The Teddy Bear is designated the state toy of Mississippi, in recognition of the Mississippi connection to the origin of the Teddy Bear. The connection is that on November 14, 1902, during a hunting expedition led by distinguished Mississippian Holt Collier in Smedes, Mississippi, President Theodore Roosevelt refused to shoot a small, exhausted black bear. The shot not fired at a baby bear in the Mississippi Delta became a great credit to the heroic and sportsmanlike conduct of President Roosevelt, and because of the President's journey to Mississippi, the stuffed bear toy was appropriately named the "Teddy Bear," a positive symbol of love, comfort and joy for children of all ages.
Structure Mississippi Code
Title 3 - State sovereignty, jurisdiction and holidays
Chapter 3 - State Boundaries, Holidays, and State Emblems
§ 3-3-1. Limits and boundaries of the territorial waters of the State of Mississippi
§ 3-3-3. How state divided into counties
§ 3-3-5. How far counties on Mississippi River and Gulf of Mexico extend
§ 3-3-8. Designation of first week in May as Hernando de Soto Week
§ 3-3-15. Display of state flag
§ 3-3-16. Design of state flag
§ 3-3-35. "Retired Teachers Day" designated
§ 3-3-37. State Grand Opera House
§ 3-3-42. The Great Seal of the State of Mississippi
§ 3-3-42.1. Replacement of older version of state seal
§ 3-3-47. State Automobile Museum
§ 3-3-48. State wildlife heritage museum
§ 3-3-49. State Historical Industrial Museum
§ 3-3-51. "Nurses Month" designated
§ 3-3-53. "Mississippi Health Awareness Day" designated
§ 3-3-55. "Katrina Day of Remembrance" designated
§ 3-3-57. State military history museum