Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby

Creator:
Canoe paddlers wait at the shoreline of a lake to start a race as spectators look on.
The starting line of the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby on Lake Bemidji, 1940.

Conceived as a way to launch the inaugural Aquatennial Celebration, the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby was a 450-mile race that took place on the Mississippi River between 1940 and 1960. Teams of two paddlers raced in stages from Bemidji to Minneapolis, with stops in Grand Rapids, Palisades, Aitken, Brainerd, Little Falls, St. Cloud, and Anoka. In some years, the race included a stop at Bena on Lake Winnibigoshish to mitigate the dangerous crossing.

The first race began on the morning of Saturday, July 13, 1940. Teams finished in Minneapolis on Saturday, July 20, with brothers Ace and Ed Eliason of Hovland winning. Bud and Harry Tibbetts, Leech Lake Ojibwe paddlers from Ball Club, finished second.

The first-place team was awarded $500. Second place received $250 and third place $100. Fourth-, fifth- and sixth-place competitors got seventy-five dollars, fifty dollars, and twenty-five dollars, respectively. The Minneapolis Tribune reported that 100,000 people watched the final sprint, and that another 100,000 people had seen the race en route.

Throughout the 1940s, the race saw heavy participation from the Ojibwe community, most notably members of the Tibbetts family. In the 1940 race, for example, the second-, fifth-, and sixth-place teams were all composed of Ojibwe racers from the Leech Lake area.

The canoe derby was held again in 1941 and 1942. The 1941 contest was marred by controversy over the winning Chicago team’s unusual canoe design and paddling style. The 1942 race was more congenial, with fewer teams entering.

With the onset of World War II, the 1943 race on the Mississippi was replaced by a forty-five-mile race that saw a four-time circuit around the Chain of Lakes in Minneapolis, with prizes offered in war bonds and stamps. In 1944 and 1945, a shorter race on Lake Calhoun (later renamed Bde Maka Ska) was open only to those seventeen and under. The full canoe derby on the Mississippi River resumed in 1946.

In 1947, sixteen-year-old Bill Smith Jr. entered the derby with his father. The two finished in thirteenth place. The race was won by Ray Tibbetts and Bill Evers.

The following year, in 1948, Smith served as driver for two racers from North Minneapolis, Eugene Jensen and Tom Estes, who won the derby. After the race, Smith approached fourth-place finishers Jim and Bernie Smith (no relation), Ojibwe paddlers from Ball Club, and asked to purchase their canoe. They sold it to him for $100.

In 1949, the race was renamed the “Mando-Aquatennial Canoe Derby” owing to sponsorship from Mando, the Minnesota and Ontario Paper Company. Bill Smith entered the race with speed skater Bob Bergstrom. The duo paddled Jim and Bernie Smith’s canoe, finishing in fourth place. Jensen and Estes won again.

After the 1949 derby, Jensen approached Smith and offered to buy his canoe. Smith refused, but he lent the boat to Jenson. It is believed the round-bottomed hull, crafted by Jim and Bernie Smith, informed Jensen’s subsequent canoe designs.

The next year, in 1950, the race was again referred to as the “Paul Bunyan Aquatennial canoe derby,” with Jensen and Estes winning a third time in their newly designed, round-bottom canoe. In 1951, Harlow Thompson and Dick Peck of Deer River took first place in a twenty-four-foot wooden canoe made by canoe maker William Hafeman of Big Fork.

The race was discontinued in 1952 in favor of a “Power Boat Derby,” causing much controversy. Instead, a shortened, eight-mile canoe race was held on Cedar Lake, Lake of the Isles, and Lake Calhoun in that year. In 1953 and 1954 abbreviated versions of the derby returned to the Mississippi River, starting at Anoka and St. Cloud, respectively. Then in 1959, the 450-mile Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby from Bemidji to Minneapolis was revived, with the final race held in 1960. Jensen and Estes won for a fourth time.

In 1961, the derby was turned over to the Boy Scouts of America. Troops competed in relay teams on an abbreviated course until 1964, after which the race was discontinued.

Many of the participants in the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby went on to win other major canoe races in Canada and the US. In 1961 derby veterans including Eugene Jensen and Karl Ketter founded the Minnesota Canoe Club, which later became the Minnesota Canoe Association. During the latter half of the twentieth century, Jensen continued to work as an influential canoe designer and innovator. He is credited with inventing the bent-shaft paddle.

