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Snoopy is a beloved character from the Peanuts franchise. Few non-Minnesotans know that Minnesota is the home of Snoopy. Creator Charles Schultz was born in Minneapolis and raised in St. Paul. Several of these statures can be seen around the Twin Cities (on at IKEA for example) and they are extremely valuable--some reached tens of thousands of dollars in auctions.

 

Minnesota State Fair (2008). Falcon Heights, Minnesota.

This is a Snoopy statue I themed for the Peanuts On Parade promotion in St. Paul, MN.

Summer of 2000.

This statue was customized to be an Organ Grinder with Woodstock on his shoulder as the Monkey.

"WAWAWA!!"

 

"Bye, Snoopy!

Thank you for shopping with us!

We're going to need to restock!"

 

Oh, wow, Snoopy, you're on a shopping spree in the Paprihaven Mall!

 

"WAWA wawa WAWA wa!"

 

Great! What did you find?

 

"WawaWAwaWa wa wa WAwa!"

 

You found a television on clearance because its volume was stuck at full? Why did you buy it??

 

"WawaWAWA wa WAWA!"

 

Ah, because there was no way you could 'turn it down'. 😏 Well, you certainly bought a lot of stuff! Do you have any rules you shop by?

 

"WAWA wawawa wa WA!"

 

Ah, 'if the shoe fits... buy it in every color..' 😏

 

"WaWAWA WAwawa WA!"

 

Oh, you used to be a secret shopper, but you're not any more? Why?

 

"Wawawa WAwa."

 

Ah, inflation has made secrets too expensive... OooKAY, Snoopy! Enjoy your shopping!

 

"HEHEHE!!!"

 

•────────────────•°•❀•°•────────────────•

A year of the shows and performers of the Bijou Planks Theater.

 

Westland

Peanuts On Parade

On The Town

Item No. 8401

Artist: Chuck Gonzales

Sponsor: Dayton's

Translation: Entrepreneur Of The Day. Kyle Alexander & Mary Jo Dutra, 2006, Wright, Santa Rosa, California, USA, sculpture.

It's a full day of commemorative performances at the Bijou Planks! For the morning show, home grown in the U.S. of A., Snoopy fires up the Planks crowd in a star-spangled stripes performance of Yankee Doodle Dandy!

 

🎶🎸🎷🎺 🎻🎵

 

...audience clapping in rhythm...

 

🎶Waa wawawaWAWAAA

WAAAA wawawaWAWAWA!! 🎵

 

Snoopy's fantastic!

I've never heard such emotional power in the lyrics!

 

🎶 Wa wa wa wa WA WA WA,

Wa Wa wawawa WA WAAAA!🎵

__________________________

A year of the shows and performers of the Bijou Planks Theater.

 

Snoopy is a beloved character from the Peanuts franchise. Few non-Minnesotans know that Minnesota is the home of Snoopy. Creator Charles Schultz was born in Minneapolis and raised in St. Paul. Several of these statures can be seen around the Twin Cities (at IKEA for example) and they are extremely valuable--some reached tens of thousands of dollars in auctions.

 

MSP airport, located near historic Fort Snelling and Mall of America, serves the Minneapolis and St. Paul area and is the largest and busiest airport in the five-state area. In terms of passengers, MSP is the 12th busiest airport in the United States and the 21st busiest in the world. It is the hub for Northwest Airlines, whose headquarters is located nearby. The airport has two separate terminals which can be accessed by the Hiawatha light rail line.

The Twin Cities are the home of Peanuts. Actually, my uncle knew Charlie Brown. Well, not THE Charlie Bown but the character that Charles Schultz based his character after. It's one of those things that brings the whole Peanuts experience even closer to home.

 

Rice Park. St. Paul, Minnesota.

Unknown artist, 2007, near Altamont Senior Apartments, Rohnert Park, California, USA, sculpture

Alejandro Torres, 2005, near Martin Levy, Junior College, Santa Rosa, California, USA, sculpture

The Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, located at 2301 Hardies Lane in Santa Rosa, opened on August 17, 2002. The museum is dedicated to the life and works of Charles Schulz, the creator ot he Peanuts comic strip. The 27,384-square-foot building, which cost $8 million to build, was designed by architectural firm C. David Robinson Architects.

 

More than 6,000-square-feet of gallery space feature permanent and changing exhibitions, culled from the Peanuts Cartoon Strip Collection, numbering nearly 6,000 original strips. A 2,133-square-foot Great Hall features two large-scale Peanuts-inspired works by the Japanese artist Yoshiteru Otani--Morphing Snoopy and the Peanuts Tile Mural. A private outdoor garden features Peanuts-inspired sculptures, and a Snoopy Labyrinth sits out in front of the entrance. Among the museum's permanent exhibits are Christo's Wrapped Snoopy House, Schulz' Bedroom Wall Mural, and a recreation of Schulz' personal studio work area. The museum also features a research center with library and archives, an education room with hands-on activities and class, and a 100-seat theatre featuring animated specials and documentary footage.

 

In 2005, to celebrate the 55th anniversary of the Peanuts cartoon, the town of Santa Rosa and Craig Schulz, Charles Schulz' son, presented It's Your Town Charlie Brown, a city-wide arts and community project hosting 55 Charlie Brown statues. In 2006, they followed up with the Summer of Woodstock, featuring 76 Woodstock statues. Woodstock's Morning Routine by Karen Johnson, Miranda Huntsinger, Emma Huntsinger, and Zoe Richardson Brumbaugh was sponsored by and placed inside of the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center.

