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===Cordwood Pete=== In an effort to promote tourism in Fosston, the legend of "Cordwood Pete" was created by Arvid Clementson, who served as Fosston's mayor until his death in 2006.<ref>[https://www.carlinfuneral.com/obituary/Arvid-Clementson Obituary of former Fosston Mayor Arvid "Clem" Clementson]</ref> In what he described as a "true story, embellished", Clementson claimed the complete story of Cordwood Pete was discovered in the spring of 2001 when a time capsule was discovered during the demolition of one of Fosston's oldest buildings.<ref name="fosston.com">[http://www.fosston.com/index.asp?Type=B_BASIC&SEC={FD14779F-1317-450C-930F-A2CA8F031CAB} Fosston.com Legend of Cordwood Pete]</ref><ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=T9okjBKav1oC&pg=PA19 Weird Minnesota By Eric Dregni, Mark Moran, Mark Sceurman]</ref> Cordwood Pete, was said to be the younger brother of famed lumberjack [[Paul Bunyan]]. While Paul Bunyan was a giant, Pete was a mere 4 feet 9 inches in height. According to the tale, Pete's growth was stunted by the fact that he could never get enough flapjacks at the breakfast table because brother Paul ate everything in sight. According to legend, Paul Bunyan left his home in [[Bangor, Maine]], to make his way in the world, and ended up in the north woods of Minnesota where he excelled as a lumberjack. Pete, tired of being mocked by lumberjacks in Maine over his size, followed Paul to Minnesota, and despite his diminutive stature, found work as a lumberjack near Fosston, Minnesota, taking the name Peter Delang. Local lumberjacks nicknamed him "Cordwood Pete" because his size suggested he was more suited to cutting cordwood than felling huge trees. Pete spent much time in the local saloons, and his fellow lumberjacks soon learned he was hot tempered and full of spunk, especially after imbibing. They came to admire his feisty spirit, and no one dared fight the little man. Legend has it that he "borrowed" his brother's double-bladed ax one day. When he swung it, the weight of the huge ax kept it spinning round and round as if in perpetual motion. When the ax finally stopped spinning, 100 acres of timber had been felled. The railroad hired Pete the next day to clear a path for their tracks, and before the day was over, he had clear-cut fifty square miles of timber. Pete had to give his brother's ax back to him the next day, and he never again achieved such a lumberjacking feat.<ref name="fosston.com"/> After that Pete stuck to cutting cordwood, which he hauled to market with the help of his little donkey named Tamarack. He died at the age of 84. Authors [[Richard Dorson]] and Marshall Fitwick cite Paul Bunyan as an example of "[[fakelore]]", or a modern story passed off as an older folktale.<ref>Fitwick, Marshall. ''Probing popular culture on and off the Internet''. Routledge, 2004, ISBN 0789021331, 9780789021335, p. 114-118</ref><ref>Dorson, Richard. ''American Folklore''. University of Chicago Press, 1977, ISBN 0226158594, 9780226158594, p. 216-226</ref> Cordwood Pete may also qualify as a more modern example of fakelore.
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