Even before the Revolutionary War, a movement arose to “De-Brit-ify” American English. In fact, in 1768, Benjamin Franklin himself proposed an entirely new alphabet that removed what he called “useless letters” like C, J, Q, W, X and Y. Obviously, that didn’t catch on.
But the movement re-gained steam in 1828 when Noah Webster introduced his American Dictionary Of The English Language. He replaced British spellings like “colour” with the more simplified “color”. And, he shifted “re” to “er” in words like “theater”. We still live with these Webster reforms.
And the spelling reform movement was really energized by the U.S. President who personified American energy—Theodore Roosevelt. He actually issued an Executive Order that mandated simplified spellings of over 300 words. For example, T.R. decreed that “dropped” be changed to “dropt’“ and “kissed” be morphed into “kist” (which of course, the StarKist tuna people picked up on). Oddly, the President (known as “The Trust-Buster”) had made strange political bedfellows with mega-industrialist Andrew Carnegie, who originally floated many of these spelling reform ideas. By the way, Congress quickly nixed Teddy’s ideas.
Fast forward to the development of modern American baseball. New team owners wanted to cement their team images in the minds of fans—something simple they could remember and that would easily fit in newspaper headlines. So, the “Boston Red Stockings” and the “Chicago White Stockings” both simplified their monikers to just “Sox”. Ditto the “Cincinnati Red Stockings”, who became the “Cincinnati Reds”.
All of these baseball-related changes—and many others we use every day—had their roots in the uniquely American political movement for spelling reform. Go Red Sox!

