When watching the old newsreel footage from the two world wars you see a fair amount of American sailors going about their business. They wore a uniform that seemed to have its origins in the Nineteenth Century, with bell bottom trousers and an odd shirt called a jumper. The blue jumper of an American sailor is decorated with various white stripes, stars and and topped off with a queer little black silk kerchief; this article seeks to explain what the meaning behind it all was, and their origins were, for the most part, British:

“The black silk neckerchief dates from the day when English sailors went into action stripped to the waist; in the olden days the sailors were served out with a cotton cloth which was tied around the neck and used as a sort of sweat-cloth or as a bandage for first-aid purposes.”

Read The American Sailor Uniform: An Explanation <br>(The Literary Digest, 1917) for Free

US navy Sailor uniform historyUS navy Sailor jumper historyUS navy Sailor Blouse historyww1 US navy Sailor Shirt 1917Jimmy Legs United States Navy WW 1US navy enlisted-men insigniaUS Naval uniform historyJolly Jack Tar US Navy historyLord Nelson Influences on US Navy Sailor Uniform
Scroll to Top