Jacket

Object number2008.142.1
Date1947
MediumWool; cotton; satin; metal
Credit LineGift of Diane Rafle
DescriptionRed wool long-sleeved jacket. Patch on proper right breast: circular, white with red embroidery with championship information. Patch on proper left breast: embroidered multi-colored American Indian head. Seven white metal buttons down front. Back: sewn patch text is team name. Two front pockets; two inner front pockets lined with red satin.Dimensions24 x 21.5 x 26.5 in. (61 x 54.6 x 67.3 cm)
InscriptionsPatch on proper right breast with red embroidery, "North American / Pro / Soccer / Champs / 1947".

Back: sewn patch text, "Pittsburgh / [red felt letters sewn onto above patch] INDIANS".
Historical NotesPittsburgh Indians professional soccer jacket worn by Nicholas DiOrio. Nicholas DiOrio grew up in Morgan, Pennsylvania, a coal mining town near Bridgeville in southern Allegheny County. He played basketball at South Fayette High School, from where he graduated in 1939, and supposedly scored 50 points in a game. After high school he worked as a laborer at factories in Bridgeville. Later he worked for the county road maintenance department. But for 22 years, he devoted his spare time to soccer. He played for the 1939 Avella Juniors that won the national junior championship, and with a series of clubs, like Morgan Strasser, Harmarville Soccer Club, and Beadling. In the late 1940s, he played for the Pittsburgh Indians and Chicago Vikings in the short-lived North American Professional Soccer League. As member of the U.S. soccer team, he competed in the 1950 World Cup in Brazil when he was 29 years old. The U.S. team was matched against England in an early round and won in one of the biggest upsets in international soccer. He retired as a player in 1959 but continued as a player-manager, a manager, and president of the West Penn Soccer Association. Mr. DiOrio was named to the National Soccer Hall of Fame, Oneonta, New York, in 1974, and to state and regional halls of fame. He died in 2003 at the age of 82.
Previous owner (died 2003)
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