The History of the Teddy Bear
By Marianne Clay
Today we can hardly imagine a world without that eager listener,
confidante, and loyal friend, the teddy bear. But the teddy bear has not
always been with us. In fact, the teddy bear did not make its entrance until
late in 1902. Then, in one of life's unexplainable synchronicities, the teddy
bear appeared in the same year in two different parts of the world: Germany
and the United States.
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Drawing the Line in Mississippi by Clifford Berryman: This cartoon is believed to have triggered the teddy bear craze in the U.S.
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The Early Years
In America, the teddy bear, according to tradition, got its start with a
cartoon. The cartoon, drawn by Clifford Berryman and titled "Drawing the Line
in Mississippi," showed President Theodore Roosevelt refusing to shoot a baby
bear. According to this often told tale, Roosevelt had traveled to
Mississippi to help settle a border dispute between that state and Louisiana,
and his hosts, wanting to please this avid hunter, took him bear hunting. The
hunting was so poor that someone finally captured a bear and invited Roosevelt
to shoot. Roosevelt's refusal to fire at such a helpless target inspired
Berryman to draw his cartoon with its play on the two ways Roosevelt was
drawing a line—settling a border dispute and refusing to shoot a captive
animal.
The cartoon appeared in a panel of cartoons drawn by Cliffored Berryman in
The Washington Post on November 16, 1902. It caused an immediate
sensation and was reprinted widely. Apparently this cartoon even inspired
Morris and Rose Michtom of Brooklyn, New York, to make a bear in honor of the
president's actions. The Michtoms named their bear "Teddy's Bear" and placed
it in the window of their candy and stationery store. Instead of looking
fierce and standing on all four paws like previous toy bears, the Michtoms'
bear looked sweet, innocent, and upright, like the bear in Berryman's cartoon.
Perhaps that's why "Teddy's Bear" made a hit with the buying public. In fact,
the demand was so strong that the Michtoms, with the help of a wholesale firm
called Butler Brothers, founded the first teddy bear manufacturer in the
United States, the Ideal Novelty and Toy Company.
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Made in the early days of teddy bear history, this 1904 Steiff hugs an early Steiff polar bear.
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Meanwhile, across the ocean in Germany, Richard Steiff was working for his
aunt, Margarete Steiff, in her stuffed toy business. Richard, a former art
student, often visited the Stuttgart Zoo to sketch animals, particularly the
bear cubs. In 1902, the same year the Michtoms made "Teddy's Bear," the
Steiff firm made a prototype of a toy bear based on Richard's designs.
Though both the Michtoms and Steiff were working on bears at the same time,
certainly neither knew, at a time of poor transatlantic communication, about
the other's creation. Besides, the Michtoms' bear resembled the wide-eyed cub
in the Berryman cartoon, while the Steiff bear, with its humped back and long
snout, looked more like a real bear cub.
A few months later, in March 1903, at the Leipzig Toy Fair, Steiff
introduced its first bear—Baer 55PB. The European buyers showed little
interest, but an American toy buyer, who was aware of the growing interest in
"Teddy's bears" in the States, ordered 3000. In America, people were
beginning to get teddy bear fever, and Steiff was in the right place at the
right time.
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This 16-inch Steiff was made about 1908 and comes from the collection of teddy bear artist Audie Sison.
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The Teddy Bear Craze
By 1906, the teddy bear craze was in full swing in the United States. The
excitement probably compared to the frenzy for Cabbage Patch dolls in the
1980s and Beanie Babies in the 1990s. Society ladies carried their teddies
everywhere, and children had their pictures taken with their teddy bears.
President Roosevelt, after using a bear as a mascot in his re-election bid,
was serving his second term. Seymour Eaton, an educator and a newspaper
columnist, was writing a series of children's books about the adventures of
The Roosevelt Bears, and another American, composer J.K. Bratton, wrote "The
Teddy Bear Two Step." That song would become, with the addition of words,
"The Teddy Bear's Picnic."
Meanwhile, American manufacturers were turning out bears in all colors and
all kinds, from teddy bears on roller skates to teddy bears with electric
eyes. "Teddy bear," without the apostrophe and the s, became the accepted
term for this plush bruin, first appearing in print in the October 1906 issue
of Playthings Magazine. Even Steiff, a German company, adopted the
name for its bears.
Steiff and Ideal were no longer the only players in the teddy bear
business. In America, dozens of competitors sprang up. Almost all of these
very early companies didn't last, with the notable exception of the Gund
Manufacturing Corporation. Gund made its first bears in 1906 and is still
making bears today.
American teddy bear companies faced stiff competition from all the teddy
bears imported from Germany, and many of the U.S. companies didn't last long.
In Germany, toymaking was an old and established industry, and many German
firms, such as Bing, Schuco, and Hermann, joined with Steiff in making fine
teddy bears.
In England, The J.K. Farnell & Co. got its start; in fact, the original
Winnie the Pooh was a Farnell bear Christopher Robin Milne received as a first
birthday present from his mother in 1921. Five years later, his father, A.A.
Milne, would begin to publish the Winnie-the-Pooh books about his son
Christopher's adventures with his bear and his other stuffed animals. Today
you can see the original toys that inspired the Winnie-the-Pooh books on
permanent display in the Central Children's Room of the Donnell Branch of the
New York Public Library in New York City, while the Pooh books themselves are
as popular as ever.
