America Wanted to Nuke the Moon and Other Weird History

America Wanted to Nuke the Moon and Other Weird History

Khalid Elhassan - October 15, 2020

America Wanted to Nuke the Moon and Other Weird History
Alston’s All Stars, and their mascot. Imgur

4. Weird Murderers’ Team Introduces Innovation to Baseball Uniforms

Warden Felix Alston’s weird baseball team introduced an innovation to baseball that is with us to this day. In the Alston All Stars’ first photo, the players wore their prison inmate numbers on their shirts’ left-hand pockets. It was not until 1916 that the Cleveland Indians became the first major league baseball team whose players wore numbers on their uniforms. In the Indians’ case, the numbers were worn on the uniforms’ left sleeves.

In another photo, taken after the Alston All Stars’ first win, the convict players look spiffy. They had lost the ad hoc prison shirt outfits, and looked sharp, sporting matching uniforms and caps. At a time when only white players were allowed in the major and minor leagues, two of the All Stars, catcher James Powell and first baseman Eugene Rowan, were black. In the midst of the offenders – including, it should be recalled, three rapists – sits the team’s mascot, Felix Vern Alston Jr., the warden’s son.

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