Reading Time: < 1 minutes
- Theodore Roosevelt was the 26th President of the US, and he was often referred to as “Teddy”.
- In 1902, when he was the President, he was invited by the governor of Mississippi for a bear hunting trip.
- Most people competing in the hunting group had killed an animal but Roosevelt was struggling.
- Soon, his assistants cornered a bear, and after beating it, tied it to a tree.
- They then summoned Roosevelt to come and shoot the bear.
- Roosevelt refused to shoot—mentioning that the action would be unsportsmanlike—but instructed that the injured bear be killed to put it out of its misery.
- This news spread quickly, and soon newspapers carried articles on this episode.
- A political cartoonist, Clifford Berryman, read one of these articles and drew a satirical cartoon on the President’s refusal to shoot the captive bear.
- In Brooklyn, a candy shop owner, Morris Michtom, saw the cartoon, made a stuffed bear, and sent it to Roosevelt seeking permission to name the toy bear after him.
- Theodore gave the permission, and the toy bear was named Teddy Bear.
- Morris Michtom then put one in his shop’s window and it was an immediate success.
- And this led to the massive rise of Morris Michtom, who in 1903 founded Ideal Novelty and Toy Co. (Tyco Toys bought this company in 1989 for $43.9 million).
Image courtesy of Oxana lyashenko through Unsplash
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