Is Paul Bunyan Based on a Real Person? - podcast episode cover

Is Paul Bunyan Based on a Real Person?

Jul 12, 20216 min
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Episode description

Tall tales about the logger Paul Bunyan and his big blue ox, Babe, are American classics. Learn about the real people they're based on and how they got so popular in this episode of BrainStuff, based on this article: https://history.howstuffworks.com/history-vs-myth/real-paul-bunyan.htm

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff, a production of I Heart Radio. Hey brain Stuff. Lauren Bogebaum here. The story of Paul Bunyan, the Giant Lumberjack is one of the most enduring tall tales in North America. The folk tale is a favorite in children's classrooms and is immortalized in cartoons and tourist attractions all over the United States. But was this based on a real person? According to legend, Paul Bunyan was so huge at birth it took five exhausted storks to

deliver him to his parents. When Bunyan was a mere week old, he already fit into his father's clothes. Junior Bunyan downed forty bowls of porridge a day, they say, and received a big blue ox named Babe for his first birthday. This Bunyon of legend grew up to become a skilled lumberjack, with Babe as outsized an ox as Bunyan was a man always at his side. As a logging team, the two were on beatable, able to clear

forests with amazing speed. At one point, Bunyan headed south and created the Grand Canyon simply by dragging his axe behind him, and Babe well, she tromped all around Minnesota's logging country. As she did so, her footsteps filled with water behind her, forming the states famed ten thousand Lakes. Of course, these are all literally and figuratively tall tales.

But are they based in any fact. Well maybe. Some historians believe that the legendary Paul Bunyan was based on a real person, a French Canadian logger named Fabian Fourgnye, or perhaps it would have been pronounced Fournier. I couldn't find a solid answer either way. He was born in Quebec around eight then moved to Michigan after the Civil War to take advantage of the high paying logging jobs

that were readily available there. His brawn and six foot height, which is just shy of two meters, were noteworthy for the time him and made him quite intimidating, as did his drinking and brawling. He died in eighteen seventy five during a fight in Bay City, Michigan, a wild town

where lumberjacks went to party after every pay day. His alleged killer, who struck him in the back of the head with a mallet, was acquitted in a subsequent trial that drew a lot of attention, helping spread the legend of Paul Bunyan to lumberjacking hotspots in Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and beyond. At some point, bunyan story became intertwined with that of another French Canadian, a war hero by the

name of bon Jean. The tales of bon Jean and Fabian combined to create one ferocious, athletic, intelligent lumberjack by the name of Paul Bunyan, with Bunyan believed to be a melding of bon Jean of bon Jan. Anyway, as the nineteenth century drew to a close, Paul Bunyan Tales spread across logging camps throughout North America, and with every retelling of the tales, the lumberjacks greatly embellished them. Yet, despite the popularity of Paul Bunyan among the lumberjack in community,

the general public knew nothing of him. The first written mention of Paul Bunyan two people outside of the lumberjacking world came in nineteen ten, when one James mcgillifray penned the first of the Logging Tall Tales series that would become popular across the nation. The piece ran in the Detroit News Tribune. Then in nineteen fourteen, the Red River Lumber Company stepped in the business, which sold its wood to local lumber yards through a national distribution network, developed

an advertising campaign for its new mill in California. As part of the campaign, the business created a series of pamphlets featuring Bunyan, but which were largely ignored, but the company published a revised version of them via a nineteen twenty two bucklet titled The Marvelous Exploits of Paul Buny In As before, the booklet was intended for lumber industry workers, but the Kansas City Star happened to publish a lengthy review of the booklet, introducing Bunyan to the masses, and

the rest, as they say, is history. The American public quickly became enamored with the massive lumberjack and his colorful bovine companion, especially kids. Soon, Bunyan was the subject of comics, books and operetta, and even poems by the likes of Robert Frost and Carl Sandberg, and numerous towns began claiming him as their own, from Minnesota to Bangor, Maine, which boasts to have possession of his birth certificate. Today, many

towns hold festivals in his honor. You can catch up Paul Bunyan Lumberjack Show in states like Wisconsin and Florida, where lumberjacks and jills compete in activities such as axe throwing and log rolling, and June is now known as National Paul Bunyan Day, making Bunyan one of America's official folklore hero. Today's episode is based on the article was There a Real Paul Bunyan on how Stuffworks dot Com?

Written by Deborah Ronka and Melanie rad Zeki McManus. Brain Stuff is production by Heart Radio in partnership with how Stuffworks dot Com, and it's produced by Tyler Clang. Four more podcasts from my heart Radio, visit the i heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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