Many bear lovers regard Teddy Bears as the quintessential
British childhood accompaniment, forever immortalized by
Sebastian in the television adaptation of Evelyn Waugh's
Brideshead Revisited.
In the United States, the connection
is with President Theodore Roosevelt (also nicknamed "Teddy").
While bear hunting in Mississippi in 1902, Roosevelt decided
to spare the life of a bear cub which had been orphaned during
the hunt. The event was the subject of a cartoon by Clifford
Berryman of the Washington Post whose cartoon was captioned
"Drawing the Line in Mississippi", a copy of which is included
for your viewing.
The cartoon was seen by husband and wife shop owners,
Morris and Rose Michtom. They owned a toy and novelty store in
Brooklyn, New York and, inspired by the cartoon, Mrs Michtom
made a toy bear and displayed it in the shop window. The bear
proved enormously popular with the public.
Mr Michtom wrote to Roosevelt requesting permission to name
the bear "Teddy" after the President. Thus was born one of the
largest toy companies of the United States: the Ideal Novelty
Toy Company, which changed its name in 1938 to become the
Ideal Toy Company.
Wherever their origin, the Teddy Bear has been embraced
world wide as a childhood companion, which some "children"
continue to hold dear well into their latter years. It is this
special relationship between people of all ages and their
bears.
摘自中国日报网站(J-04)