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The earliest U.S. Presidents didn't wear pants.
The very first American Presidents — George Washington included — led the country through the American Revolution and its earliest days without wearing a single pair of pants. That's because the Founding Fathers actually wore breeches, pairs of tight-fitting men's bottoms that cut off at the knee. (Their calves were covered with knee-high stockings.) Breeches were a status symbol; full-length pantaloons were generally reserved for working folk who needed more ease to complete manual labor, which was difficult to do in custom-fitted breeches. The knee-length items were also the pinnacle of men's fashion because they were on-trend in Europe; Americans generally kept up with overseas styles, in part because the Colonies initially couldn't mass-produce clothing (for some time, textiles were the top import from England).

Another revolution — in France — eventually led Americans to turn their backside on breeches around the start of the 19th century. French political groups such as the sans-culottes (literally meaning "without knee breeches") stylized longer trousers as the apparel of the everyday man, disparaging breeches as the clothing of the wealthy elite. For a while, American Presidents continued to stick with the cropped breeches, though pants slowly crept into everyday style. Americans wouldn't see the country's highest leader don full-length pants until 1825, when John Quincy Adams became the sixth President — and the first to be inaugurated while wearing a pair of trousers. (He also ditched the powdered wig.)
 
George Washington wore a wig.
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Numbers Don't Lie
Year the first knitting machine was invented, for making stockings and socks
1589
Year George Washington was inaugurated, wearing a brown suit with breeches
1789
Age (in years) of the world's oldest surviving pair of pants, found in a Chinese tomb
3,000
Average age boys began wearing breeches in the 16th century, replacing unisex dresses
4-8
Did You Know? Pants were once banned in ancient Rome.
When in ancient Rome, dress as the Romans do — and this once meant avoiding pants. In 397 and 399 CE, ruling brothers Honorius and Arcadius issued strict edicts against trouser-wearing, their reasoning being the supposedly uncivilized nature of two-legged apparel. Most Romans wore tunics on a day-to-day basis — togas were generally reserved for formal events — in contrast to the shirt-and-pant combination worn by neighboring Germanic cultures. Many Romans considered the foreign garments to be "aggressive" and uncouth, only acceptably worn by soldiers. The fourth-century ban prohibited civilians from donning pants, and doing so meant risking permanent exile. The influence of trousers, however, was hard to fight off, and the ban wouldn't hold up as Rome fell; pants eventually became a regular part of Roman court clothing during the fifth and sixth centuries.
 
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