- Paul Bunyan
Paul Bunyan is a
mythological lumberjack who appears intall tales ofAmerican folklore . The character originated in the work of Americanjournalist James MacGillivray. Historically, the character has been popular in the northern region of the United States, aroundMichigan ,Wisconsin andMinnesota .Origin
Lumberjack legends
Bunyan's birth was strange, as are the births of many mythic heroes, as it took 5
storks to carry the infant (ordinarily, one stork could carry several babies and drop them off at their parents' home). When he was old enough to clap and laugh, the vibration broke every window in the house. When he was 7 months old he sawed the legs off of his parents bed in the middle of the night. Paul and Babe dug theGrand Canyon by dragging hisaxe behind him, and createdMount Hood by piling rocks on top of their campfire to put it out.He is a classic American "big man" who was popular in 19th century America. Further, the Bunyan myths sprang from lumber camp tales, sometimes bawdy ones, to put it mildly. In one such tale, extreme cold forced bears to look for food; one wandered into a lumber camp. It chased the lumberjacks up a tree on which they had a ladder. To keep the bear from climbing after them (despite the fact that bears do not need ladders to climb trees), they kicked down the ladder. This saved them from the bear, but trapped them in the tree. To escape, the lumberjacks urinated in unison and created a frozen pole, which they slid down. Such tall tales, though later watered down, were attributed to a single character, Bunyan, and became the stories known today.
Newspaper myths
The earliest published versions of the myth of Paul Bunyan can be traced back to James MacGillivray, an itinerant newspaper reporter who wrote the first Paul Bunyan article in 1906, and an expanded version of the same article for the
Detroit News . He is alleged to have collected stories from lumberjacks, combined them with his own embellishments, and began disseminating the legend with theJuly 24 ,1910 , printing of "The Round River Drive" which included the following, concerning Dutch Jake (another mythical lumberjack of great strength) and the narrator participating in a Bunyan-sponsored contest to cut down the biggest tree in the forest.:"Dutch Jake and me had picked out the biggest tree we could find on the forty, and we'd put three days on the cut with our big saw, what was three crosscuts brazed together, making convert|30|ft|m of teeth. We was getting along fine on the fourth day when lunchtime comes, and we thought we'd best get to the sunny side to eat. So we grabs our grub and starts around that tree.:'We hadn't gone far when we heard a noise. Blamed if there wasn't Bill Carter and Sailor Jack sawin' at the same tree. It looked like a fight at first, but we compromised, meetin' each other at the heart on the seventh day. They'd hacked her to fall to the north, and we'd hacked her to fall to the south, and there that blamed tree stood for a month or more, clean sawed through, but not knowin' which way to drop 'til a windstorm came along and throwed her over."Fact|date=June 2008
The popularization of the myth started with William B. Laughead's "Introducing Mr. Paul Bunyan of Westwood, California", one of a series of Bunyan advertising pamphlets for the Red River Lumber Company. Some of the pamphlet tales were based on Laughead's recollections of stories he had heard ten years earlier in a Minnesota lumber camp. Others were highly exaggerated tales of his own experiences.
Overall, Paul Bunyan was considered to be a strong brave man who feared nothing including his beloved pet, Babe, the blue ox.
Laughead, through the ad pamphlets, created much of the Bunyan "canon", including the blue ox and Johnny Inkslinger. [cite web
url=http://www.straightdope.com/columns/020510.html
title=The Straight Dope: Is Paul Bunyan a fraud?
publisher=www.straightdope.com
accessdate=2008-06-08]Locations
Paul Bunyan has dozens of towns vying to be considered his home. Several authors, including James Stevens and D. Laurence Rogers, have traced the tales to the exploits of French Canadian lumberjack Fabian "Saginaw Joe" Fournier, 1845-1875. Fournier worked for the H.M. Loud Company in the
Grayling, Michigan area, 1865-1875, where MacGillivray later worked and apparently picked up the stories. The state of Michigan has declaredOscoda, Michigan as the official home of Paul Bunyan because of the earliest documented published stories by MacGillivray. Other towns such as Bemidji, Brainerd, Shelton, and Westwood, MinnesotaBay City, Michigan ,Eau Claire, Wisconsin , and evenBangor, Maine also claim the title.Kelliher, Minnesota is the home of Paul Bunyan Memorial Park, which contains a site purporting to be Paul Bunyan's grave. Another legend claims thatRib Mountain inWausau, Wisconsin , is Bunyan's grave site.Furthermore, two
Boy Scouts of America Order of the Arrow lodges have their original roots tied into the fable of Paul Bunyan.OA Lodge 196 ,Mesabi , fromHibbing , MN used Paul Bunyan as its lodge totem from 1941-1995.OA Lodge 26 , Blue Ox, fromRochester , MN has used the Blue Ox (Babe) exclusively as its lodge totem and on nearly all issues of patches and neckerchiefs since 1927.Tourist attractions
*
Paul Bunyan and Babe the Blue Ox are statues of both Bunyan and Babe inBemidji, Minnesota . Other statues exist inBrainerd, Minnesota ;Westwood, California ;Del Norte County, California ;St. Ignace, Michigan ,Ossineke, Michigan ; and in Eau Claire,Wisconsin .