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Cite
Bures, Frank. "Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby." MNopedia, Minnesota Historical Society. https://www.mnhs.org/mnopedia/search/index/event/paul-bunyan-canoe-derby
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First Published: March 03, 2026
Last Modified: March 03, 2026

Bibliography

"74 Paddle for Bonds: Bunyan Canoe Field Varied." Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, August 8, 1943.

"Aqua Canoe Derby at Calhoun Today." Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, July 22, 1945.

"Aquatennial Canoe Derby and Parade Details Are Shaped." Minneapolis Star Journal, May 10, 1940.

Arimond, George. Interview with the author, October 15, 2024.

"Bergstrom, Smith Find Rough Going." Minneapolis Star, July 22, 1949.

"Canoe Champs Turn Prize Into War Bonds." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 21, 1942.

"Canoe Derby Called Off; Brandt Quits." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, May 23, 1958.

“Canoe Derby Plans Shifted.” Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, March 22, 1964.

"Canoeists Wait Gun in Aquatennial Race: Paul Bunyan Derby to Start at Bemidji." Minneapolis Star Journal, July 12, 1940.

"City Pair Take Aqua Canoe Race." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 18, 1953.

Connor, Jack. "Three Different Boats, Three Titles: Estes, Jensen Can Win With Any Canoe." Minneapolis Star, July 22, 1950.

——— . “Canoe Derby Features Youth.” Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, June 4, 1961.

——— . "Canoe Derby Price List to Total $8,000." Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, January 23, 1949.

——— . "'You've Got to Be Nuts to Be in Canoe Derby'—Peck." Minneapolis Star, July 21, 1951.

——— . "Estes, Jensen Face Stiffer Test as Canoe Derby Starts Friday." Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, July 9, 1950.

Conrad, Joe. "An Incomplete History of the MCA." Hut magazine, August 1970.

Droogsma, Stan. Interview with author, March 25, 2024.

Landwehr, Mary. Interview with the author, December 10, 2024.

"Mankato Pair Captures Aqua Canoe Feature." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 31, 1944.

"Motorboat Race May Replace Canoe Derby." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, February 19, 1952.

Murray, Frank. “Indian Team Wins 800-Mile Canoe Derby; Bridges Here Crowded With Spectators to See Finish.” Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, May 27, 1928. [Author’s note: The actual race distance was 500 miles.]

"One-time Wrestler, Son in Canoe Derby." Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, May 25, 1947.

"Peterson, Carlson Win Canoe Derby." Minneapolis Star, July 28, 1952.

Peterson, Jim. "Kossow, Thompson Win Canoe Race." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 18, 1959.

——— . "Derby Victory No. 4 for Estes-Jensen." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 16, 1960.

Scott, Russell. Interview with author, July 8, 2025.

Shave, Ed L. "Ace, Ed Eliasen Winners in 450-Mile Canoe Derby." Minneapolis Star Journal, July 21, 1940.

 ——— . "Plywood Canoe in Derby Must Win O. K. of Judges: Chicagoans, Leading in Paul Bunyan Classic, Contend Paddling Technique, Not Craft, Responsible for Continued Lead." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 10, 1941. 

Shave, Ed. "Tibbetts-Evers Capture Derby." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 19, 1947.

——— . "Jensen, Estes Win Derby; City Pair Cops $1,000 Prize; Deer River Team 18 Minutes Behind." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 24, 1948.

Shave, Ed. "Peterson-Scott Canoe Winner." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 17, 1954.

——— . "Tibbetts Teams Complete Picture for Canoe Derby." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 9, 1946.

——— . "Canoe Derby Starts First Lap Today: 22 Teams Enter 450 Mile Race; Lake Winnibigoshish is First Rest Point." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 10, 1946.

——— . "Estes-Jensen Smash Record in Canoe Win." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 23, 1949.

——— . “Inboards, Canoes to Vie at Calhoun.” Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, July 27, 1952.

Smith, Bill. Interview with author, June 6, 2023.

Thompson, Harlow. Interview with author, September 30, 2024.

"Thompson, Peck Capture Canoe Derby First Place." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 21, 1951.

“The Surprisingly Interesting History of the Bent-Shaft Paddle.” Gear Junkie, June 21, 2018.
https://gearjunkie.com/boats-water/canoe/history-bent-shaft-canoe-paddle

Related Resources

Secondary

Bures, Frank . “The Lost History of the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby.” Minnesota History 69, no. 2. (Summer 2024): 54–67. https://storage.googleapis.com/mnhs-org-support/mn_history_articles/69/v69i02p54-67.pdf

———. Pushing the River: An Epic Battle, a Lost History, a Near Death, and Other True Canoeing Stories. Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2025.

