Dan Dee Collectors Edition Teddy  Roosevelt 100th Anniversary Bear Talking Plush

This is a 2002 Dan Dee Collector's Choice 100th Anniversay Teddy Roosevelt Bear.  The bear is new and unusued, the hang tag with the Teddy Roosevelt story has creases from storage.  The bear was created to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Teddy Bear and measures 16 inches tall seated by 18 inches wide by 12 inches deep.  When you push the bear's paw, the bear tells the story of the Teddy Roosevelt's hunting trip and how the Teddy Bear was created.  Please see video below.

It all started with a hunting trip President Theodore Roosevelt took in 1902 in Mississippi at the invitation of Mississippi Governor, Andrew H. Longino. After three days of hunting, other members of the party had spotted bears, but not Roosevelt.  To prevent the "failure" of the President's bear hunt, the next day, the hunt guides tracked down an old black bear that the dogs had cornered and attacked.  The guides tied the bear to a willow tree and called for the President to come shoot the bear.  But Roosevelt took one look at the old bear and refused to shoot it.  He felt doing so would be unsportsmanlike.  However, since it was injured and suffering, Roosevelt ordered that the bear be put down to end its pain.  Word of this hit newspapers across the country, and political cartoonist Clifford Berryman picked up on the story, drawing a cartoon showing how President Roosevelt refused to shoot the bear while hunting in Mississippi.  The original cartoon, which ran in the Washington Post on November 16, 1902, shows Roosevelt standing in front.  The guide and bear are in the background, and they’re about the same size.  Later, similar cartoons appeared, but the bear was smaller and shaking with fear.  This bear cub then appeared in other cartoons Clifford Berryman drew throughout Roosevelt’s career.  That connected the bears with President Roosevelt.   The Teddy Bear stuffed plush toy was created when a Brooklyn, NY candy shop owner, Morris Michtom, saw Clifford Berryman’s original cartoon of Roosevelt and the bear and had an idea.  He put in his shop window two stuffed toy bears his wife had made.  Michtom asked permission from President Roosevelt to call these toy bears "Teddy's bears".  The rapid popularity of these bears led Michtom to mass-produce them, eventually forming the Ideal Novelty and Toy Company.  At about the same time, a Germany company, Steiff, started making stuffed bears.  Margaret Steiff earned her living by sewing, first by making stuffed elephants, then other animals.  In 1903, an American saw a stuffed bear she had made and ordered many of them making them an International sensation.  More than a century later, teddy bears have never lost popularity, and all can be traced to that original hunting trip in Mississippi.