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Made around 1929, this 9-inch mechanical duck by the German company of Bing was wound by a key.
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More Great Years: The 1920s - 1940s
With the exception of the four years when World War I raged in Europe, the
next 25 years were kind to the teddy bear. Mass production had not yet taken
over the teddy bear world, and people still preferred to buy high quality,
hand-finished teddy bears.
Because World War I interrupted the flow of teddy bears from Germany, new
teddy bear industries developed outside Germany. Chad Valley, Chiltern, and
Dean's joined Farnell in England; Pintel and Fadap were begun in France, and
Joy Toys in Australia. The bears themselves changed, too. Boot-button eyes
were replaced by glass, and excelsior stuffing was replaced by a softer
alternative, kapok.
The United States was relatively untouched by the war, and its teddy bear
industry continued to grow. For example, the Knickerbocker Toy Company got
its start in 1920 and continues to make teddy bears today. Nine years later,
though, the U.S. was hit by the Depression, and most teddy bear companies were
hurt by the financial crisis. After 1929, many American companies either
found cheaper ways to produce bears, or they closed.
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This 12-inch Schuco bear is called a yes/no bear, because this bear from the 1930s shakes his head no or nods yes, depending on how you move his tail.
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In the 1920s and 30s, musical bears and mechanical bears were very popular,
and they were produced all over the world. Perhaps the most noteworthy
manufacturers of these novelty bears were Schuco and Bing. These two German
companies made bears that walked, danced, played ball, and even turned
somersaults.
But the outbreak of World War II in 1939 stopped the fun. Instead of
making teddy bears, the world's workers and factories were needed for the war
effort. Some companies closed and never reopened.
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Made about 1970, this 20-inch bear from the German company of Fechter wears its orignal ribbon.
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The Lean Years: The 1950s - 1970s
While traditional teddy bear companies had always prided themselves on
quality hand-finishing and had always used natural fibers to make their bears,
all that changed after World War II. Fueled by a desire for washable toys,
synthetic fibers were all the rage in the post-War years. Buyers liked the
idea of washable toys, so bears were made from nylon or acrylic plush, and had
plastic eyes and foam rubber stuffing.
While traditional teddy bear companies could adapt to this change in
materials, they were not prepared to compete against the flood of much
cheaper, mass-produced teddy bears coming from eastern Asia. Even the old,
well-established companies were hurt by the onslaught of inexpensive teddy
bears from the Far East.
The Teddy Bear's Comeback: The Present
Strangely enough, the comeback of the teddy after years of mass-production
was triggered, not by a bear maker, but by an actor. On television, British
actor Peter Bull openly expressed his love for teddy bears and his belief in
the teddy bear's importance in the emotional life of adults. After receiving
2000 letters in response to his public confession, Peter realized he wasn't
alone. In 1969, inspired by this response, he wrote a book about his lifelong
affection for teddy bears, Bear with Me, later called The Teddy
Bear Book. His book struck an emotional chord in thousands who also
believed in the importance of teddy bears. Without intending to, Bull created
an ideal climate for the teddy bear's resurgence. The teddy bear began to
regain its popularity, not so much as a children's toy, but as a collectible
for adults.
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Jenni, an 18-inch bear, was made by British teddy artist Elizabeth Lloyd.
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In 1974, Beverly Port, an American dollmaker who also loved making teddy
bears, dared to take a teddy bear she made to a doll show. At the show, she
presented Theodore B. Bear holding the hand of one of her dolls. The
next year, Beverly presented a slide show she had created about teddy bears
for the United Federation of Doll Clubs. That show quickly became a
sensation. Other people, first in the United States and then all over world,
caught Beverly's affection for the teddy bear. They, too, began applying
their talents to designing and making teddy bears. One by one, and by hand,
teddy bear artistry was born with Beverly, who coined the term "teddy bear
artist," often cited as the mother of teddy bear artistry. Today thousands of
teddy bears artists, often working from their homes all over the world, create
soft sculpture teddy bear art for eager collectors.
Artist bears also set the stage for a new kind of manufactured bear, the
artist-designed manufactured bear. Today artist-designed manufactured bears
are offered by Ganz, Gund, Dean's, Knickerbocker, Grisly Spielwaren, and
others; all offer collectors the opportunity to own artist-designed bears that
cost less due to mass production.
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American teddy bear artist Heather Stanley made 14-inch Simon.
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This increased appreciation for the teddy bear as an adult collectible has
also increased the value of antique teddy bears, the hand-finished,
high-quality teddy bears manufactured in the first decades of the 20th
century. In the 1970s and 1980s, these old, manufactured teddy bears began
showing up in antique doll and toy auctions, and they began winning higher and
higher bids. Today the current record price for one teddy bear, Teddy
Girl by Steiff, is $176,000; that bear was sold at Christie's auction
house in 1994.
So what's next for the teddy bear? Certainly our love affair with the teddy
bear shows no signs of abating.
In 1999, in just the United States, collectors purchased $441 million worth
of teddy bears. Certainly, as we begin our journey through a new century, we
certainly need the teddy bear's gift of uncondtional acceptance, love, and
reassurance more than ever.
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