Related Images

Canoe paddlers wait at the shoreline of a lake to start a race as spectators look on.
The starting line of the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby on Lake Bemidji, 1940.
Two side-by-side newspaper-print photos, both showing two men holdings canoe paddles.
At left, the winners of the 1928 Diamond Jubilee canoe marathon, Ben Tibbetts and Bill Reynolds (Leech Lake Ojibwe); at right, Al Hendrickson and Gussie Gustafson, fourth-place finishers and winners of the final lap. Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, May 27, 1928.
Newsprint photo under a headline showing two canoes in water with a boat and shoreline in the background.
Harry and Bud Tibbetts (Leech Lake Ojibwe) at back, won the final sprint of the 1940 Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby. Ace and Ed Eliason of Hovland, foreground, were the derby’s winners. Minneapolis Star Journal, July 21, 1940.
Newsprint photo under a headline of two men stand up in a canoe while holding paddles.
Howie Oslund and Bob Robinson demonstrate their unusual paddling posture in the canoe that other racers competing in the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby protested. Minneapolis Star Journal, July 8, 1941.
People crowd the shore of a lake and a dock stretching into open water.
Governor Luther Youngdahl fires the shot to start the 1947 Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby. The statue of Paul Bunyan and a Ferris wheel can be seen on the horizon. Billy Smith Sr. and Jr. wait for the gun.
A bird's-eye view of a river with a treeline in the middle ground and people standing as observers in the bottom-left corner.
Crowds watch the final sprint of the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby in 1947 from the west bank of the Mississippi, above the Franklin Avenue Bridge.
Two men paddle a canoe on a river with buildings on an island in the background.
Tom Estes and Gene Jensen arriving at Nicollet Island, just above the Falls of St. Anthony, July 1948, at the end of the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby. Canoes were trucked around the falls for the final sprint race. Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 22, 1948.
Two men stand on a river bank next to an American flag as canoists paddling in the water in front of them.
Gerard Du Four and Gene Le May, a team from Quebec, finished in fourth place on the first day of the 1949 Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby.
Rowers in three canoes paddle with oars in their hands across a lake in the middle ground, with the horizon and sky in the background.
The start of the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby on Lake Bemidji, 1951. Canoeists are Dick Butler and George Messing of Minneapolis; Richard and Donald Meyer of Wayzata; and Tom and Phil Estes of Minneapolis.
Two rows of canoes sit on a grassy beach behind a crowd of spectators and, in front of them in the background, open water.
Beached canoes during the 1959 Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby.
Line drawing showing the route of race, with city names spelled out along a line, and filled-in shapes for lakes.
A map of the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby route, from Bemidji to Minneapolis. Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, July 12, 1959.
Two Ojibwe men crouch in a canoe with the words "Cass Lake" written on it in white capital letters.
Benny and Frank Tonce before competing in the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby, 1960. 
Canoe paddlers wait at the shoreline of a lake to start a race as spectators look on.

Starting line on Lake Bemidji

The starting line of the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby on Lake Bemidji, 1940.
Two side-by-side newspaper-print photos, both showing two men holdings canoe paddles.

1928 Diamond Jubilee canoe marathon winners

At left, the winners of the 1928 Diamond Jubilee canoe marathon, Ben Tibbetts and Bill Reynolds (Leech Lake Ojibwe); at right, Al Hendrickson and Gussie Gustafson, fourth-place finishers and winners of the final lap. Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, May 27, 1928.
Newsprint photo under a headline showing two canoes in water with a boat and shoreline in the background.

1940 canoe derby winners

Harry and Bud Tibbetts (Leech Lake Ojibwe) at back, won the final sprint of the 1940 Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby. Ace and Ed Eliason of Hovland, foreground, were the derby’s winners. Minneapolis Star Journal, July 21, 1940.
Newsprint photo under a headline of two men stand up in a canoe while holding paddles.

Howie Oslund and Bob Robinson, 1941

Howie Oslund and Bob Robinson demonstrate their unusual paddling posture in the canoe that other racers competing in the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby protested. Minneapolis Star Journal, July 8, 1941.
People crowd the shore of a lake and a dock stretching into open water.

