Sean Fitzpatrick
Master Sculptor
Boston, MA
781-249-1494 |
Professional
sculpting services for events, parties, and promotion.
Sand Sculpting,
Snow Sculpting, Ice Sculpting, Pumpkin Sculpting, Custom Fine
Jewelry.
Servicing Nationwide
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Chicago - Illinois - Peoria - Springfield
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Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
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Welcome
and thank you for choosing Fitzy Snowman Sculpting. Home based
In Saugus Massachusetts, we service nationwide. Our team of
master sculptors travel the united states. You may find us at
your local fair or at corporate events. We have won numerous
awards for our sand, snow and ice sculpting all around New England.
We are also master pumpkin carvers. Our sculpting talents have
been featured on NBC's Today show twice this year. Browse all
of our galleries for a sample of what we can do for your next
special event. Whether you need a sand sculpture, snow sculpture,
ice sculpture or custom carved pumpkin, we promise professional
clean and affordable service. No job is too large or small.
We employ some of the most talented sculptors in the world!
Join
the Fitzy Snow Man Team
Now Hiring in
Illinois
(see employment
button)
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Sculpting
News
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NBC's Today Show
Sean Fitzpatrick was featured
on NBC's Today show Saturday October 29th promoting Fitzy Snowman
Sculpting's custom carved pumpkins. Hosts, Lester and Cambell,
also tried their hands at carving with instruction from Sean.
Sculpting Lessons
We offer individual and group sculpting
lessons to people of all ages. Ask about our birthday party
lesson package. Sculpting lessons provide the perfect activity
for your next party and can be taylored to your child's particular
interests.
New England Sand Sculpting Invitational
at Revere Beach
Last years event was so sucessful we decided
to extend the event. This year the worlds' best masters and
sculptors will transform Revere Beach with a stunning tribute
to its glorious past. The event will begin Monday July 10th
and conclude Sunday July 16th. Master sculpting competition
begings Thursday July
13th and winners wil be announced
at the conclusion
of the event at the Reinstein Bandstand Sunday July 16th.
Woman's Day October 2006
Although the issue is almost a
year from publication,We at Fitzy Snowman Sculpting are already
looking forward to this issue. A photo shoot is scheduled for
November 7th and 8th which will feature our pumpkins gracing
the cover for the October 2006 issue
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Chicago, Springfield, Peoria, Rockford, Davenport, Carol Stream, Schaumburg, Aurora, Bloomington, Decatur, Palatine, Champaign, Evanston, Joliet, Naperville, Clinton, Des Plaines, Elgin, Hinsdale, Loves Park, Oak Park, Arlington Heights, Bensenville, Carbondale, Crystal Lake, Melrose Park, Pekin, Quincy, Rock Island, Urbana
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Indians hunted
in Illinois as far back as 5000 B.C. and today you can still
view the remains of their civilization at places such as
Chahokia Mounds—North America's largest and most valuable
prehistoric earthwork relic. Dickson Mounds Indian Museum
near Lewiston features special exhibits which chronicle the
Indian's valuable place in Illinois history.
French explorers Jacques Marquette and Louis Joliet, in
1673, were the first Europeans of record to visit the region
paddling by birch bark canoe along the Mississippi and
Illinois Rivers. They traveled the length of the state --
from what is now Chicago to the southernmost reaches of
Illinois.
In 1699 French settlers established a fur-trading post and
the first permanent settlement at Cahokia, near present-day
East St. Louis. More French explorers followed, building
military outposts and establishing a fur trading empire with
local Indians. In 1675, Father Jacques Marquette founded a
mission at the Kaskaskia Indian Village near present-day
Ottawa.
In 1717, France placed Illinois into the Louisiana Colony.
Great Britain obtained the region at the end of the French
and Indian Wars in 1763 at the close of the French and
Indian War, the Treaty of Paris ceded to England all lands
France had claimed east of the Mississippi River, except for
New Orleans in Louisiana. Many of the French settlers in
Illinois moved across the river into Iowa. Only
missionaries, fur traders, a few settlers, and English
soldiers remained in the Illinois region.
During the Revolutionary War (1775-1783), George Rogers
Clark of Virginia and a group called the “Big Knives” raided
English forts in Illinois. The British continued to control
what is now Illinois until 1778 when George Rogers Clark, a
Revolutionary War hero, and his band of American colonists
captured Fort Kaskaskia. The Illinois country became a
possession of Virginia until 1787 when it joined the
Northwest Territory under the government of the United
States.
