Bear Affair to celebrate famous hunt
By By James L.Cummins / special to The Star
October 15, 2004
Rolling Fork will be the site of a national celebration the 3rd Annual Great Delta Bear Affair. It will be held on Oct. 23 commemorating the 102st anniversary of President Theodore Roosevelt's 1902 bear hunt which resulted in the creation of the most famous children's toy in the world the teddy bear. It is sponsored by Cellular South.
On Nov. 13, 1902, Roosevelt, a renowned hunter and conservationist, had traveled by train into Mississippi to Smedes Plantation, where he met what amounted to a contemporary Who's Who of Southern planters and businessmen. Among the notables in what turned out to be Roosevelt's famous hunting party were soon-to-be Louisiana Gov. John M. Parker; Huger L. Foote, grandfather of Civil War historian, writer and friend, Shelby Foote; Tabasco sauce heir John McIlnenny; and Leroy Percy.
Legendary guide Holt Collier was the guide for the hunt. On the night before the hunt, he reportedly promised Roosevelt a bear, "If I have to tie one up and bring it to you." According to the now generally accepted story, Collier found a bear and it attacked his favorite dog. The guide, unable to shoot due to the proximity of his pet, used his rifle like a club, smashing the bear across its head and rendering it semi-conscious in the bayou. He then tied the bear to the nearest tree and sounded his hunting horn to alert the president.
In a gesture which may have been born as much out of political expediency as altruism there were a number of journalists on the trip that criticized Roosevelt in the press for his hunting activities the president refused to shoot the pitiful creature. As the whims of politics and history would have it, political cartoonist Clifford Berryman, who highly favored Roosevelt, popularized the event with a caricature he called "Drawing the Line in Mississippi," which eventually ended up in publications around the country. The idea of the teddy bear was born and soon a manufacturer began production of what would become the favorite toy of millions of Americans.
There will be many dignitaries who will attend the Great Delta Bear Affair. In addition, a festival-like atmosphere will characterize the event complete with merchandise vendors, food vendors, lots of music, as well as seminars, foot and bicycle races, horse-drawn wagon tours, bird and animal habitat tours, a hunt re-enactment, a book signing, children's activities and a reunion of all bear-hunt descendants. It will be in Rolling Fork, which is on U.S. 61. It is 45 minutes south of Greenville and 45 minutes north of Vicksburg. For more information, call (662) 873-6258.
James L. Cummins is executive director of the Mississippi Fish and Wildlife Foundation in Stoneville. Known as "Wildlife Mississippi," the foundation is a nonprofit, conservation organization founded to conserve, restore and enhance fish, wildlife and plant resources throughout Mississippi. For more information, visit www.wildlifemiss.org.