Starting line of the 1947 derby

Governor Luther Youngdahl fires the shot to start the 1947 Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby. The statue of Paul Bunyan and a Ferris wheel can be seen on the horizon. Billy Smith Sr. and Jr. wait for the gun.
A bird's-eye view of a river with a treeline in the middle ground and people standing as observers in the bottom-left corner.

Final sprint of 1947 derby

Crowds watch the final sprint of the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby in 1947 from the west bank of the Mississippi, above the Franklin Avenue Bridge.
Two men paddle a canoe on a river with buildings on an island in the background.

Tom Estes and Gene Jensen, 1948

Tom Estes and Gene Jensen arriving at Nicollet Island, just above the Falls of St. Anthony, July 1948, at the end of the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby. Canoes were trucked around the falls for the final sprint race. Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 22, 1948.
Two men stand on a river bank next to an American flag as canoists paddling in the water in front of them.

End of the first day of the 1949 derby

Gerard Du Four and Gene Le May, a team from Quebec, finished in fourth place on the first day of the 1949 Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby.
Rowers in three canoes paddle with oars in their hands across a lake in the middle ground, with the horizon and sky in the background.

Start of the 1951 derby

The start of the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby on Lake Bemidji, 1951. Canoeists are Dick Butler and George Messing of Minneapolis; Richard and Donald Meyer of Wayzata; and Tom and Phil Estes of Minneapolis.
Two rows of canoes sit on a grassy beach behind a crowd of spectators and, in front of them in the background, open water.

Canoes during the 1959 derby

Beached canoes during the 1959 Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby.
Line drawing showing the route of race, with city names spelled out along a line, and filled-in shapes for lakes.

1959 map of the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby route

A map of the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby route, from Bemidji to Minneapolis. Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, July 12, 1959.
Two Ojibwe men crouch in a canoe with the words "Cass Lake" written on it in white capital letters.

Benny and Frank Tonce, 1960

Benny and Frank Tonce before competing in the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby, 1960. 

Turning Point

In 1948, Eugene Jensen and Tom Estes enter the race for the first time. Bill Smith of Minneapolis, meanwhile, purchases and uses a canoe from Jim and Bernie Smith, Ojibwe canoe builders from Ball Club, Minnesota, on the Leech Lake Reservation. Their canoe later informed Eugene Jensen’s thinking about hull shape, altering the course of North American canoe racing and design through the remainder of the twentieth century.

Chronology

1928
The Diamond Jubilee Canoe Marathon, from Elk Lake (above Lake Itasca) to Minneapolis, is held in honor of the city’s seventy-fifth anniversary. Ben Tibbetts and Bill Reynolds, Ojibwe racers from Ball Club, win the race.
1940
The first Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby is held to kick off the first Aquatennial Celebration, modeled on the 1928 race.
1943
The derby is moved to the Chain of Lakes in Minneapolis. Paddlers complete four circuits, totaling forty-five miles. Hugh Leach and Walter Heineman win.
1944–1945
The derby is held as a shortened race on Lake Calhoun (Bde Maka Ska), open to youth.
1946
The Bemidji-to-Minneapolis Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby resumes. Brothers Walter and Orbid Heineman, defending 1942 champions, win again.
1947
Bill Smith Jr. and Bill Smith Sr. enter the race. Winners are Ray Tibbetts and Bill Evers.
1948
Eugene Jensen and Tom Estes win their first derby. 
1949
Bill Smith and Bob Bergstrom race in a canoe designed by Ojibwe racers Jim and Bernie Smith from Ball Club. Smith and Bergstrom finish fourth. Jensen and Estes win.
1950
Jensen and Estes win again in a canoe modeled after Jim and Bernie Smith’s design.
1951
Harlow Thompson and Dick Peck of Deer River win.
1952
The Canoe Derby is suspended in favor of a power boat derby staged in towns across the state. Irwin “Buzzy” Peterson and Wayne Carlson win an eight-mile canoe race on Lake Calhoun.
1953
An abbreviated canoe derby is held on the Mississippi River from Anoka to Minneapolis. Peterson and Carlson win.
1954
A two-day canoe derby is held from St. Cloud to Minneapolis. Buzzy Peterson and Russell Scott win.
1955–1958
No races are held.
1959
The full Bemidji-to-Minneapolis race is held. Howard Thompson and Gordon Kossow of Deer River win.
1960
The final Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby is held. Eugene Jensen and Tom Estes take their fourth victory.
1961
The Boy Scouts of America relaunch the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby as a race for youth.

Bibliography

"74 Paddle for Bonds: Bunyan Canoe Field Varied." Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, August 8, 1943.

