- Smokey Bear - Wikipedia
Smokey Bear II (or Little Smokey) eating from the new "honey tree" (a tree that automatically dispenses honey and berries) installed in Smokey's cage in the summer of 1984
- Smokey Through the Years | Smokey Bear
Smokey Bear first appeared in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1966 Smokey’s first digitized videos and artwork, created by Brian Edward Miller, Evan Hecox, Janna Mattia and Victoria Ying, portraying Smokey Bear in each of their unique styles Smokey Bear joins in panda-monium!
- Happy Birthday, Smokey Bear! - US Forest Service
In 1950, a wildfire in New Mexico orphaned a black bear cub A New Mexico game warden, taking pity on the cub, took him home and helped get him medical attention Later, he offered the cub to the Forest Service with the condition that the bear be dedicated to wildfire prevention and conservation
- A Brief History of Smokey Bear, the Forest Services Legendary Mascot
He first appeared in August 1944 pouring a bucket of water on a campfire saying, “Care will prevent 9 out of 10 fires ” In 1947, he got his better-known tagline
- Smokey Bear - Forest History Society
In the spring of 1950, a bear cub was rescued from a fire in the Capitan Mountains of New Mexico, treated for his burns, and then transported to Washington, DC, to serve as the living symbol of Smokey Bear at the National Zoo
- Smokey Bear - Macys Thanksgiving Day Parade Wiki
Smokey Bear made his first Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade appearance in 1952, when Macy's requested that the Cooperative Forest Fire Prevention Program (CFFP) create a costumed version of the character to appear in that year's event [3]
- Smokey Bears Life Story, Or Is It Smokey The Bear? | Weather. com
A Look Back At Smokey Bear’s 80 Years Smokey Bear made his first appearance on a wildfire prevention poster in 1944
- Smokey Bear | History, Real, Song, Confusion over Name, Facts . . .
Smokey Bear is an official mascot of the USDA Forest Service, created in 1944 as part of a national campaign to educate campers and others on forest fire prevention and safety A black bear cub that survived a New Mexico forest fire in 1950 became a living embodiment of the cultural icon
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