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ATTENTION ANY ONE INTERESTED IN
THIS DOMAIN NAME IT IS FOR SALE FOR $15,000.00
PLEASE EMAIL ME AT
CINDY@ATEDDY4U.COM |
WELCOME TO A TEDDY 4 U
....
IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A PUPPY
VISIT WWW.FUZZYWUZZYPUPS.COM
I
would first like to start off my saying thank you
for visiting our collection of free teddy graphics.

Please Choose the Teddy Bear you would like to save
on your hard drive. Right click on it with your
mouse and then save it. I will try to change Teddy
Graphics on a regular basis. So please check back
often.
   
   
 


I AM THANKFUL
FOR GOD ABOVE & FOR HIS PRECIOUS GIFTS OF WARMTH &
LOVE
I AM THANKFUL
FOR MY HOME & FAMILY TOO & FOR THE BLESSING I
RECEIVE THE WHOLE YEAR THROUGH...

WHERE DID THE TEDDY BEAR COME FROM????
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One of the world’s most universally
cherished toys was originally created as the
result a humane act by Theodore Roosevelt,
the 26th president of the United States. In
November, 1902, following Roosevelt’s help
settling a border dispute between
Mississippi and Louisiana, the President and
members of his staff went bear hunting in
Mississippi. Members of the hunting party
found and wounded a bear, which, when
cornered by the hunters, fought and killed
one of the group's hunting dogs. Roosevelt
ordered his men to humanely destroy the
suffering bear and end the hunt. Clifford
Berryman, a newspaper cartoonist for the
Washington Post, witnessed Roosevelt’s
compassion and decisiveness and turned his
experience into a political cartoon
entitled, "Drawing the Line in Mississippi,"
which depicted Roosevelt resting the butt of
his rifle on the ground and gesturing his
refusal to shoot the easy trophy being
offered by a staff member who was holding a
defenseless bear cub by a rope tied around
its neck. The cartoon was printed in the
November 16, 1902 issue of the Washington
Post and quickly appeared in newspapers
throughout the United States. Soon, the bear
cub was appearing in all of Berryman's
cartoons that included President Roosevelt,
and became popularly known as "Teddy's
bear."
A Russian immigrant to the United States,
Morris Michtom, and his wife Rose, who owned
a confectionery and stationery shop in
Brooklyn, NY, saw the Berryman cartoon in
the Washington Post and decided to make a
stuffed bear in the image of the bear cub in
the cartoon. When she had finished sewing
it, Rose Michtom put the stuffed bear with a
clipping of Berryman’s cartoon in her shop
window for sale, calling it “Teddy’s bear.”
Legend has it that Morris Michtom had asked
and received President Roosevelt’s
permission to call the stuffed bear “Teddy’s
bear.”
Teddy’s bear sold immediately, and sales
boomed when Butler Brothers, a US toy
wholesaler, became the distributor of the
Michtom’s stuffed bears. In 1903 Butler
Brothers formed the Ideal Novelty and Toy
Company, which changed its name in 1938 to
the Ideal Toy Co. Also in 1903, Hermann
Berg, a toy buyer for the New York
department store George Borgfeldt & Co.,
ordered 3,000 stuffed toy bears that Berg
had seen exhibited at the March, 1903
Leipzig Fair. The George Borgfeldt & Co.’s
stuffed bear imports had been sewn in
Giengen, Germany by Margarete Steiff from
her nephew Richard’s sketches. Because of
the Berryman cartoon, stuffed bears had
become big sellers in the US, and The Steiff
Company benefited from the increased demand
created by President Roosevelt’s popularity.
The toy bear's popularity was boosted still
further with the publication of Seymour
Eaton's “Roosevelt Bears,” rhyming tales
which originally appeared in Sunday
newspapers in 1905 and were featured in four
books between 1906 and 1907. By 1907,
Teddy's bear was universally known as the
teddy bear. The Steiff bear became so
popular that the factory was forced to
expand three times between 1903 and 1908,
when its annual production grew from 12,000
to nearly one million. In 1907, Steiff
officially started calling their stuffed
bears, “teddy bears.”
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LEGAL INFO:
This website is owned and operated By
Cindy Miller (Abuddy4uLLC)
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PLEASE NOTE: These images have been
collected from various newsgroups
and public domain sources, and all
are believed to be free of
copyright. If you find an image
within this collection that is not
free for distribution, please
contact us with this information,
and we will either remove the image,
or credit its author.Free teddy bear
clipart gallery. |
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