Little Brown Bear - Monroe, MI
N 41° 54.908 W 083° 23.843
17T E 301184 N 4643133
Statue of Little Brown Bear, a book series authored by Elizabeth Caroline Crosby, located in Loranger Park in downtown Monroe, MI.
Waymark Code: WM15FWY
Location: Michigan, United States
Date Posted: 12/29/2021
Views: 0
Aunt Bett is remembered for many things, but is perhaps best known as Monroe’s author of the Little Brown Bear series and many poems and rhymes. Many remember her simply as the woman who thrilled kids with spellbinding stories.
Born Oct. 20, 1904, Aunt Bett was the youngest of nine children born to Albert and Elizabeth ( Wilson) Upham in Flat Rock. Her family moved to Monroe when she was 4. After graduating in 1923, she continued her education at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and became a school teacher, eventually teaching in Rockwood, Farmington, Lincoln Park and Detroit. She married George (Mac) Mc-Webb on Aug. 20, 1940, in Angola, Ind., and moved to South Rockwood where they owned a pharmacy for many years. They settled in Monroe upon his retirement. He died March 14, 1968.
Aunt Bett’s outstanding career of writing stories, poems and limericks began when she was a child. She began writing stories and verses while teaching Sunday school. Her sister, who worked for Highlights Magazine, encouraged her to submit her story about a little brown bear, the bear whose image sits in front of the library at E. First and Washington Sts. Her first book, “Little Brown Bear,” was published in 1942.
“Grandmother’s Locket” is the most recognizable of her books, Krueger said. Aunt Bett’s other books include “The Merry Adventures of Little Brown Bear,” “Little Brown Bear Goes to School,” “Little Brown Bear and Friends,” “Little Brown Monkey,” “Through My Kitchen Window,” “Little Brown Bear Learns To Cook” and “Little Brown Bear Loses His Clothes.” All of the books are available at Dorsch or can be found online at the library system’s website. The books can be made available at any of the system’s 16 branches if requested.
Aunt Bett’s last effort, “Little Brown Bear Builds a Playhouse,” was written in collaboration with Julia Richardson and still benefits Habitat for Humanity.
Despite her literary talent, thousands of children in Monroe knew her best for the stories she told rather than those she read.
Source: (
visit link)