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COMMANDER ZORRO'S MAGIC TIME PORTAL TO TEDDY BEAR DAY! |
A BIG HI, TIME TRAVELLERS! |
I'M COMMANDER ZORRO, CONTE DI SYLVESTRO! |
WHO AM I, YOU ASK? |
I'M THE NEW MEMBER OF CAPTAIN BOOTSIE'S CREW! |
WHERE DID I COME FROM? HOW DID I BECOME A MEMBER OF THE CREW? WELL.....THATS ANOTHER STORY. |
BUT IN HONOUR OF CAPTAIN BOOTSIE BEAR, I'VE DISCOVERED A HOLIDAY YOU EARTHLINGS CELEBRATE ....WHAT HOLIDAY, YOU ASK? |
WHY, TEDDY BEAR DAY!..... BUT DID YOU KNOW THAT THERE'S A TEDDY BEAR WORLD?......NO?.... WELL....ON TEDDY BEAR WORLD EVERY DAY IS TEDDY BEAR DAY. |
CHECK OUT THE TEDDY BEARS |
SO WHAT IS TEDDY BEAR DAY AND WHY DO YOU EARTHLINGS CELEBRATE IT? |
LET'S GO BACK TO THE BEGINING ...OK? |
The story begins in Germany, in late October 1902, where Richard Steiff, a toy designer working for the family firm in Giengen, went to a touring American circus in search of an idea for a popular new toy. Among the animals he saw there was a troupe of performing bears, and they sparked off the original idea. The following day, he put his thoughts down on paper for Margarete Steiff, his aunt, who had founded the firm in 1880. |
Richard saw an opportunity to make a bear toy, standing upright, and jointed in a similar way to dolls. There had been bear toys before, of course - often made from real fur! - but these had all been copies of real bears on all fours. Richard's bear would be able to walk upright. Margarete Steiff liked the idea, and Richard set to work on visiting zoos to sketch the bears and come up with some proper designs. |
Meanwhile, several thousand miles away in the year 1902, the other half of the Teddy Bear story was about to begin. President Roosevelt, visiting Mississippi to settle a border dispute, decided to go out hunting for the day. After several hours, he still hadn't bagged anything, when one of his aides discovered wandering through the wood an old she-bear. Catching it, he tied it to a tree, and brought the President to it - here was his trophy for the day! To Roosevelt's eternal credit, he couldn't bring himself to shoot the defenseless bear, and ordered it to be set free. Had he done so, he said, he wouldn’t “be able to look my boys in the face again". Washington Post staff artist Clifford K. Berryman (1869-1949) made the incident famous with a front-page cartoon called 'Drawing the Line in Mississippi' in which he transformed the old bear into a cub. This cartoon was printed in all the papers. Among the many readers who saw the Berryman cartoon was Russian immigrant Morris Michtom, a Brooklyn candy store owner. Seeing a potential market, Morris had his wife make a toy bear, with movable limbs, for sale and put it into his shop window with a copy of the cartoon and a hand written notice saying 'Teddy's Bear'. When it sold quickly, the Michtoms made others. Within a year, Michtom closed his candy store and founded the Ideal Novely and Toy Company, still one of the biggest toy firms in the world over 90 years later. After obtaining T.R.’s permission to use Roosevelt’s name in connection with the new toy, Michtom closed a deal with a large toy wholesaler to distribute the bears. In Germany, unaware of what was going on in New York, Richard Steiff completed the designs for his toy bear, and Margarete quickly ran up a prototype from scraps of mohair cloth. The bear, christened 'Friend Petz' first appeared in public at the 1903 Spring Toy Fair at Leipzig, but - to Richard's disappointment, nobody seemed interested. Legend has it that it was only as Richard was packing away the stand at the end of the fair, that an American toy buyer came up to him, seized the bear, and ordered 3000 on the spot. And so the Teddy Bear was born, and sent on his way to international success. |
Within a few years of their invention, Teddy Bear-mania had swept the world. Roosevelt adopted the bear cub as his mascot for a successful re-election campaign, and Steiff redesigned their bears to create a more appealing face which was to influence all other Teddy Bears for the next fifty years. While American firms mainly supplied their home market, the German firms - at first Steiff, and later competitors such as Hermann and Bing, exported bears across Europe. Only with the First World War did the Teddy Bear industries of other countries start to make a mark. |
SOME IMPORTANT THINGS TO REMEMBER! |
On Planet Earth Teddy Bear Day is celebrated on September 9th |
On Teddy Bear World, Teddy Bear Day is celebrated every day! |
Teddy does not get the day off! Your Teddy Bear still has to work, which means being cute, cuddly and loveable! |
Teddy Bears are not afraid of the dark.... so your Teddy Bear will keep you safe! |
Your Teddy Bear also needs hugs and love, so give your Teddy an extra hug today! |
Important message for parents and adults: No child should grow up without a teddy bear. If you know of any child without one, use this day or any other day to buy a teddy bear for them. |
Remember, you can always adopt a Captain Bootsie Teddy Bear or one of the crew. Not only will you bring a smile to someone you love, but you will also be helping others. 50% of the proceeds from the adoption of one of the crew is donated to two charities, |
for disadvantged children, and |
for animals in distress |
This article and photos are excerpted from material on Wikipedia® and distributed under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License |
MusicTeddy Bear's Picnic (1920s) by Henry Hall |
Just click on Teddy to take you to the Teddy Bears 4 Charity Adoption Center>>>>> |
If you would like to receive an official personalised adoption certificate just press on Happy Teddy to send Captain Bootsie an email! |
Photos of Commander Zorro, Captain Bootsie and His crew copyrighted by J Shahverdian |
Better check my special Teddy Bear World crystal ball to see where the others are.... |
Gosh! |
They all seem |
running from Baby Girl and some very noisy ladies! |
to be |
Guess we better find out what's going on! Let 's Goooooo |