The story of the Teddy Bear
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Teddy's Bear - the original teddy bear |
Roosevelt's assistants, led by Holt Collier, a born slave and former
Confederate cavalryman, cornered and tied a black bear to a willow tree.
They summoned Roosevelt and suggested that he shoot it. Viewing this as
extremely unsportsmanlike, Roosevelt refused to shoot the bear. The news
of this event spread quickly through newspaper articles across the
country.
The articles recounted the story of the president who refused to
shoot a bear. However, it was not just any president, it was Theodore
Roosevelt the big game hunter!
A political cartoonist Clifford Berryman read the article and decided
to lightheartedly lampoon the president's refusal to shoot the bear.
Berryman's cartoon appeared in the Washington Post on November 16, 1902.

A Brooklyn candy shop owner Morris Michtom saw the cartoon and had an
idea. He and his wife Rose were also makers of stuffed animals and
Michtom decided to create a stuffed toy bear and dedicate it to the
president who refused to shoot a bear. He called it ‘Teddy's Bear'.
After receiving Roosevelt's permission to use his name, Michtom mass
produced the toy bears which were so popular that he soon founded the
Ideal Toy Company.
To this day the Teddy Bear has worldwide popularity and its origin
can be traced back to Theodore's fateful hunting trip in 1902.
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