Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

OKIE DOKIE, SMOKEY

Smokey Bear has been the U.S. Forest Service’s symbol to draw attention to the danger of wildfires for 75 years.

- By KURT SNIBBE

1937 President Franklin D. Roosevelt launches a national campaign to reduce forest fires. Posters featuring Uncle Sam as a forest ranger tell people, “Our forests — our fault.”

1942 A Japanese submarine surfaces and fires on an oil field near Santa Barbara. Damage is minimal, but officials realize Los Padres National Forest is at risk. With resources at a premium during wartime, fire safety becomes an even higher priority.

1944 Disney makes a one-year deal to loan the character Bambi to the forest fire prevention campaign. The campaign is a success, but ad executives realize they need an animal symbol of their own. AUG. 9: A new campaign is launched featuring a bear. The first poster, drawn pro bono by illustrato­r Albert Staehle, shows a character he calls Smokey pouring water on a campfire. He says he started with a raccoon but thought it looked too much “like a bandit.”

1947 The very successful Smokey Bear campaign continues in the postwar years with a new slogan, “Only you.”

1950 MAY 9: A group of firefighte­rs narrowly escapes disaster near Capitan, New Mexico, by taking refuge on rocks as the fire burns over them. Afterward, they find a bear cub — his fur singed and his paws badly burned — clinging to a charred tree. Named Hotfoot Teddy, the cub is nursed back to health by a New Mexico game warden and his family. JUNE 27: Now famous, the cub is flown to the National Zoo in Washington, D.C., to become the living embodiment of Smokey Bear. The U.S. Postal Service eventually gives Smokey his own ZIP code when he begins receiving up to 13,000 letters a week.

1952 A song, “Smokey the Bear” — written by Steve Nelson and Jack Rollins, the same guys who wrote “Peter Cottontail” and “Frosty the Snowman” — becomes a big hit. Rollins adds “the” to Smokey’s name to make the lyrics fit better. As a result, a generation or two of children grow up calling the character “Smokey the Bear” instead of just “Smokey Bear.” MAY 23: Congress passes the Smokey Bear Act, taking Smokey out of the public domain and preserving the trademark for the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e. More importantl­y, the move earmarks revenue from sales of Smokey toys and memorabili­a for fire prevention awareness efforts.

1971 A new cub, Little Smokey, joins Smokey in the National Zoo. He, too, was born in the Lincoln National Forest and rescued from starvation by park rangers.

1975 MAY 2: Smokey, old and arthritic and still suffering from his injuries, is officially retired from public service. Little Smokey is officially named his successor as “Smokey II.”

1976 NOV. 9: Smokey dies at age 26. His remains are flown back to near where he was found in New Mexico. More than 250 people attend his memorial service. Two days later, an obituary runs on Page 1 of the Wall Street Journal.

1979 Smokey Bear Historical Park is completed near Capitan at the grave of the original Smokey. The park includes a museum.

1990 AUG. 11: Smokey II dies.

2014 While both Smokey and Smokey II have died, the character lives on. New public service ads feature Smokey seeking out people who exhibit safe behavior and rewarding them with — what else? — a bear hug.

2017 In 2017, 88% of wildfires were casued by humans. Smokey continues to campaign about campfire safety, how to properly burn backyard debris, and proper equipment to prevent wildfires. You can learn more at smokeybear.com.

 ??  ?? 1. Only you can prevent wildfires. 2. Always be careful with fire. 3. Never play with matches or lighters. 4. Always watch your campfire. 5. Make sure your campfire is completely out before leaving it.
1. Only you can prevent wildfires. 2. Always be careful with fire. 3. Never play with matches or lighters. 4. Always watch your campfire. 5. Make sure your campfire is completely out before leaving it.
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U.S. FOREST SERVICE
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THE SMITHSONIA­N INSTITUTIO­N
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THE AD COUNCIL
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