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AA Milne, Harrods, Winnie the Pooh Bear, Winnipeg, London and New York

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 AA Milne's childhood teacher was HG Wells, author of the 1897 novel War of the Worlds. Wells was Milne’s botany teacher, taking him and his classmates on field trips around the country. From the beginning, Milne was very interested in his outdoor experiences.

In 1913 AA Milne married Dorothy de Selincourt, daughter of the owner of the popular Swan & Edgar Department Store. After suffering terrible shell shock in WWI, he re-located his family to Ashdown Forest in East Sussex. Later he became a writer and editor of the satirical magazine Punch, and began writing children's poetry and literature, after son Christopher Robin Milne was born in 1920.
  
Christopher Robin Milne
with his stuffed bear birthday present from Harrods

The best toy collection in London was inside Harrods Department Store. So of course AA Milne chose Harrods to buy his son’s his first birthday present in Aug 1921, a stuffed toy bear. This was despite the fact that Christopher's maternal grandfather owned Swan & Edgar, which featured its own kind of teddy bear called the Merrythought bear.

Harrods Toy Department,
London.

Christopher Robin Milne’s stuffed bear wasn’t named Winnie: he was first called Edward, the proper name for Teddy. But when Christopher was 5, his parents first took him to the Zoo. The little boy already loved his own brown bear toy and immed­iate­ly fell in love with the full sized bear at the zoo called Winnie. The more trips that Christopher made to the London Zoo, the closer he became to Winnie, and vice versa.

How did this big bear even get to London Zoo in the first place? Harry Cole­bourn, a Canadian officer and veterinary surgeon, brought the cub to England in 1914 when WWI broke out. Harry’s Winnipeg Regiment fell in love with this small ball of fur that became a part of the group and their mascot, and named her after Winnipeg. Sadly Harry had to leave her at the London Zoo temporarily when his unit left for France. Winnie became the star attraction at the zoo, and children absolutely loved her.
  
Harry Colebourn and Winnie the Bear 
Salisbury Plain, 1914

When Harry was returning to Canada in 1918, he wanted to ret­r­ieve his bear. But he made the decision to leave Winnie behind, because of the happiness she gave to zoo visitors.

AA Milne's inspiration for his stories definitely came from seeing his son playing with his beloved toys but they were not only the pro­d­­uct of Milne’s imagination. The author met his future Pooh collab­or­ator, illustrator EH Shepard, through an editor at Punch magazine.

AA Milne’s old neighbour reported how Shepard wandered around Ash­down Forest, the inspiration for Milne’s mythical woods. Then he turn­ed up at Milne’s home, and got drawing. The actual drawings for Winnie-the-Pooh occurred after many discus­sions between Shepard & Milne, letter exchanges and visits to the real-life Milne family home. Shep­ard first illustrated Milne's poetry collection When We Were Very Young 1924.

When We Were Very Young’s introduction traced the Pooh part of the name to a swan; Christ­opher Robin fed this swan in the mornings. Thus the name of Winnie the Pooh came from Christopher Rob­in, a combination of the names of a real bear (Winnie) and a pet swan (Pooh), and first appeared in print at Christ­mas 1925. Perfect timing for the book Winnie-the-Pooh, which was first published in Oct 1926!

Winnie the Pooh’s friends were received as gifts by Christ­opher Robin between 1920-28. As a result, Winnie the Pooh had adventures with Pig­let, Eeyore, Kanga, Roo, Owl, Rabbit, Tigger and Growler. These an­imals inspired the children’s classics When We Were Very Young 1924, Winnie the Pooh 1926, Now We Are Six 1927 and The House at Pooh Corner 1928. And the home of the Milnes, Ashdown Forest in East Sus­sex, was the basis for the setting of the Winnie-the-Pooh stories.
  
Tigger, Kanga, Edward Bear Winnie-the-Pooh, Eeyore and Piglet
clockwise from bottom left. 

Images of this much loved animal remains. A dungaree set for newborns from Harrods is decorated with a print of Winnie the Pooh outside the famous shop front. As part of the exclusive Harrods X Disney Winnie the Pooh collection, a plush bear is crafted with super-soft faux fur and wears his signature red jumper. And a children's satchel from Harrods is adorned with illustrations of the friendly bear, featuring a contrast buckle fastening and a matching shoulder strap.

Edward from Merrythought is Harrod’s replica of the teddy bear in a mohair coat and star of a major feature film. Goodbye Christopher Robin was a 2017 British biographical drama film about the lives of Winnie-the-Pooh creator AA Milne and his family, especially his son Christopher Robin. And Winnie the Pooh has made his way to the Vic­t­oria & Albert Museum where he set up his temporary home. The inter­active exhibition brought him to life via photography, letters, fashion and sketches, the master work of AA Milne and EH Shepard.

Taken to the USA in 1947, the toys remained with the American publisher EP Dutton until 1987, when they were donated to New York Public Library. For nearly 30 years before Walt Disney began anim­at­ing the bear, an American producer bought Pooh’s merchand­ising rights for the USA and Canada. In 1961, Walt Disney purchased the motion picture rights from AA Milne’s widow, thus beginning a memorable part of the Disney Empire.

The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
Disney publication, 1996

In 1977, cartoon shorts became the first theatrical release of The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. The 1980s brought two television shows, Welcome to Pooh Corner and The New Adventures of Winnie The Pooh. There is a life-size bronze sculpture at the London Zoo of Win­nie the Pooh, created by Lorne McKean which was unveiled by Christ­oph­er Milne in 1981. And there is a very sensitive Winnie-the-Bear and Colebourn statue in Assiniboine Park Zoo Winnipeg, designed by sculptor William Epp.







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