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The Dark and Bloody Origin of the Teddy Bear

Vintage teddy bear

Every child has owned one. Every nursery has had one sitting on a shelf. The teddy bear is so deeply woven into childhood that it's hard to imagine it was ever invented at all — that there was a specific moment, in a specific place, where it didn't exist yet. That moment was November 1902. And it started with a president, a hunting trip, and a bear that had been cornered, beaten unconscious, and tied to a willow tree.

President Theodore Roosevelt had traveled to Mississippi for a bear hunt hosted by the state's governor. Days into the trip, Roosevelt hadn't found a single bear. His guide, a skilled tracker named Holt Collier, was determined to fix that. Collier spent hours chasing down a black bear with hunting dogs, eventually cornering it, clubbing it over the head, and tying it to a tree so that the President of the United States could walk up and shoot it at close range. Roosevelt took one look at the situation and refused. Killing a helpless, restrained animal wasn't hunting. It was an execution. He walked away.

The story spread fast. Political cartoonist Clifford Berryman caught wind of it and sketched a cartoon for the Washington Post on November 16, 1902, showing a disgusted Roosevelt turning his back on a cowering bear. The cartoon wasn't really about the bear. Berryman was using it as a metaphor for a political boundary dispute Roosevelt was refusing to take a side on. The bear represented Roosevelt "drawing the line" — staying out of a messy situation. But most readers didn't see the political subtext. They just saw a president with a conscience.

A Brooklyn candy store owner named Morris Michtom saw the cartoon and had an idea. He and his wife Rose sewed a small stuffed bear and placed it in their shop window, calling it "Teddy's Bear" — after Roosevelt's widely used nickname, which Roosevelt himself reportedly despised. The bear sold immediately. Then another. Then more. Michtom wrote to Roosevelt asking permission to use his name, and Roosevelt — apparently amused, if skeptical — agreed, reportedly saying he doubted the toy would amount to much.

He was wrong. By 1903, the Michtoms had formed the Ideal Toy Company and were manufacturing teddy bears at scale. Around the same time, a German toymaker named Margarete Steiff independently created her own stuffed bear, which an American buyer spotted at a Leipzig trade fair and ordered 3,000 of for the U.S. market. Neither Steiff nor the Michtoms knew the other existed at the time — poor transatlantic communication meant two people on opposite sides of the world were simultaneously creating the same toy, inspired by the same news story.

Roosevelt leaned into it. During his 1904 re-election campaign, a Michtom bear was prominently displayed at the White House, cementing the connection between the president and the toy. By 1906, one Manhattan store alone sold more than 60,000 teddy bears. The craze was global. Berryman kept drawing the little bear into his political cartoons throughout Roosevelt's presidency, and the image became permanently linked with the man.

Not everyone was charmed. A Michigan minister named Reverend Michael Esper warned his congregation in 1907 that the teddy bear craze was dangerous — specifically, that girls who preferred stuffed animals over baby dolls would lose their maternal instincts and stop wanting children altogether. Several social commentators agreed, warning that the "horrible monstrosity" of the teddy bear would lead to falling birthrates and the destruction of family values. History has not been kind to this prediction.

The bear that started it all — the one tied to the tree that Roosevelt refused to shoot — was ultimately killed by his guide with a knife, put out of its misery as Roosevelt had instructed. A moment of cruelty, a refusal, a cartoon, and a candy store window display later, one of the most iconic childhood objects in human history had been born. The original Michtom teddy bear eventually made its way to the Smithsonian Institution, where it still sits today — soft, worn, and somehow still completely innocent-looking, given everything.

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