds of jerseys? That's right- Each team is supposed to get one kind of jersey for away side and another for home side. It's only the ALL STARS that have one kind of jerseys.
Tony Danza goes by "Brooklyn" Tony Danza, "The Brooklyn Brawler", and "The Brooklyn Bomber".
Jersey is spelled the same in Spanish as it is in English. Is is pronounced differently, with a Spanish 'j' .
35 years... not anymore though... their moving to Brooklyn!