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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Cape Girardeau - Columbia - Kansas City - Missouri - Springfield - St. Joseph - St. Louis
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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 Missouri
(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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Saint Louis, Springfield, Columbia, Jefferson City, Independence, Saint Joseph, East Saint Louis, Lees Summit, Belleville, Ballwin, Cape Girardeau, Florissant, Joplin, Saint Charles, Blue Springs, Chesterfield, Liberty, Rolla, Alton, Branson, Brighton, Butler, Carrollton, Edwardsville, Fenton, Fillmore, Freeburg, Greenfield, Greenville, Hardin
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Throughout the
pre–Civil War period and during the war, Missourians were
sharply divided in their opinions about slavery and in their
allegiances, supplying both Union and Confederate forces
with troops. However, the state itself remained in the
Union.
Historically, Missouri played a leading role as a gateway to
the West, St. Joseph being the eastern starting point of the
Pony Express, while the much-traveled Santa Fe eastern
terminus was Franklin in 1921, Missouri; by 1832,
Independence, Missouri; and by 1845, Kansas City, Missouri.
Independence, Missouri was the most popular "jumping off"
point on the Oregon Trail.
Missouri's recorded history begins in the latter half of the
17th century when the French explorers Jacques Marquette and
Louis Jolliet were the first white people to see the
Missouri River in 1673, followed by Robert Cavelier, sieur
de La Salle, who in 1682 claimed the whole area drained by
the Mississippi River for France, calling the territory
Louisiana , after King Louis XIV.
When the French explorers arrived the area was inhabited by
Native Americans of the Osage and the Missouri groups, and
by the end of the 17th century French trade with the Native
Americans flourished.
In the early 18th century the French worked the area's lead
mines and made numerous trips through Missouri in search of
furs. Missionaries established St. Francis Xavier, the first
white settlement of Missouri. It was located near
present-day St. Louis, but was deserted in 1703. Trade down
the Mississippi prompted the settlement of Ste. Geneviève
about 1735 and the founding of St. Louis in 1764 by Pierre
Laclede and René Auguste Chouteau, who were both in the
fur-trading business.
Although not involved in the last conflict (1754–63) of the
French and Indian Wars, Missouri was affected by the French
defeat when, in 1762, France secretly ceded the territory
west of the Mississippi to Spain. Although few Spaniards
settled Missouri, many U.S. miners and farmers entered from
Mississippi.
In 1800, France reclaimed the Louisiana Territory and in
1803, sold it to the United States as part of the Louisiana
Purchase. French influence remained dominant, even though by
this time Americans had filtered into the territory,
particularly to the lead mines at Ste Geneviève and Potosi.
By the time of the Lewis and Clark expedition (1803–6), St.
Louis was already known as the gateway to the Far West.
The Missouri Territory was organized in 1812., but
settlement was slow even after the War of 1812. The coming
of the steamboat increased traffic and trade on the
Mississippi, and settlement progressed. Planters from the
South had introduced slavery into the territory, but their
plantations were restricted to a small area.
As people flooded into Missouri, Native Americans grew angry
and began raiding settlements. During the War of 1812,
Britain supplied the Indians with weapons and encouraged
them to attack Missouri settlements. Not until 1815 did the
attacks end with a peace treaty at Portage des Sioux. By
1825, few Native Americans lived in Missouri.
However, the question of admitting the Missouri Territory as
a state became a burning national issue because it involved
the question of extending slavery into the territories.
Attempts for statehood started in 1818, but questions
concerning slavery in the state were not settled until 1820.
The dispute was resolved by the Missouri Compromise, which
admitted (1821) Missouri to the Union as a slave state but
excluded slavery from lands of the Louisiana Purchase north
of lat. 36°30´N. (All of Missouri lies north of 36°30´
except for the southeastern "bootheel") and allowed Maine
become a free state. This kept the number of slave and free
states equal. Missouri became the 24th state on Aug. 10,
1821.
Slaveholding interests became politically powerful, but the
state remained principally a fur-trading center. The
American Fur Company organized in St. Louis in 1822 and soon
developed a monopoly on all fur trade west of the
Mississippi River. Trade with Mexico was very successful.
The Santa Fe Trail connected Independence with the
Southwest. Independence also marked the beginning of the
Oregon Trail that led thousands to the Pacific Northwest.
In 1854 the problem of slavery was made acute with the
passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, leaving the question of
slavery in the Kansas and Nebraska territories to the
settlers themselves. The proslavery forces in Missouri
became very active in trying to win Kansas for the slave
cause and contributed to the violence and disorder that tore
the territory apart in the years just prior to the Civil
War. Nevertheless Missouri also had leaders opposed to
slavery, including one of its Senators, Thomas Hart Benton.
In 1857, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in the Dred Scott
Decision that slaves were considered property. This historic
decision increased tension between the North and the South.
Kansas, located on Missouri's western border, became a free
state in 1861. Fighting between Kansas and Missouri began
and continued into the Civil War.
During the Civil War most Missourians remained loyal to the
federal government. In 1861, a convention was called to
determine whether Missouri would secede from the Union.
Although the majority voted to support the Union, Governor
Claiborne Jackson refused to send troops at the request of
President Lincoln. Jackson led the state militia against
Union troops at the Battle of Boonville. Jackson's militia
was forced to southern Missouri where they defeated Union
troops at Wilson' Creek. Shortly after, the state convention
met again to remove all pro-Confederate state leaders from
office.
The coming of the railroads brought the eventual decay of
many of Missouri's river towns and tied the state more
closely to the East and North. St. Louis and Kansas City
became important railroad centers. Outlaws held up banks,
stagecoaches, and trains. Jesse James terrorized the state
for over 20 years until he was killed by one of his own gang
in 1882. Urbanization and industrialization progressed, and
the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, held at St. Louis in
1904, dramatically revealed Missouri's economic growth. The
following year laws were passed that required inspection of
working conditions and regulation of child labor and public
utilities in Missouri.
Although during World War I, general prosperity prevailed in
the state. Missouri's industries expanded to help supply war
materials. John Pershing of Linn County was named commander
in chief of the U.S. forces in France. The Great Depression
(1929-1939) caused more than 200,000 Missourians to lose
their jobs and some to lose their land. The federal
government established programs to help bring employment to
Missouri.
World War II (1939-1945) also revived the economy as
factories again opened to provide war materials and both St.
Louis and Kansas City served as vital transportation
centers, and industrialization increased enormously. In the
postwar period, Missouri became the second largest producer
(behind Michigan) of automobiles in the nation. Although
most industry remains based in the two metropolitan centers,
smaller Missouri communities, especially suburbs, have since
attracted much light and heavy industry, as well as former
city dwellers. St. Louis lost half its population between
1950 to 1990, and out-migration has continued; what was once
the fourth largest U.S. city is now barely in the top 50 in
size.
New industries moved to Missouri during the 1950s. A
uranium-processing plant opened in Weldon Spring, electronic
plants were built in Joplin, and factories in St. Louis and
Neosho began producing parts for spacecrafts. Economic
growth continued through the 1960s. State leaders encouraged
tourism and the expansion of mining throughout the state.
Missouri encountered serious pollution problems in the early
1980s. Contamination threatened ground water supplies and
poisonous substances were discovered in Times Beach. The
federal government is striving to help Missouri clean these
areas. As urban problems became serious, St. Louis and
Kansas City rebuilt their riverfronts. Missouri was also
faced with financial problems. In 1986, a state lottery was
established to help with education, welfare, and
environmental programs.
Today in spite of these difficulties, Missouri continues to
grow and the economy remains strong.
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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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