One of the more well-known stories revolves around Dacy Crockett and Daniel Boone giving Babe to Paul as a gift, which would place him at the latter end of the 18th century. As he is credited with many of the natural wonders that we discovered as settlers moved west, this makes the most sense.
Paul Bunyan is not a real person. 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.
yes!
the ending of paul revres story is when hedied
yes alice paul had disabilities.
Alice paul
Paul was allegedly born in Bangor, Maine.
no Its a tall tale
The main idea of the Paul Bunyan story is to entertain and amuse readers with exaggerated tales of a larger-than-life lumberjack and his exploits in the American frontier. Paul Bunyan embodies the spirit of hard work, ingenuity, and American frontier folklore.
According to Paul Bunyan's story, Great Lakes are Babe the Blue ox's hoof-prints filled with water.
no
Paul Bunyan
"The story of Paul Bunyan is a tall tale."
Paul Bunyan. And his companion Babe the blue ox
Supposedly, Paul Bunyan was a giant, and his profession was logging trees. He had an enormous blue ox, and legend has it, that everywhere he stepped (Paul, not the ox) filled with water and became a lake. That's (supposedly) why Minnesota has so many lakes.
Paul Bunyan Land was created in 1950.
Paul Bunyan's younger (and smaller) brother was Cordwood Pete.
National Paul Bunyan Day is always June 27. http://www.zanyholidays.com/2008/06/national-paul-bunyan-day.html