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The Guild 8-24-2002 Long Live Teddy!
AP ^ | 8-23-2002 | By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON, Associated Press Writer

Posted on 08/24/2002 7:08:21 AM PDT by BigWaveBetty

Tweed Roosevelt, great-grandson of President Teddy Roosevelt, takes part in Teddy Bear Expo, marking the 100th year of the Teddy Bear in Washington Friday, Aug. 23, 2002. Roosevelt holds an original bear made in 1904, right, and a reproduction of the first Teddy Bear, introduced in 1902, at left. The Teddy Bear, with its link to Theodore Roosevelt, is easily the most popular presidential memento ever produced. (AP Photo/Dennis Cook)

Teddy Bear Celebrates Centennial

WASHINGTON (AP) - The teddy bear, inspired by the helpless bear a president refused to shoot, turns 100 this fall, still fuzzy-eared, huggable and loved by millions of children around the world.

Theodore Roosevelt's teddy bear is easily the most popular presidential memento ever produced and the centennial celebrations have already begun.

Appearing on Friday at the Doll and Teddy Bear Expo here, Tweed Roosevelt, the 26th president's great grandson, said teddy bears have long been part of childhood for young members of the Roosevelt family.

Roosevelt, 60, is a Boston investment banker and a spokesman for the teddy bears produced by the Steiff Company, which has been making stuffed bears since 1903.

"I think that the teddy bear has come to represent all that's good about humans," Roosevelt said. "For a child it is a confidant that's entirely on the child's side. It's an honor to the Roosevelt family that we had a part of giving to the world this symbol of joy and solace."

The teddy bear's creation resulted from the accidental combination of a tethered bear in a Mississippi woods, news stories about the president's refusal to shoot it, and a cartoonist's eye for an arresting image.

As the end of 1902 approached, Roosevelt had completed a busy and successful first year in office and Republicans had breezed through the November elections. The president decided he deserved a break and a bear hunt seemed made to order.

Soon Roosevelt was clambering down from a private car on a railway siding in Mississippi in leather leggings, a blue flannel shirt, corduroy jacket and hobnail boots. He had a cartridge belt at his waist, a hunting knife on his hip and a favorite, custom-made rifle under his arm.

The president was clearly ready. But the bears were not.

As biographer Edmund Morris records in Theodore Rex, his account of the Roosevelt presidency, wherever an increasingly frustrated Roosevelt went in the deep woods the bears went elsewhere.

Finally, a pack of hunting dogs gave chase to a bear which lunged exhausted into a pond where a guide roped it and cracked it in the skull with a rifle butt.

The president was sent for. Here, finally, was a bear for him to shoot.

"He was both disappointed and upset, on reaching the pond, to find a stunned, bloody, mud-caked runt tied to a tree," Morris writes. "The bear was not much bigger than he. He refused to shoot. 'Put it out of its misery,' he said. Somebody dispatched it with a knife."

The hunt went on for three more days. Roosevelt never got a shot.

But back in Washington the newspaper stories of the president's sporting refusal to shoot a defenseless bear reached the desk of Clifford Berryman, then a cartoonist for The Washington Post.

Berryman sketched a small, bewildered, tethered bear, with the president turning away in disdain. The cartoon appeared on the front page of the Post on Nov. 16 over the caption, "Drawing the Line in Mississippi."

Readers took to the imagery at once, demanding more bear cartoons. Berryman obliged. Subsequent bears became "smaller, rounder and cuter." Soon Berryman was adding tiny big-eared bear cub mascots to every cartoon he drew.

Berryman, whose cartooning career was to extend into the Truman administration, described the cartoon beast as "a poor measly little cub with most of its fur rubbed off and ears like prickly pears."

"We have all been delighted with the little bear cartoons," Roosevelt wrote Berryman on Dec. 29, 1902.

The president's delight was widely shared. Soon people on both sides of the Atlantic saw commercial possibilities in the little bears.

In New York City, Rose Michtom, the wife of Brooklyn candy store owner Morris Michtom, made two stuffed toy bears. Her husband put them in his window at $1.50 each with a sign calling them "Teddy's Bears." Soon the stuffed bears were selling so briskly that the Michtoms, both Russian immigrants, established the Ideal Toy Company to keep up with demand.

Meanwhile, in Germany, toy manufacturer Margarete Steiff had added plush, stuffed, bear cubs to her line of stuffed elephants and other toy animals. Each had button eyes, long arms, movable joints and a distinctive button in an ear.

In 1903, a New York toy store ordered 3,000 Steiff bears. In 1907, the year teddy bear first appeared in a dictionary, the company sold 974,000. The teddy bear was on its way to becoming an essential of childhood. Steiff still sells more than 800,000 bears a year.

In 1904, the little bear became the mascot of Roosevelt's successful presidential campaign.