"Aqua Canoe Derby at Calhoun Today." Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, July 22, 1945.

"Aquatennial Canoe Derby and Parade Details Are Shaped." Minneapolis Star Journal, May 10, 1940.

Arimond, George. Interview with the author, October 15, 2024.

"Bergstrom, Smith Find Rough Going." Minneapolis Star, July 22, 1949.

"Canoe Champs Turn Prize Into War Bonds." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 21, 1942.

"Canoe Derby Called Off; Brandt Quits." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, May 23, 1958.

“Canoe Derby Plans Shifted.” Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, March 22, 1964.

"Canoeists Wait Gun in Aquatennial Race: Paul Bunyan Derby to Start at Bemidji." Minneapolis Star Journal, July 12, 1940.

"City Pair Take Aqua Canoe Race." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 18, 1953.

Connor, Jack. "Three Different Boats, Three Titles: Estes, Jensen Can Win With Any Canoe." Minneapolis Star, July 22, 1950.

——— . “Canoe Derby Features Youth.” Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, June 4, 1961.

——— . "Canoe Derby Price List to Total $8,000." Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, January 23, 1949.

——— . "'You've Got to Be Nuts to Be in Canoe Derby'—Peck." Minneapolis Star, July 21, 1951.

——— . "Estes, Jensen Face Stiffer Test as Canoe Derby Starts Friday." Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, July 9, 1950.

Conrad, Joe. "An Incomplete History of the MCA." Hut magazine, August 1970.

Droogsma, Stan. Interview with author, March 25, 2024.

Landwehr, Mary. Interview with the author, December 10, 2024.

"Mankato Pair Captures Aqua Canoe Feature." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 31, 1944.

"Motorboat Race May Replace Canoe Derby." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, February 19, 1952.

Murray, Frank. “Indian Team Wins 800-Mile Canoe Derby; Bridges Here Crowded With Spectators to See Finish.” Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, May 27, 1928. [Author’s note: The actual race distance was 500 miles.]

"One-time Wrestler, Son in Canoe Derby." Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, May 25, 1947.

"Peterson, Carlson Win Canoe Derby." Minneapolis Star, July 28, 1952.

Peterson, Jim. "Kossow, Thompson Win Canoe Race." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 18, 1959.

——— . "Derby Victory No. 4 for Estes-Jensen." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 16, 1960.

Scott, Russell. Interview with author, July 8, 2025.

Shave, Ed L. "Ace, Ed Eliasen Winners in 450-Mile Canoe Derby." Minneapolis Star Journal, July 21, 1940.

 ——— . "Plywood Canoe in Derby Must Win O. K. of Judges: Chicagoans, Leading in Paul Bunyan Classic, Contend Paddling Technique, Not Craft, Responsible for Continued Lead." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 10, 1941. 

Shave, Ed. "Tibbetts-Evers Capture Derby." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 19, 1947.

——— . "Jensen, Estes Win Derby; City Pair Cops $1,000 Prize; Deer River Team 18 Minutes Behind." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 24, 1948.

Shave, Ed. "Peterson-Scott Canoe Winner." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 17, 1954.

——— . "Tibbetts Teams Complete Picture for Canoe Derby." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 9, 1946.

——— . "Canoe Derby Starts First Lap Today: 22 Teams Enter 450 Mile Race; Lake Winnibigoshish is First Rest Point." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 10, 1946.

——— . "Estes-Jensen Smash Record in Canoe Win." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 23, 1949.

——— . “Inboards, Canoes to Vie at Calhoun.” Minneapolis Sunday Tribune, July 27, 1952.

Smith, Bill. Interview with author, June 6, 2023.

Thompson, Harlow. Interview with author, September 30, 2024.

"Thompson, Peck Capture Canoe Derby First Place." Minneapolis Morning Tribune, July 21, 1951.

“The Surprisingly Interesting History of the Bent-Shaft Paddle.” Gear Junkie, June 21, 2018.
https://gearjunkie.com/boats-water/canoe/history-bent-shaft-canoe-paddle

Related Resources

Secondary

Bures, Frank . “The Lost History of the Paul Bunyan Canoe Derby.” Minnesota History 69, no. 2. (Summer 2024): 54–67. https://storage.googleapis.com/mnhs-org-support/mn_history_articles/69/v69i02p54-67.pdf

———. Pushing the River: An Epic Battle, a Lost History, a Near Death, and Other True Canoeing Stories. Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2025.