National Paul Bunyan Day | June 28
Wed Jun 28th

National Paul Bunyan Day

On June 28th, we recall vividly the tales of the big blue ox and a mighty lumberjack. It's National Paul Bunyan Day!

#nationalpaulbunyanday

Paul Bunyan, who is portrayed as a giant and a lumberjack of rare talent, is one of North America folklore heroes. Paul Bunyan was almost always accompanied by his companion, Babe the Blue Ox, in the stories.

Was he real?

Bunyan's character appeared in folktales circulated among lumberjacks in the Northeastern United States and Eastern Canada, first appearing in print in 1906 in a story published by Northern Michigan journalist James MacGillivray. The character appeared in newspapers in 1906 in a story published by Northern Michigan journalist James MacGillivray. According to One's account, the tales began during the 1837 Papineau Rebellion. William Laughhead reworked the stories for a logging company's public relations campaign in 1914. Paul Bunyan's burgeoning legendary person gave the campaign a new lease on life. The 1922 edition of Laughead's tales inspired many others, and soon the character's plaid shirt and far-fetched characteristics spread throughout both of the United States and Canada.

The folklore

Paul Bunyan is one of the few characters with an origin story in folklore. According to One Paul Bunyan's legend, it took five storks to carry him as a newborn. As he got older, when he clapped his hands and yelled, windows shook and shattered, as he grew older. When he was just seven months old, the boy screamed off the legs of his parents' bed in the middle of the night. Bunyan is also credited with establishing the Grand Canyon as he and Babe the Blue Ox walked through, carrying his ax behind him. Bunyan is believed to have built the Great Lakes so Babe had a watering hole, according to another legend.

How to celebrate national paul bunyan day..

Read one or two of Paul Bunyan's stories. As you discover the various statues dedicated to this folklore hero, be sure to share your adventures. To post on social media, use the hashtag #NationalPaulBunyanDay..