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Teddy Bears

 

Happy 100th Birthday Teddy Bear!

June 23, 2002

dedicated to the Arctophile is all of us...

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DRAWING THE LINE IN MISSISSIPPI

 

Clifford Berryman: 

April 2, 1869 -- December 11, 1949

In November 1902, president Theodore Roosevelt went to Mississippi to help settle a boundary dispute with Louisiana.  While there he joined other in an unsuccessful bear hunt.  A fellow hunter captured a bear, tied it to a tree and summoned the President to shoot it.  Upon seeing the defenseless bear, Roosevelt did not have the heart to do so.  Clifford Berryman, a cartoonist with the Washington Post drew a picture depicting Roosevelt’s refusal to shoot the bear called “Drawing the Line”, which was published in newspapers across the nation.

Morris and Rose Michtom, a Russian immigrant couple, had a store in Brooklyn NY and saw the cartoon.  Rose made a small-stuffed bears to sell in their store.  Morris wrote to the president requesting permission to call the hand made bears “Teddy’s Bears”.  The President replied giving his permission, but added that he did not think that using his name would help sell the bears.  The bears proved to be very popular and soon were mass-produced.  The profits from the sale of these bears started what later became the Ideal Toy Co.

At the same time, jointed plush bears were being developed in Germany by a family business headed by Margarete Steiff.  In 1902 Margarete Steiff’s nephew, Richard Steiff developed the first bears with movable limbs and shaggy mohair fur.  At first the Steiff bears were unsuccessful, until in March 1903 when exhibiting at the Leipzig Fair, Hermann Berg a toy buyer for the New York department store George Borgfeldt and Co. bought 3,000 of the Steiff teddy bears.  By 1907 Steiff were making 975,000 a year, 90% of which were exported to the USA……………………………………the rest is history!  

"We cannot do great deeds unless we are willing to do the small things

that make up the sum of greatness."   

 

Theodore Roosevelt:   October 27, 1858 -- January 6, 1919

Smithsonian Bear

 

In 1962, on the 60th anniversary of the bear's creation, an early example of the

original 1903 bear was presented to Theodore Roosevelt's grandson Kermit 

by Benjamin Mictom, the son of Ideal Toy Company's founder Morris Mictom.

 

In 1964, the bear was  donated to the Smithsonian Institution.  It is now part of the collections at the National Museum of American History.

 

 

This limited-edition reproduction bear is based on

the Smithsonian Teddy Bear. 

 

.

 

Teddy bear celebration canceled due to terrorism

WASHINGTON (December 15, 2001 11:01 a.m. EST) - The teddy bear was to have had his 100th birthday party next summer at the Smithsonian Institution, but now the centennial fest has been canceled thanks to Osama bin Laden.

"Our product development and licensing division had to have commitments by fall to go ahead with the celebration, but those commitments weren't forthcoming for the same reason there's been a tremendous falloff in Washington tourism since Sept. 11," Smithsonian spokeswoman Mary Combs said Friday.

"That doesn't mean tourism won't pick up again, but we had to make a decision for planning purposes."

Even though he won't have a birthday party, "Teddy" is especially hot stuff again, just as he was back in 1902. That's when President Theodore Roosevelt refused to shoot a bear cub that his companions caught and tied to a tree on a hunting expedition on Mississippi's Little Sunflower River.

Press reports at the time convinced political cartoonist Clifford Berryman to draw a cartoon of the incident, titled, "Drawing the Line at the Mississippi." The Ideal Toy Company began turning out teddy bears within the year, and TR had a bully mascot for the rest of his political life.

The bear also stood for TR's rise as the first presidential media star who could shape popular culture, according to biographer Edmund Morris' new volume, "Theodore Rex."

The stuffed animal has been popular ever since, with teddy bear clubs and museums across the United States and as far away as Japan, "Crazy for Bears" author Wendy Mitman Clarke reports.

Bears also are big business, accounting for $2.7 billion of the $4.5 billion-a-year plush toy market in the United States.

Christie's in London stages two auctions a year of vintage teddies. At the most recent sale on Dec. 3 a center-seam Steiff bear from 1904 went for $16,732.

Stateside, Steiff North America President Paul Johnson advises collectors to check eBay for "bear necessities" that include almost 3,000 vintage items for sale.

According to Johnson, the toy is still the No. 1 item for Steiff, which sells 100,000 a year and will issue four limited-edition versions next year for the 100th birthday. A 12-inch police commissioner teddy is available for Christmas to commemorate TR's 1895 tenure as New York City's top cop. This Steiff creation goes for $275; 1,500 have been made.

