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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Chattanooga - Knoxville - Memphis - Nashville - Tennessee
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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
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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
Tennessee
(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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Memphis, Nashville, Knoxville, Chattanooga, Murfreesboro, Jackson, Johnson City, Kingsport, Clarksville, Cleveland, Cookeville, Franklin, Dalton, Maryville, Millington, Morristown, Bristol, Calhoun, Crossville, Germantown, Greeneville, Lebanon, Madison, Sevierville, Shelbyville, Antioch, Athens, Blytheville, Bolivar, Brentwood
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Tennessee's great diversity in land, climate, rivers, and
plant and animal life is mirrored by a rich and colorful
past. For all but the last 200 years of the 12,000 years or
so that this country has been inhabited, the story of
Tennessee is the story of its native peoples. The fact that
Tennessee and many of the places in it still carry Indian
names serves as a lasting reminder of the significance of
its native inhabitants. Since much of Tennessee's appeal for
her ancient people as well as for later pioneer settlers lay
with the richness and beauty of the land, it seems fitting
to begin by considering some of the state's generous natural
gifts.
Tennessee divides naturally into three “grand
divisions”—upland, often mountainous, East Tennessee, Middle
Tennessee with its foothills and basin, and the low plain of
West Tennessee. Travelers coming to the state from the east
encounter first the lofty Unaka and Smoky Mountains, flanked
on their western slope by the Great Valley of East
Tennessee. Moving across the Valley floor, they next face
the Cumberland Plateau, which historically attracted little
settlement and presented a barrier to westward migration.
West of the Plateau, one descends into the Central Basin of
Middle Tennessee—a rolling, fertile countryside that drew
hunters and settlers alike. The Central Basin is surrounded
on all sides by the Highland Rim, the western ridge of which
drops into the Tennessee River Valley. Across the river
begin the low hills and alluvial plain of West Tennessee.
These geographical “grand divisions” correspond to the
distinctive political and economic cultures of the state's
three regions. Tennessee possesses a climate advantageous
for people and agriculture, with abundant rainfall and a
long, temperate growing season. The area generally is free
from the long droughts and freezes of more extreme climes.
The three major rivers that flow around and across
Tennessee—the Mississippi, Tennessee and Cumberland
Rivers—have created watersheds which cover most of the
state. Tennessee River forms near Knoxville and flows in a
southwesterly direction into Alabama, then loops back north
to the Kentucky border. The Cumberland River drains northern
Middle Tennessee, and West Tennessee is covered by a network
of sluggish streams, swamps and lakes which flow directly
into the Mississippi River. These rivers and their tributary
streams have played a significant role from the earliest
times by yielding fish and mussels, by serving as major
transportation routes, and by creating the fertile bottom
soils that attracted farmers.
Fossil-laden rocks found across Tennessee attest to the fact
that warm, shallow seas covered the state in the distant
past. Coal-bearing strata of the Pennsylvanian period are
present throughout the Cumberland Plateau. Plant and
dinosaur fossils of the Cretaceous epoch occur in the
sandstones of West Tennessee. Remains of extinct mammoths,
mastodons and giant sloths, driven south by the advancing
glaciers of the Ice Age, can be found in the Pleistocene
deposits of West and Middle Tennessee. The story of man in
Tennessee begins with the last retreat of the Ice Age
glaciers, when a colder climate and forests of spruce and
fir prevailed in the region. Late Ice Age hunters probably
followed animal herds into this area some 12,000-15,000
years ago. These nomadic Paleo-Indians camped in caves and
rock shelters and left behind their distinctive arrowheads
and spear points. They may have used such stone age tools to
hunt the mastodon and caribou that ranged across eastern
Tennessee.
About 12,000 years ago, the region's climate began to warm
and the predominant vegetation changed from conifer to our
modern deciduous forest. Abundant acorns, hickory, chestnut
and beech mast attracted large numbers of deer and elk.
Warmer climate, the extinction of the large Ice Age mammals,
and the spread of deciduous forests worked together to
transform Indian society. During what is known as the
Archaic period, descendants of the Paleo-Indians began to
settle on river terraces, where they gathered wild plant
food and shellfish in addition to hunting game.
Sometime between 3,000 and 900 B.C., natives took the
crucial step of cultivating edible plants such as squash and
gourds—the first glimmerings of agriculture. Archaic Indians
thereby ensured a dependable food supply and freed
themselves from seasonal shortages of wild plant foods and
game. With a more secure food supply, populations expanded
rapidly and scattered bands combined to form larger
villages.
The next major stage of Tennessee pre-history, lasting
almost 2,000 years, is known as the Woodland period. This
era saw the introduction of pottery, the beginnings of
settled farming communities, the construction of burial
mounds and the growing stratification of Indian society.
Native Americans in Tennessee made the transition from
societies of hunters and gatherers to well-organized tribal,
agricul- Early man hunted mastodon that roamed during the
last Ice Age.
The peak of prehistoric cultural development in Tennessee
occurred during the Mississippian period (900-1,600 A.D.).
Cultivation of new and improved strains of corn and beans
fueled another large jump in population. An increase in
territorial warfare and the erection of ceremonial temples
and public structures attest to the growing role of
chieftains and tribalism in Indian life. Elaborate pottery
styles and an array of personal artifacts such as combs,
pipes, and jewelry marked the complex society of these last
prehistoric inhabitants of Tennessee.
First visited by the Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto in
1540, the Tennessee area would later be claimed by both
France and England as a result of the 1670s and 1680s
explorations of Jacques Marquette and Louis Joliet, sieur de
la Salle, and James Needham and Gabriel Arthur
In their futile search for gold and silver, Hernando de
Soto's band in 1541 and two later expeditions led by Juan
Pardo encountered Native Americans. By introducing firearms
and, above all, deadly Old World diseases, such contacts
hastened the decline of these tribes and their replacement
by other tribes, notably the Cherokee. The advent of the gun
brought about major changes in Native American hunting
technique and warfare. Indians grew increasingly dependent
on the colonial fur trade by supplying European traders with
deer and beaver hides in exchange for guns, rum and
manufactured articles. This dependence, in turn, eroded the
Indians' traditional self-sufficient way of life and tied
them ever closer to the fortunes of rival European powers.
Woodland Indians first developed farming in Tennessee.
Great Britain obtained the region following the French and
Indian Wars in 1763. During 1784–87, the settlers formed the
“state” of Franklin, which was disbanded when the region was
allowed to send representatives to the North Carolina
legislature. In 1790 Congress organized the territory south
of the Ohio River, and Tennessee joined the Union in 1796.
Although Tennessee joined the Confederacy during the Civil
War, there was much pro-Union sentiment in the state, which
was the scene of extensive military action.
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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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