Teddy bears History 1902-2002
The Teddy Bear is now so much part of our lives that it's hard to believe he was only invented in 1902, and
is named after Theodore 'Teddy' Roosevelt, the famous hunting President of the USA. The teddy bear is named after Teddy Roosevelt
because he refused to shoot a bear while hunting with some friends. For years, the claim to have made the first Teddy Bear
has been disputed between America and Germany - and in some ways, both countries made the first Teddy!
The story begins
in Germany, in late October 1902, where Richard Steiff, a toy designer working for the family firm in Giengen, went to a touring
American circus in search of an idea for a popular new toy. Among the animals he saw there was a troupe of performing bears,
and they sparked off the original idea. The following day, he put his thoughts down on paper for Margarete Steiff, his aunt,
who had founded the firm in 1880. Richard saw an opportunity to make a bear toy, standing upright, and jointed in a similar
way to dolls. There had been bear toys before, of course - often made from real fur! - but these had all been copies of real
bears on all fours.
Richard's bear
would be able to walk upright. Margarete Steiff liked the idea, and Richard set to work on visiting zoos to sketch the bears
and come up with some proper designs. Meanwhile, several thousand miles away, the other half of the Teddy Bear story was about
to begin. President Roosevelt, visiting Mississippi to settle a border dispute, decided to go out hunting for the day. After
several hours, he still hadn't bagged anything, when one of his aides discovered a lost bear cub wandering through the woods.
Catching it, he tied it to a tree, and brought the President to it - here was his trophy for the day!
To Roosevelt's eternal credit, he couldn't bring himself
to shoot the defenseless cub, and ordered it to be set free. The press pack following Roosevelt's visit heard about the story,
and it inspired cartoonist Clifford Berryman to draw a cartoon of the incident, entitled 'Drawing the Line in Mississippi'.
This cartoon was printed in all the papers, and triggered a moment of inspiration for Brooklyn candy store owner Morris Michtom.
Using Berryman's cartoon as a guide, he quickly worked out a pattern, and, within days, had put together a little jointed
toy bear cub, which he put in his shop window with a copy of the cartoon, and a handwritten notice saying 'Teddy's Bear'.
The Bears sold like wildfire, and within a year, Michtom closed his candy store, and founded the Ideal Novelty and Toy Co.
- still one of the biggest toy firms in the world over ninety years later.
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