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Teddy Bear

ca. 1910 (manufactured)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

It was in the United States of America that the teddy got its name. The President at the time, Theodore (“Teddy”) Roosevelt, was portrayed in a political cartoon that appeared in the Washington Post in November 1902 refusing to shoot a small bear that had been captured for him to kill. The cartoonist, Clifford Berryman, continued to associate Roosevelt with this endearing bear in his cartoons. Morris Mitchom, a New York shopkeeper and founder of the Ideal company, is credited with making a soft toy bear and calling it “Teddy’s Bear” as a tribute to the President. By 1906, the term teddy bear had become widely accepted in the United States and Europe.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Stitched and stuffed mohair
Brief description
Mohair plush teddy bear, by Ideal, US, ca. 1910
Physical description
Short golden mohair bear fully jointed at neck and limbs. It has a pronounced hump and pointed snout. The mouth and lower nose are stitched with wool. The upper portion of the nose area is shaved and stained. The ears are stitched across the face seams. It has small black boot button eyes. There are felt pads at the ends of the arms. The legs are all mohair with the seams at the front and round the bottom of the feet. It is firmly stuffed, probably with wood wool and there is an inoperable voice box loose inside the body.
Dimensions
  • Height: 35cm
Production typeMass produced
Subjects depicted
Summary
It was in the United States of America that the teddy got its name. The President at the time, Theodore (“Teddy”) Roosevelt, was portrayed in a political cartoon that appeared in the Washington Post in November 1902 refusing to shoot a small bear that had been captured for him to kill. The cartoonist, Clifford Berryman, continued to associate Roosevelt with this endearing bear in his cartoons. Morris Mitchom, a New York shopkeeper and founder of the Ideal company, is credited with making a soft toy bear and calling it “Teddy’s Bear” as a tribute to the President. By 1906, the term teddy bear had become widely accepted in the United States and Europe.
Collection
Accession number
B.98-2011

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Record createdApril 13, 2012
Record URL
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