*Paul Bunyan Land , an amusement park convert|7|mi|km|0 east ofBrainerd, Minnesota , features a talking statue of Paul with a statue of Babe (its original Baxter location was cleared in 2003 to make room for new commercial development). There are two other (smaller, non-talking) statues located in Brainerd.
*Trees of Mystery , a roadside attraction inKlamath, California , features a 49 ft (15 m) tall statue of Bunyan and a 35 ft (10 m) tall statue of Babe. It also features carvings and characters from stories of Paul. InNovember of2007 the statue of Babe's head fell off, owing to rain and old, rotted materials giving way. [ It has since been repaired.cite web
url=http://www.times-standard.com//ci_7547326?IADID
title=Klamath tourist attraction loses its head - Times-Standard Online
publisher=www.times-standard.com
accessdate=2008-06-08]*The State of Michigan has designated Oscoda, Michigan as the official home of
Paul Bunyan due to the earliest documented publications in the Oscoda Press, August 10, 1906 by James MacGillivray (later revised and published in the Detroit News in 1910). [ [http://www.oscodapress.com/articles/2005/11/08/news/news01.txt Oscoda Press on Paul Bunyan designation] ]
*Statues of Bunyan (alone) exist inOld Forge, New York ;Akeley, Minnesota ;Tucson, Arizona ;Woodruff, Wisconsin ;Bangor, Maine ;Rumford, Maine ;Oscoda, Michigan ; a recently moved pair of statues sit inOssineke, Michigan with a neuteredBabe the Blue Ox [ [http://www.roadsideamerica.com/tips/getAttraction.php?tip_AttractionNo=2125 Roadside attractions, Ossineke, Michigan Babe and Paul Bunyan] ] ,Portland, Oregon ;St. Maries, Idaho ;Shelton, Washington ;Lake Nebagamon, Wisconsin ;Aline, Oklahoma ; and also on top of a Vietnamese (May Cafe 111 Louisiana Blvd. SE 87108) restaurant inAlbuquerque, New Mexico .
*A statue depicting Bunyan's wife can be found inHackensack, Minnesota . Her name is Lucette
*Bunyan is depicted on the world's largest wood carving, at the entrance toSequoia National Park in California.
*There is a group called the Mystic Knights of the Blue Ox inBayfield, Wisconsin .
*There is a 25' tall Paul Bunyan at the Paul Bunyan's Northwoods Cook Shanty in Minocqua, Wisconsin
* The unincorporated town of Union Lake, Michigan, previously held an annual Paul Bunyan Festival every year in July. The festival was sponsored and run by several local charitable and civic groups, including theJaycees and the Chamber of Commerce. It included a carnival, exhibits, sporting contests, and various events. At its height, local community groups, churches, businesses, and other organizations participated with tie-in events. The highlights of the festival were a three-mile (5 km) long parade from Highland Lakes Campus of Oakland Community College (which frequently hosted the carnival as well) down Cooley Lake Road and Union Lake Road, featuring a celebrity "Grand Marshall" who was typically a politician, sports figure, or other local celebrity, including several Michigan governors, and, on the last night of the festival, a fireworks display. Unfortunately, the Paul Bunyan Festival was gradually downsized and ultimately discontinued due to budget constraints and the price of liability insurance -- the parade was discontinued in the early 1990s, and the fair and festival itself was discontinued in the late 1990s when the Jaycees, the primary sponsor, could no longer afford the costs of liability insurance and increased rental fees for the fairgrounds at the community college.Fact|date=June 2008
*Thelog flume (attraction) atNickelodeon Universe located inThe Mall of America inBloomington, MN has a Paul Bunyan theme. It is called the "Log Chute ".Recent fiction
*
Stephen King makes reference to a Paul Bunyan statue located in his fictional town ofDerry, Maine in the novels " It", and " Insomnia".
