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The story about the Teddy Bear originates 100
years ago when the 26th President of the United
States, Theodore Roosevelt, decided to take
time out for himself following some difficult
bargaining over the disputed boundaries between
Mississippi and Louisiana.
In November
1902, President Roosevelt, who truly enjoyed the
outdoors, nature, and especially being in the woods,
among the animals, set out for a bear hunt with his
aides. Because he was the president, the people
organizing the hunt wanted to be sure that the
Presidents hunt was a success.
After a day in
the woods, having not fired one shot, the President
was called to kill a bear cub that was stunned, tired
and tied to a tree. This, the aides thought, would
ensure that the President would have an easy target
and a trophy to go home with.
However, the plan
backfired because the President refused to shoot the
bear. Feeling it was un-sportsman-like and inhumane to
shoot a defenceless cub, President Roosevelt
ordered that the bear be set free.
The
following day a popular cartoonist, Clifford K.
Berryman (Bear-y-man!) captured that moment in the
woods in the November 16, 1902 cartoon for The
Washington Post. He captioned the cartoon,
"Drawing the Line in Mississippi." The
cartoon emphasized the childlike helplessness of the
cub and conveyed the political message that such an
upstanding President, as Roosevelt, could not
be persuaded to make decisions for the wrong reasons.
The cartoon was printed in many papers and Roosevelt's
popularity soared as a result of his actions.
The restrained
bear cub in the cartoon was variously called, "Berryman's
Bear", "The Roosevelt Bear",
and "Teddy's Bear"… In just a few
years, the lucky "Teddy's Bear"
became the "teddy bear" and toy
companies sprang up all over the United States to
produce this popular toy.
Who made the
first teddy bear?
There are several
stories that could answer this question. The most
popular story is about a man named Morris Michtom.
He made the first official toy bear called the teddy
bear. Mr. Mitchtom owned a small candy store in
Brooklyn, New York and his wife, Rose, made toy bears
to sell in their store. Mr. Mitchtom sent President
Roosevelt one of Roses' bears and asked permission to
use the teddy bear name. Following the Presidents
approval, Mr. Michtom consulted a company called
Butler Brothers to start mass-producing the teddy
bear. Within a year, Mr. Mitchtom closed his candy
store and started a company called the Ideal Novelty
and Toy Company, which remains one of the biggest toy
companies in the world today.
At the same time
the teddy bear was born in The United States, it was
also born, across the ocean in Giengen, Germany.
Richard Steiff was working for his aunt, Margarete
Steiff, in her stuffed toy business. Richard, a
former art student, often visited the Stuttgart Zoo
to sketch animals, especially bear cubs. His design
talents led to the creation of a toy bear prototype in
1902, the same year the Michtoms made "Teddy's
Bear." Steiff bears were first introduced at the 1903
Leipzip Fair, where an American buyer saw them
and ordered several thousand for shipment to the
United States.
Although both the
Michtoms and Steiff created their toy
bears at the same time, it is believed that neither
knew, at a time of poor transatlantic communication,
about the other's creation. Besides, the Michtoms bear
resembled the wide-eyed cub in the Berryman cartoon,
while the jointed Steiff bear, with its humped back
and long snout, looked more like a real bear cub, like
the ones at the Stuttgart Zoo.
While there are
other stories that have been told about how the teddy
bear came to be, and nobody knows for sure whose story
was first, the simultaneous births of the teddy bear
in Brooklyn and Giengen are the best substantiated.
By 1908,
there were more than 20 companies making teddy bears
in the United States alone. Consumers were in love
with teddy bears! The popularity of the toy led to its
use in every imaginable consumer good-candy
containers, music boxes, clothing lines for bears,
specialty bears that performed and lit up and
innumerable teddy bear novelties.
Today the Steiff teddy bears are still being made.
Steiff is a well-respected manufacture with its
distinct button sewn to one ear and very
characteristic shape. Although no longer classed as a
child’s toy, they are prized and highly sought after
by collectors. Original old Steiff bears are fetching
many thousands of £/$’s at Christie’s and
Sotherby’s UK’s top Auction houses, on the rare
occasions they come up for re-sale, attracting bidders
from around the world.
By
Oaky Woodã2005
Oaky Wood was a qualified professional toy
maker / designer running his own craft workshops for
over 10 years in the UK, and is currently retired
through ill health. His main business now is designing
and running his own websites The Oakwood Grafix
Group http://oakwoodgrafix.co.uk/
and is currently developing “The Corner 4 women” an
eZine for every woman, http://thecorner4women.com
and is the resident Agony Uncle, article writer and
poet. |