During the first
World War troops from Winnipeg (Manitoba,
Canada) were being transported to
eastern Canada, on their way overseas
to Europe where they should join
the 2nd Canadian Infantry Brigade.
When the train stopped at White
River, Ontario, a lieutenant called
Harry Colebourn bought a small female
black bear cub for $20 from a hunter
who had killed its mother. He named
her 'Winnipeg', after his hometown
of Winnipeg, or 'Winnie' for short.
Winnie became the
mascot of the Brigade and went to
Britain with the unit. When the
Brigade was posted to the battlefields
of France, Lt. Colebourn took Winnie
to the London Zoo for a long loan.
Formally Colebourn presented the
London Zoo with Winnie in December
1919 where it became a popular attraction
and lived until 1934.
The bear was also
very popular by Christopher Robin,
son of author A.A. Milne. It was
his favorite at the zoo, and he
often spent time inside the cage
with it. The bear was Christopher
Robin's inspiration for calling
his own teddy bear Winnie.... Winnie
the Pooh (this teddy bear started
out with the name of Edward Bear).
The name of Pooh originally belonged
to a swan, as can be seen in a poem
from Milne's When We Were Very Young.
A.A. Milne started
to write a series of books about
Winnie the Pooh, his son Christopher
Robin, and their friends at 100-Aker-Wood.
These other characters, such as
Eeyore, Piglet, Tigger, Kanga and
Roo were also based on stuffed animals
belonging to Christopher Robin.
Other characters as Rabbit and Owl
were based on animals that lived,
just like the swan Pooh, in the
surrounding area of Milne's country
home Cotchford Farm in Ashdown Forest,
Sussex, on which 100-Aker-wood was
based.
'Winnie-the-Pooh'
was published by Methuen on October
14th, 1926, the verses 'Now We are
Six' in 1927, and 'The House at
Pooh Corner' in1928. All these books
were illustrated in a beautiful
way by E.H. Shepard, which made
the books even more magical. The
Pooh-books became firm favourites
with old and young alike and have
been translated into almost every
known language. A conservative figure
for the total sales of the four
Methuen editions (including When
We Were Very Young) up to the end
of 1996 would be over 20 million
copies. These figures do not include
sales of the four books published
by Dutton in Canada and the States,
nor the foreign-language editions
printed in more than 25 languages
the world over!
The Pooh-books had
also been favourites of Walt Disney's
daughters and it inspired Disney
to bring Pooh to film in 1966. In
1977 'the Many Adventures of Winnie
the Pooh', the first feature-length
animated film of Pooh was released.
In 1993, the Walt Disney Company
acknowledged that Pooh Bear is second
only to Mickey Mouse in their portfolio
of the most-loved and trusted characters
known to millions of people all
the world over. By 1996, after the
second release of 'the Many Adventures
of Winnie the Pooh', the Bear of
Very Little Brain had proved to
be more popular than any other Disney
character. In 1997, thirty years
after the release of 'the Many Adventures
of Winnie the Pooh', Disney released
'Pooh's Grand Adventure', picking
up where Disney's 22nd Masterpiece
left off.