Stanford University Palo Alto Tree Cardinal Red Adjustable Strap Baseball Cap

 This is a cardinal red 100% cotton twill embroidered baseball cap with a curved bill, one size fits most, Stanford University logo hat featuring their Palo Alto Sequoia Tree mascot.  The hat is in clean, lightly worn pre owned condition.  This is an unconstructed six panel hat and features the Palo Alto Tree inside an S on the front and "Stanford" embroidered on the adjustable hook and loop backstrap.   This is a super sharp hat that will appeal to all Stanford fans and alumni.

Stanford University, officially Leland Stanford Junior University, is a private research university in Stanford, California, and one of the world's most prestigious institutions.  Stanford was founded in 1885 by Leland Stanford, former Governor of and U.S. Senator from California and leading railroad tycoon, and his wife, Jane Lathrop Stanford, in memory of their only child, Leland Stanford Jr., who had died of typhoid fever at age 15 the previous year.  Stanford admitted its first students on October 1, 1891 as a coeducational and non-denominational institution.  Tuition was free until 1920.  The university struggled financially after Leland Stanford's 1893 death and again after much of the campus was damaged by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake.  Following World War II, Provost Frederick Terman supported faculty and graduates' entrepreneurialism to build self-sufficient local industry in what would later be known as Silicon Valley.  By 1970, Stanford was home to a linear accelerator, and was one of the original four ARPANET nodes which was the precursor to the Internet.

The Stanford Tree is the Stanford Band's mascot and the unofficial mascot of Stanford University.  Stanford's team name is "Cardinal", referring to the vivid red color and not the common song bird as at several other schools, and the university has never been able to come up with an official mascot.  The Tree, in various versions, has been called one of America's most bizarre and controversial college mascots.  The tree regularly appears at the top of Internet "worst mascot" lists.  The "Tree" is representative of El Palo Alto, the tree that appears on both the official seal of the University and the municipal seal of Palo Alto, Stanford's nearby city.

Stanford currently has 36 varsity sports (18 female, 15 male, one coed), 19 club sports and 37 intramural sports.  About 800 students participate in intercollegiate sports with an offer of about 300 athletic scholarships.  The sports teams are now officially referred to as the "Stanford Cardinal", which is a "mascot" name adopted in 1972 after the abandonment of the previous "Indians" owing to racial insensitivity complained by Native American students. It is a member of the Pac-12 Conference in most sports, the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation in several other sports, and the America East Conference in field hockey with the participation in the inter-collegiate NCAA's Division I FBS.  Its traditional sports rival is Berkeley, the neighbor to the north in the East Bay. The winner of the annual "Big Game" between the Cal and Cardinal football teams gains custody of the Stanford Axe.

Stanford has had at least one NCAA team champion every year since the 1976–77 school year and has earned 108 NCAA national team titles since its establishment, second most behind the UCLA Bruins, and 467 individual National championships, the most by any university.  Stanford has won the award for the top-ranked collegiate athletic program, the NACDA Directors' Cup, formerly known as the Sears Cup, annually for the past twenty years.  Stanford athletes have won medals in every Olympic Games since 1912, winning 242 Olympic medals total, 129 of them gold.  In the 2008 Summer Olympics, Stanford won more Olympic medals than any other university in the United States.  Stanford athletes won 16 medals at the 2012 Summer Games, 12 gold, 2 silver, and 2 bronze.

Relaxed unstructured shape
100% cotton twill
Precurved bill
One size fits most
White embroidered "S" with Palo Alto Tree on front and "Stanford" on back