Teddy in Hat Door Hanger
- ClearanceNational Archives Store Exclusive
- Made in the U.S.A
- 6 1/2 inches
- 100% cotton pillow with satin ribbon for hanging
- This item is a clearance item and not returnable, and not eligible for further discounts unless explicitly mentioned in promotional offers
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Adorn your door in support of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness with this sweet teddy bear door hanger.
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Preeminent Washington political cartoonist Clifford K. Berryman is credited with introducing this lasting symbol into the American consciousness. In 1902, President Theodore Roosevelt famously refused to shoot an old bear during a hunting trip. In his drawings, Berryman transformed the old bear into a cute, cuddly “teddy bear”—named for the President. The image not only became a common symbol representing Theodore Roosevelt in Berryman‘s cartoons, but also gave rise to the popular stuffed teddy bear. After Roosevelt left office, Berryman continued to use his lovable teddy bear to represent his own personal point of view.
By some estimates, Berryman drew over 15,000 cartoons in his lifetime, and his work was formally recognized in 1944 with a Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning. In 1949, President Harry Truman honored Berryman with a well-deserved compliment: “You are a Washington Institution comparable to the Monument.” Approximately 2,400 of the Berryman cartoons are now part of the official Records of the U.S. Senate housed in the Center for Legislative Archives. Since the First Congress in 1789, the records of the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate have documented the history of the legislative branch. These records remain the legal property of the House and Senate, but they are preserved and made available by the Center for Legislative Archives at the National Archives.