So THAT'S Where Teddy Bears Got Their Name

It all started with a hunting trip.
Teddy bears were so dubbed more than a century ago. Here's their story.
(c) Harold Lloyd via Getty Images
Teddy bears were so dubbed more than a century ago. Here's their story.

Giving your sweetheart a teddy bear this Valentine’s Day? Then you’re also gifting them with a tribute to President Theodore Roosevelt. Well, sort of.

In 1902, Roosevelt went bear hunting in Mississippi at the invitation of Gov. Andrew H. Longino. Roosevelt’s guide was Holt Collier, who was born in slavery and served as a Confederate cavalryman during the Civil War. He was also a skilled hunter and killed more than 3,000 bears, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. On this hunt, Collier was ready to help the president shoot a bear.

During the hunt, he found a black bear and planned to have Roosevelt kill it, as detailed in Minor Ferris Buchanan’s biography of Collier. Before the president could get there, though, the animal grabbed one of Collier’s hunting dogs. To protect his dogs and himself but also to ensure the president could take the fatal shot, Collier rounded up the bear (in part by hitting it on the skull with his gun) and tied it to a tree.

A teddy bear in the 1950s sits next to its tag explaining its link to President Theodore Roosevelt.
Hulton Archive via Getty Images
A teddy bear in the 1950s sits next to its tag explaining its link to President Theodore Roosevelt.

When Roosevelt finally arrived, the president refused to kill the captured animal, and according to Washington Post reporters who were also there, he told his hunting crew to “put it out of its misery.” Some sources suggest that Roosevelt knew he would receive more backlash for his love for hunting if he killed the bear in such circumstances. Others note that he was simply being sportsmanlike.

In the days after, the Post ran a cartoon by Clifford Berryman about Roosevelt’s hunt, titled “Drawing The Line In Mississippi.” It depicts the president firmly refusing to kill the tied-up bear. The cartoon creature looks barely larger than either of the hunters.

This 1902 cartoon depicting Roosevelt's refusal to kill a captured bear appeared in The Washington Post.
Universal History Archive via Getty Images
This 1902 cartoon depicting Roosevelt's refusal to kill a captured bear appeared in The Washington Post.

Roosevelt’s hunting expedition also caught the eye of Morris and Rose Michtom, Russian Jewish immigrants who ran a penny goods store in Brooklyn, New York. Rose sewed a bear out of plush velvet and displayed it in their shop as “Teddy’s bear,” according to Smithsonian Magazine. The couple soon realized there was immense customer interest in the soft toy. (There is evidence that similar stuffed bears were created in Europe around the same time.)

Seeing the popularity of the little bear and erring on the side of caution, the Michtoms sent one of their stuffed animals to Roosevelt and asked for permission to associate his name with it. The president gave the OK. The couple had such success with the teddy bear that they founded the Ideal Novelty and Toy Company. In the ’60s, the family gave one of the original bears to the Smithsonian Institution.

Teddy bears are still massively popular. Last year, a survey from Build-A-Bear Workshop, which specializes in helping customers create their own stuffed toys, found that 56 percent of respondents have treasured their favorite stuffed animal for more than two decades. The classic toy also makes frequent appearances around Valentine’s Day, especially in “giant” versions of the original.

So this Valentine’s Day, you can turn to the teddy bear to remind your darling of your undying love ― as well as Roosevelt’s fondness for hunting. How romantic.

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