*Paul Bunyan makes an appearance in the "Mars" trilogy byKim Stanley Robinson
*InNeil Gaiman 's novel "American Gods ", Paul Bunyan is ridiculed as a fake mythology.
*A fictional Paul Bunyan statue inBrainerd, Minnesota is seen in theCoen brothers ' 1996 movie "Fargo".
*He is the subject of an opera byBenjamin Britten called "Paul Bunyan", libretto byW. H. Auden (1941).
*In the comic book "The Badger ", the title character meets Bunyan and Babe ("First Comics " # 42, 1998). The story was called "Tall Tale".
*He is the subject of "Paul Bunyan and the Photocopier" by Larry Hammer.
*The story is a subject of the Simpsons episode "Simpsons Tall Tales ", in which the Simpsons board a train toDelaware and meet a hobo who tells them a selection of "tall tales".
*In the webcomic "The Adventures of Dr. McNinja ", the "Paul Bunyan's disease" causes people to turn into giant lumberjacks.
* Paul was briefly shown in the 1954 Warner Brothers' only 3-D animated short "Lumber Jack-Rabbit ". In the cartoon, Bugs Bunny stumbles upon Bunyan's giant carrot patch, which is guarded by Smidgen, a convert|124|ft|m|0|sing=on dog.
* Paul Bunyan is alluded to as the name "The Tall Man With The Big Axe" in the novel Summerland byMichael Chabon .
* In the 70's TV series Land of the Lost, in the episode "Snowman" from third season, Uncle Jack calls Will "A regular Paul Bunyan" when the boy chops a tree in order to make a bridge over a big cliff
* Paul Bunyan appears in the one-act play "Mr Charles, currently of Palm Beach" (1998) by Paul Rudnick in the line "A gay woman is not simply Paul Bunyan with a cat."
* The Woodsman character voiced by James Belushi in the animated film "Hoodwinked! " (2005) auditions for the part of Paul Bunyan for an advert in the film.
* Paul Bunyan is mentioned in the lyrics to the Kid Dakota song "Ten Thousand Lakes" from the album "The West Is The Future".
* Paul Bunyan appears the film "" (portrayed byOliver Platt ) along with John Henry and Pecos Bill
* In 1958, Disney released an animated short about Paul's life directed byLes Clark .
* Paul Bunyan is a recurring character in the Vertigo comic bookJack of Fables
* Paul Bunyan is mentioned in the lyrics of the Magnetic Fields song "Grand Canyon" from the album "69 Love Songs Vol.2".ee also
*
Fakelore
* Jim Stevens
*Operation Paul Bunyan
*Paul Bunyan's Axe
*Paul Bunyan Trophy
*Paul Bunyan (operetta)
*Fearsome critters
*Bay City, Michigan concerning Fabian "Saginaw Joe" FournierFootnotes
References
*Bélanger, Georges. "La collection Les Vieux m'ont conté du père Germain Lemieux, s.j.: Francophonies d'Amérique", Ottawa. Presses de l'Université d'Ottawa, no. 1, 1991, pp. 35-42.
*cite journal
last= Gartenberg
first= Max
title= Paul Bunyan and Little John
journal= Journal of American Folklore
volume= 62
year= 1949
*Germain, Georges-Hébert, "Adventurers in the New World: The Saga of the Coureurs des Bois", Montréal: Libre-Expression, 2003.
*cite book
last= Maltin
first= Leonard
title= Of Mice and Magic - the History of American Animation
publisher= Plume Books
edition= Rev. ed.
date= 1990
External links
* [http://www.paulbunyantrail.com/talltale.html The Story of Paul Bunyan]
* [http://www.paulbunyanbook.com Folklore History of the Paul Bunyan Legend] Paul Bunyan: How A Terrible Timber Feller Became the Legend, book tracing the origin of the Paul Bunyan legends
* [http://www.straightdope.com/columns/020510.html The Straight Dope: Is Paul Bunyan a fraud?] Describes the links between the Bunyan legend and the Red River Lumber Company.
* [http://www.roadsideamerica.com/set/bunylist.html Roadside America] Roadside statues and other tributes to the Great Tree-Biter, Paul Bunyan.
* [http://support.microsoft.com/kb/152698/en-us The Story of Paul Bunyan] a Microsoft Knowledge Base article
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