Tag Archives: Winnie the Pooh

A A Milne’s Winnie-The-Pooh (1926)

Is there any gen­tler set of children’s book char­ac­ters than A A Milne’s Win­nie the Pooh and the oth­er inhab­i­tants of Hun­dred Acre Wood? Now a hun­dred years old, they are still ubiq­ui­tous and loved today, and jus­ti­fi­ably so. Alan Alexan­der Milne (1882–1956) was pri­mar­i­ly a play­wright before he wrote his children’s books and was a mod­est­ly suc­cess­ful one at that, but it is unsur­pris­ing that his plays have been some­what over­shad­owed by his lat­er suc­cess in chil­dren’s lit­er­a­ture. The sto­ry of his char­ac­ters’ incep­tion is quite well-known but inter­est­ing nonethe­less, so if you’re com­fort­able, I’ll begin…

Milne was of course the father of Christo­pher Robin Milne, upon whom the char­ac­ter Christo­pher Robin is based, and he enjoyed writ­ing poet­ry inspired by his son. One day they vis­it­ed Lon­don Zoo and out of all the ani­mals there, young Christo­pher was par­tic­u­lar­ly tak­en by the tame and ami­able Cana­di­an black bear Win­nipeg, or Win­nie for short. Christo­pher had a stuffed bear, orig­i­nal­ly named Edward, like a mil­lion oth­er stuffed bears, but now he renamed him Win­nie. A future star was born. The “Pooh” part came lat­er from a nick­name the very young Christo­pher had adopt­ed for a local swan.

Not yet known as Pooh, the char­ac­ter made his first appear­ance in a poem, Ted­dy Bear, pub­lished in Punch mag­a­zine in Feb­ru­ary 1924 and repub­lished the same year in Milne’s book of poet­ry When We Were Very Young. Illus­trat­ed by E H Shep­ard (1879–1976) we can see the recog­nis­able char­ac­ter for the first time.

When We Were Very Young, First Edi­tion

Win­nie-the-Pooh was pub­lished in 1926, fol­lowed by The House at Pooh Cor­ner in 1928. A sec­ond col­lec­tion of nurs­ery rhymes, Now We Are Six, was pub­lished in 1927. These three books were also illus­trat­ed by E H Shep­ard, who was of course a huge­ly impor­tant part of the Pooh sto­ry. Christo­pher Robin, mean­while, seems to have had quite the knack for nam­ing toy ani­mals: his col­lec­tion also includ­ed the per­fect­ly-named Piglet, Eey­ore, Kan­ga, Roo and Tig­ger. Indeed, it was only Owl and Rab­bit that A A Milne him­self con­tributed to the final group­ing, though of course it was his genius to imbue all the ani­mals with their unique char­ac­ters.

The fic­tion­al Hun­dred Acre Wood of the Pooh sto­ries derives from Five Hun­dred Acre Wood in Ash­down For­est in East Sus­sex, where Milne went on walks with his son. Shep­ard drew on these land­scapes to the point that the grown-up Christo­pher Robin would com­ment: “Pooh’s For­est and Ash­down For­est are iden­ti­cal”. You can vis­it the for­est today, and look out for such spots as the Hef­falump Trap, Eey­ore’s Sad and Gloomy Place, and the wood­en Pooh Bridge where Pooh and Piglet invent­ed Pooh­sticks.

E H Shep­ard draw­ings
A A Milne