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Legend has it that the naming
of the beloved Teddy Bear resulted from one of President Roosevelt's famous
big game hunting trips. In 1902 Roosevelt traveled to Mississippi to settle
a boundary dispute between the states of Mississippi and Louisiana. As he was
an avid and accomplished hunter, his trip included a four-day bear hunt. During
the entire time, he failed to shoot a single bear but other members of the party
managed to capture a small bear cub. They tied it to a tree so the President
could shoot and claim it as his own but Roosevelt refused, sparing its
life.
A political cartoonist by
the name of Clifford Berryman recorded the episode in a sketch entitled "Drawing
the line in Mississippi" and published it to wide acclaim in The Washington
Post. The sketch attracted so much national attention that the popular cartoonist
hereafter included the appealing little bear character whenever he portrayed
the President. But neither Berryman or Roosevelt ever referred to the Bear as
"Teddy".
It took a Brooklyn shopkeeper
by the name of Morris Mitchom to give the bear its moniker. Mitchom asked his
wife Rose, a seamstress, to stitch a jointed bear to resemble Berryman's drawing
and then showcased her creation in their shop window along with a sign that
read "Teddy's Bear." The bear sold so quickly they couldn't make bears fast
enough to meet demand. He wrote to President Roosevelt asking for permission
to name his popular bear "Teddy" and the president is said to have agreed in
a hand-written reply. On the success of their "Teddy Bear" design Morris and
Rose launched the Ideal Novelty and Toy Company and with it, the American Teddy
Bear was born -- and the rest is Teddy Bear history!
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