Other bear-makers plan commemorations too, and the U.S. Postal Service will issue four commemorative stamps on Aug. 15, 2002.

It took an act of terror, however, for teddies to take on new meaning for today's generation of children and adults in need of comfort.

Within days after the Oklahoma City federal building was bombed in 1995 - killing 168 people, including 19 children - Brenda Edgar, wife of then-Illinois Gov. Jim Edgar, brought teddy bears as gifts for the families of youngsters who died in the attack. Soon, people around the nation and the world were sending teddy bears to Oklahoma City, and teddies began to appear on the fence surrounding the rubble. The Oklahoma City National Memorial was built on that site.

In the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist strikes, Oklahoma City memorial staffers organized a teddy bear drive. So far, they have sent more than 100,000 of the toys to survivors of the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks.

Some are "Hope Bears" left on the Oklahoma City fence, said memorial organizer Kara Ferguson.

Those teddies, she said, bear a special tag for the new owner: "We know this Hope Bear helped us feel better. We want you to have it now and know that we care."

As for the original teddy TR couldn't bear to shoot, the public never learned that the cub was killed anyway. Her pelt is now part of the Smithsonian collection.

BEARY GOOD  /  BEARY HELPFUL Links

 

Teddy Bears for Tykes - helping children affected by fire

 

Teddy Bears that Care

 

Teddy Bear Cops charity program

 

Teddy Bear Foundation

 

The Teddy Bear Project – global classroom program

The project aims to enhance understanding and acceptance of diverse cultures by the exchange of teddy bears and their diaries amongst schoolchildren of the world.

BEARY FUN Links

 

Teddy Roosevelt & Bear e-card – REALLY AWESOME!  MUST SEE!

Build A Bear – what a GREAT store & concept – SUCH FUN!!

Cherished Teddies e-cards

The Teddy Bear Museum

includes excellent history of the bear…

The Teddy Bear Search Engine –WOW!!!

History of the Bear

Teddy Bear Museum – Stratford-Upon-Avon

Vermont Teddy Bear Company

The Teddy Bear’s Picnic Ground – TONS of links to other bear sites

Teddy Bears' Picnic

If you go down to the woods today
You're sure of a big surprise
If you go down to the woods today
You'd better go in disguise.

For ev'ry bear that ever there was
Will gather there for certain, because
Today's the day the Teddy Bears have their picnic.

Ev'ry Teddy Bear who's been good
is sure of a treat today.
There's lots of marvelous things to eat
And wonderful games to play

Beneath the trees where nobody sees
They'll hide and seek as long as they please
'Cause that's the way the Teddy Bears have their picnic

If you go down to the woods today
You'd better not go alone
It's lovely down in the woods today
But safer to stay at home.

For ev'ry bear that ever there was
Will gather there for certain, because
Today's the day the Teddy Bears have their picnic.

Picnic time for Teddy Bears
The little Teddy Bears are having a lovely time today
Watch them, catch them unawares
And see them picnic on their holiday.

See them gaily gad about
They love to play and shout;
They never have any cares;

At
six o'clock their Mummies and Daddies,
Will take them home to bed,
Because they're tired little Teddy Bears.

Link to hear the music (midi pending)

 

Famous Bears We All Love

Corduroy by Don Freeman

Corduroy, the bear longs for a pocket of his own. He has many misadventure in the Laundromat while searching for a pocket. Lisa finally finds Corduroy and makes him the pocket of his dreams.

The Berenstain Bears - official website

Winnie the Pooh

Paddington Bear - official website

Goldilocks & the Three Bears

Smokey the Bear


In the 1950s, a bear cub found himself in a forest surrounded by flames. To escape the fire burning around him, he climbed up in a tree. By the time the fire fighters found the scared and hungry cub, the forest was charred and
blackened.

The firefighters, park forest rangers and the warden were so moved by the bravery of this little cub that they named him Smokey. They put him on a plane and sent him to the National Zoo in Washington, D.C. to live.

In the town of Capitan, New Mexico near where this brave bear had been found, people erected a museum to honor him. The museum still exists today.

Is Smokey Bear that brave bear cub? It’s hard to say for sure. But, certainly this Smokey carries on the spirit of that little bear cub-- to protect forests and keep them safe from the kind of fire that destroyed a forest and made so many animals homeless so long ago.

In 1994, the Smokey campaign celebrated its 50th anniversary of communicating Smokey Bear’s message that, "Only you can prevent forest fires!"

More on Smokey's Story (His web site)