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Back-us for a Blast in 2012
Corn Fest Meetings are 3rd
Monday of each month at the
Backus City Hall at 7:00 PM
New members are welcome
Backus Cornfest
The Backus cornfest committee would like to thank all the teams for being part of Donkey Basketball Event, To all that attended this fundraising event. And a big thank you to the area businesses that sold tickets.Also we wish to Thank the Pine River /Backus school and the Prom committee for the use of the gym,and for the Prom committee selling their goodies, at the event .
The cornfest committee is always seeking new members to be part of the committee, for fundraising and new ideas and the man power to hopefully keep cornfest a float. Meetings are the third Monday of each month at 7 pm at Backus city hall. Contact info backuscornfest@hotmail.com and backuscornfest@yahoo.com or send letter of interest to Backus cornfest at po. Box 98 Backus, Mn 56435.
Mike Martin

Colonel Cobber
Back-us for a Blast in 2012
Wayne Renn will be entertaining at the street dance.
E-mail the
Backus Cornfest committee
The wood carving was done by
Chainsaw Artist Ross Olsen of Hackensack
The Legend of Colonel Cobber
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Col. Cobber was a born salesman. After years of
traveling with his medicine show,Col. Cobber chose to settle "up north" where
he married the Indian maiden, Tasseltop, on the southern shores of Pine Mountain
Lake. They built a small cabin in the woods, surrounded by hundreds of trees.
One day when he was walking amongst the many trees, Col. Cobber ran into the one
man of which he had heard many legendary feats – none other than Paul Bunyan.
Col. Cobber invited Paul to join he and Tasseltop for dinner, and once Paul
tasted that first bite, he fell in love with corn on the cob. It’s said he ate
over 100 ears that day alone. Never one to miss a deal, Col. Cobber told Paul that he
could grow ears of the sweet corn if only the trees were cleared, and they
struck a bargain. Paul cleared some of that land, pulled the stumps out with the
help of his Blue Ox, Babe, and the Cobbers began to grow corn. Amazingly, that
corn grew and grew in soil that for hundreds of years had only fed trees, and
which Babe helped fertilize. The ears became as big as Paul and his wife,
Lucette. Paul could only eat two or three ears that size.
Now Tasseltop knew lots of ways to use that corn, so
she taught Lucette, the cook at the logging camp, to use it as corn flour,
cornmeal, corn syrup, corn pancakes, corn fritters, and even a little corn
whiskey for medicinal purposes (of course). They also showed Paul and Lucette
that the cobs could be used to fuel the stove during the cold northern winters.
Being the salesman that he was, Col. Cobber looked for
more ways to use that corn, but he knew that the forests had to be cleared to
grow it. That was when he convinced E. W. Backus to cut down more trees. He also
suggested that there were enough trees for Mr. Backus to ship the logs to Kansas
City as supplies to build enormous stockyards. Mr. Backus did just that, and the
townspeople were so impressed that they named the town Backus – not Cobber.
Col. Cobber continued to grow his corn, but over the
years, the soil was depleted of nutrients and the ears got small enough for
regular people to enjoy. He continued to sell his ideas, urging anyone who would
listen, that corn could be used for even more things – noting that it was the
"gold" of the Up North Country. Little did he know that today corn would be used
to manufacture biodegradable plastic products and as an additive to gasoline to
run cars and trucks. He became known as the "Corn King".
After all those years, the town of Backus finally
recognized the efforts of Col. Cobber and decided to honor him with this
carving. They wanted an "Up North" décor for it, however, so they asked Ross
Olsen of the Flying Squirrel Studio to carve Col. Cobber with his chainsaw. Mr.
Olsen found one of the trees still left standing and went to work.
So, here stands Col. Cobber, a monument for the town of
Backus and all its visitors to remember the salesman who grew corn. It also
commemorates the 30th Anniversary of the Backus Corn Fest, held the
second Saturday every August.
By 2006 corn fest committee
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The 2006 Corn Fest Committee
that made this years events exceptional
Thank you Committee members

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