While
Ken Harrelson is often credited with being the first Major League player to wear a batting glove when he did so in the 1960s, the use of gloves dates to at least the late 1800s. An early example is
Tom Brown of the
1897 Washington Senators wearing his
fielding glove while batting to protect and injured hand; in that era, fielding gloves were smaller, softer and lacking webbing, making this unintended usage possible. In his book
A Game of Inches, baseball historian
Peter Morris wrote that a batting glove may have been used as early as 1901 by
Hughie Jennings, who had a knack for being
hit by pitches. "Hughey Jennings has lots of fun flirting that big glove of his into the ball, and many a time he was made a present to first when he was no more entitled to it than a
Kohinoor," wrote
John B. Foster of
The Sporting Life. Morris wrote that this "seems to indicate that Jennings wore some form of glove while batting." Also in 1901,
Frank Butler, playing his final professional season for the minor league
Chattanooga Lookouts, wore a batting glove to protect a sore hand. In 1932,
The Sporting News reported that
Lefty O'Doul and
Johnny Frederick of the
Brooklyn Dodgers both wore batting gloves to protect injured hands, with O'Doul wearing an ordinary street glove and Frederick supplementing his with bandages and padding. In 1949,
The News Tribune wrote that
Boston Braves outfielder
Marv Rickert "introduced something new to baseball—the use of a golf glove while hitting." Rickert, nursing a broken thumb, happened upon a golf glove in sporting goods store, and found that it improved his grip while padding his injured finger. After a successful 1948 minor league season wearing the glove with the
Triple-A Milwaukee Brewers, he introduced the idea to the Braves' athletic trainer in 1949, who ordered a supply for the club. "The gloves are now worn by several major leaguers," the report said. In the 1940s and 1950s, many players wore gloves while batting in Major League games, including
Birdie Tebbetts, Marv Rickert,
Vic Wertz,
Roy Campanella,
Bobby Ávila,
Frank Thomas, and
Johnny Temple.
Bobby Thomson,
Willie Mays, and
Gil Hodges wore them in batting practice. Morris does, however, credit Harrelson and
Rusty Staub with helping to popularize batting gloves, ==Use in cricket==