All of this had a touch of irony about it. The president disliked the nickname Teddy. Friends called him "Theodore."

But his fellow countrymen were far more informal. To them, the president was Teddy. And the little stuffed bear was "the teddy bear."



TOPICS: Society
KEYWORDS: guild; theguild
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To: lodwick
Smile - You're Over 40

I only missed one. That's because I forgot,,, you see,,, ,I'm closer to 60 than I am to 50.

61 posted on 08/25/2002 10:40:57 AM PDT by Iowa Granny
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To: Iowa Granny
;-) I'll be joing the club in October - yikes.
62 posted on 08/25/2002 10:50:29 AM PDT by lodwick
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To: *The GUILD; goron; Anyone but Gore; algore

63 posted on 08/25/2002 10:58:55 AM PDT by lodwick
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To: *The GUILD

I don't write'em, I only find'em. ;-)


64 posted on 08/25/2002 11:06:12 AM PDT by lodwick
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To: lodwick
gotta have that one. Please e it to me.
65 posted on 08/25/2002 11:22:23 AM PDT by Iowa Granny
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To: Iowa Granny; *The GUILD

66 posted on 08/25/2002 11:39:14 AM PDT by lodwick
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Comment #67 Removed by Moderator

To: Motherbear
Great to see you here. Glad to know that you found The Guild, and don't be a stranger to the social arbiter of the internet. ;-)
68 posted on 08/25/2002 4:21:47 PM PDT by lodwick
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To: Motherbear
You are not alone. Most of us would react the same way. Way funny, JL.
69 posted on 08/25/2002 4:41:15 PM PDT by Iowa Granny
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Comment #70 Removed by Moderator

Comment #71 Removed by Moderator

To: Motherbear
Yes, Motherbear, we are here everyday. Sometimes, on the weekend, a thread rolls over into the next day. Hillary's Lovely Legs and Big Wave Betty and the others do a great job of keeping the merriment going.

We hope you'll check back often. Things seem to be a little slow today. Could it be there are others sending miniFreepers off to college today? I just now got mine out the door. My Diningroom Table was under that pile of stuff he took with him. I'm happy to reclaim my territory.

72 posted on 08/25/2002 6:29:34 PM PDT by Iowa Granny
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To: BigWaveBetty; Hillary's Lovely Legs; Motherbear
Could you please add Motherbear to your Guild ping list, so she can find us a little easier? TIA
73 posted on 08/25/2002 6:31:11 PM PDT by Iowa Granny
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Comment #74 Removed by Moderator

To: Motherbear
Yes, children grow up, and children raised by Freepers tend to be exceptionally well prepared for whatever is ahead.

I had several years of preparing 2 to go off to college in the same year. Those were the years when I couldn't find the floor,,, let alone the table.

I hope you'll visit us often now that you are cooking smaller meals,,, and I hope the ailing one is up and at'em soon. Surely the possibiltiy of claiming some unused space will spur this younger child to health. LOL Remembering how the youngest sibblings claimed 'dibs' on any left behind articles,,,, closet space, and total rooms.
75 posted on 08/25/2002 10:20:52 PM PDT by Iowa Granny
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To: BigWaveBetty; Hillary's Lovely Legs; All
Good Morning everybody! Oh man, that mess in Oregon City is finally opening up. I just can't imagine.

Hope everyone has a great day.
76 posted on 08/26/2002 5:06:33 AM PDT by Iowa Granny
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To: Iowa Granny; *The GUILD; Motherbear
Good morning up there. That is one sick family. We'll have to be alert for neighbors pouring cement slabs and not constructing buildings on them - how genius is that?

A tremendous day to one, and all.
77 posted on 08/26/2002 5:20:48 AM PDT by lodwick
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To: lodwick
Good morning, JL. Yes, I occasionally tire of mowing the grass. But there are better ways to deal with it rather than pouring a cement slab.

Pouring a cement slab would seem to be a *dead giveaway*. Pardon the pun.

Inch and a half of rain last week,, the soybeans have been awakened from dormancy.

I know nothing of the USDA stuff. Haven't even read the stuff yet. You need much better advice than what I can provide.
78 posted on 08/26/2002 5:54:41 AM PDT by Iowa Granny
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To: Hillary's Lovely Legs
Anxiously awaiting a report of your weekend. Tell us what you can.
79 posted on 08/26/2002 5:56:16 AM PDT by Iowa Granny
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To: lodwick; Iowa Granny; Motherbear; All
Good morning, all. After a little freeping this a.m., I have some concrete work to do (really!) - no slabs, just patching some cracks in the sidewalk. You're probably right that many Guild folk were busy with school-related things this weekend. I'm going to take my usual morning jaunt around the internet, and come back with all the news that's fit to print. Meanwhile, check out this piece on the guy who made a living trying to make Hillary look good, here.
80 posted on 08/26/2002 5:58:01 AM PDT by mountaineer
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