In 1809, the Illinois Territory was created. The area
figured prominently in frontier struggles during the
Revolutionary War and in Indian wars during the early 19th
century. Hundreds of settlers began moving to Illinois from
Virginia, Kentucky, and Maryland. Indians, angry with the
settlers for taking their lands, sided with Britain in the
War of 1812. Many settlers were massacred as they attempted
to leave Fort Dearborn near the mouth of the Chicago River.
Illinois was one of the five states created from the
Northwest Territory. Six different forms of government
operated in Illinois before its first constitution took
effect in 1818. That first document was followed by
constitutions in 1848, 1870, and 1970.
Illinois became the 21st state on December 3, 1818.
Construction of the Erie Canal in 1825 provided easy
transportation to the Midwest. Kaskaskia became Illinois'
first capitol. Two years later the seat of Illinois
government was moved to Vandalia.
Hundreds of people from the eastern states and Europe rushed
to settle the new state following the opening of the Erie
Canal in 1825. The federal government forced Indians living
in the state to cross the Mississippi River into Iowa. In
1832, the Sauk and Fox Indians fought state militias for
their land. The Black Hawk War ended that same year, and all
Indians were forced out of Illinois which virtually ended
the Indian troubles in the area.
In 1839, largely through the efforts of a young legislator
named Abraham Lincoln, the capitol was again moved—this time
to Springfield, where it is now open to the public as an
historic site. In 1858, Abraham Lincoln ran against Stephen
A. Douglas for the U.S. Senate. Lincoln's stand against
slavery during several debates in Illinois, gave him
national attention. He lost the election, but became
president of the United States two years later. Six southern
states seceded from the Union and the Civil War (1861-1865)
began after Lincoln's inauguration.
Ulysses S. Grant, general of the Union Army, and 250,000
soldiers fought from Illinois during the war.
After the war, industry boomed in Illinois. Railroads were
expanding, bringing immigrants to work factories in Chicago,
Joliet, and Rockford. Chicago led the nation in grain and
meatpacking production. On Oct. 8, 1871 the city of Chicago
was destroyed; the Great Chicago Fire burned for almost two
days killing over 300 people.
The Capitol in use today dates back to 1868, when ground was
broken for its construction. Although the General Assembly
moved in eight years later in 1876, it took 20 years to
complete the building at a cost of $4.5 million.
During the late 1800s, unrest swept throughout the nation's
farmers and factory workers. Farmers were paying high prices
for land and farm equipment while receiving low prices for
crops. Factory workers were paid low salaries in unsafe
working conditions. In 1886, a riot occurred in Chicago's
Haymarket Square, killing eight policemen and several
bystanders.
The early 1900s brought great reform in Illinois. Laws were
passed to help workers, especially women, and a state board
established to help settle strikes. Laws were also passed
banning the manufacturing and selling of alcohol. During the
years of Prohibition (1920-1933), Al Capone's mob and other
mafia gangs selling illegal liquor caused much violence and
killings while in gang warfare.
Industrial expansion greatly increased in Illinois until the
beginning of the Great Depression in 1929. Manufacturing
slowed and thousands lost their jobs. The federal government
began construction of roads and waterways. This and the
discovery of oil in southern Illinois provided many with
jobs and helped the economy begin to recover in the late
1930s.
Illinois produced hundreds of aircraft and ammunition during
World War II (1939-1945). The first controlled nuclear chain
reaction, a major step in the development of the atomic
bomb, also took place at the University of Chicago. Since
the war, many new laboratory and research centers developed
nuclear technology in Illinois. Other industries, such as
chemical, steel, and auto production, have also expanded.
Its 1970 constitution included protection from
discrimination for women, protection for a healthy
environment, and the right of suffrage for more citizens by
relaxing residency requirements. The senate and house of
representatives, constituting the state's general assembly,
are selected from 59 districts, each represented by one
senator and two at-large representatives. The executive
branch includes a team-elected governor and lieutenant
governor, assisted by an attorney general, secretary of
state, comptroller, and treasurer. The supreme court
consists of seven judges elected from five judicial
districts for 10-year terms. The appellate court judges,
also elected for 10-year terms, serve each of the state's
judicial districts, hearing appeals from state circuit
courts, whose judges are elected for 10-year terms.
Recently, Illinois is striving to decrease the air and water
pollution problems in the state. Taxes were raised to create
needed public services and a state lottery was adopted in
1973, to help raise money for education. Industries are
continuing to grow and expand.
During 1988, Illinois celebrated the centennial of the
completion of the Statehouse.
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All images are
property of Fitzy Snowman Sculpting and may not be
reproduced in any way without permission. Fitzy Snowman
and the Fitzy snowman logo are registered trademarks.
All rights reserved
2006
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