In 2005, to celebrate the 55th anniversary of the Peanuts cartoon, the town of Santa Rosa and Craig Schulz, Charles Schulz' son, presented It's Your Town Charlie Brown, a city-wide arts and community project hosting 55 Charlie Brown statues. It's Your Museum, Charlie Brown by Pam Drucker and Mich Harris was sponsored by and placed outside of the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center.

 

The Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, located at 2301 Hardies Lane in Santa Rosa, opened on August 17, 2002. The museum is dedicated to the life and works of Charles Schulz, the creator ot he Peanuts comic strip. The 27,384-square-foot building, which cost $8 million to build, was designed by architectural firm C. David Robinson Architects.

 

More than 6,000-square-feet of gallery space feature permanent and changing exhibitions, culled from the Peanuts Cartoon Strip Collection, numbering nearly 6,000 original strips. A 2,133-square-foot Great Hall features two large-scale Peanuts-inspired works by the Japanese artist Yoshiteru Otani--Morphing Snoopy and the Peanuts Tile Mural. A private outdoor garden features Peanuts-inspired sculptures, and a Snoopy Labyrinth sits out in front of the entrance. Among the museum's permanent exhibits are Christo's Wrapped Snoopy House, Schulz' Bedroom Wall Mural, and a recreation of Schulz' personal studio work area. The museum also features a research center with library and archives, an education room with hands-on activities and class, and a 100-seat theatre featuring animated specials and documentary footage.

Candyland, in Downtown St. Paul, has three of the famous Peanuts Gang statues outside their front door. St. Paul is a great place to find several of these, including the "Doghouse Days of Summer" (2004) collection featuring Snoopy sitting on top of his doghouse. Sweeten Up Lucy is one of the Looking for Lucy statues which were released in 2002 as part of the Peanuts on Parade collection.

 

Candyland. St. Paul, Minnesota.

In 2005, to celebrate the 55th anniversary of the Peanuts cartoon, the town of Santa Rosa and Craig Schulz, Charles Schulz' son, presented It's Your Town Charlie Brown, a city-wide arts and community project hosting 55 Charlie Brown statues. In 2006, they followed up with the Summer of Woodstock, featuring 76 Woodstock statues. Halftime by Barbara Rossini and Gail Robinson was sponsored by and placed at the Redwood Empire Ice Arena.

 

The Redwood Empire Ice Arena, commonly known as Snoopy's Home Ice, at 1667 West Steele Lane in Santa Rosa, opened on April 28, 1969 with a gala event starring 1968 Olympic Gold Medalist Peggy Fleming and the The Vince Guaraldi trio. The arena was built by and originally owned by Charles M. Schulz, the creator of the Peanuts comic strip. Schulz' then-wife, Joyce, acted as the project manager and was instrumental in the design, which includes finely crafted replicas of Swiss houses in relief that line the arena.

 

The Arena offers public skating, private ice time, figure skating, junior hockey, and adult hockey. It is also host to the annual Snoopy's Senior World Hockey Tournament, in which 64 teams from all over the world come to Santa Rosa for a week-long hockey tournament in the summer. The arena has about 500 permanent seats for hockey games, but this can be expanded to 3,000 seats for concerts and other events.

 

The Arena also houses the Warm Puppy Cafe where patrons can watch the ice activities from inside the lobby while having anything from a warm cup of cocoa to a complete meal. Schulz would eat breakfast and lunch in the café every day at his own reserved table.

In 2005, to celebrate the 55th anniversary of the Peanuts cartoon, the town of Santa Rosa and Craig Schulz, Charles Schulz' son, presented It's Your Town Charlie Brown, a city-wide arts and community project hosting 55 Charlie Brown statues. Slap Shot Schulz by Barbara Rossini and Gail Robinson was sponsored by and placed outside of Redwood Empire Ice Arena.

 

The Redwood Empire Ice Arena, commonly known as Snoopy's Home Ice, at 1667 West Steele Lane in Santa Rosa, opened on April 28, 1969 with a gala event starring 1968 Olympic Gold Medalist Peggy Fleming and the The Vince Guaraldi trio. The arena was built by and originally owned by Charles M. Schulz, the creator of the Peanuts comic strip. Schulz' then-wife, Joyce, acted as the project manager and was instrumental in the design, which includes finely crafted replicas of Swiss houses in relief that line the arena.

 

The Arena offers public skating, private ice time, figure skating, junior hockey, and adult hockey. It is also host to the annual Snoopy's Senior World Hockey Tournament, in which 64 teams from all over the world come to Santa Rosa for a week-long hockey tournament in the summer. The arena has about 500 permanent seats for hockey games, but this can be expanded to 3,000 seats for concerts and other events.

 

The Arena also houses the Warm Puppy Cafe where patrons can watch the ice activities from inside the lobby while having anything from a warm cup of cocoa to a complete meal. Schulz would eat breakfast and lunch in the café every day at his own reserved table.

In 2005, to celebrate the 55th anniversary of the Peanuts cartoon, the town of Santa Rosa and Craig Schulz, Charles Schulz' son, presented It's Your Town Charlie Brown, a city-wide arts and community project hosting 55 Charlie Brown statues. For C.B. by artists Ami Victorino, Joel Yau and Jonathan Penaloza was sponsored by Determined Productions, Inc. and placed at 965 Sonoma Avenue. It can currently be found in Snoopy's Gallery & Gift Shop.

 

Snoopy's Gallery & Gift Shop, located next to the Redwood Empire Ice Arena at 1665 West Steele Lane in Santa Rosa, features 2,400 square feet of a wide range of Peanuts products.

Under Construction Charlie Brown, currently located in the garden of the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, designed by Ellerbe Becket Design Team for St. Paul, Minnesota's Charlie Brown Around Town in 2001, originally stood outside the Science Museum of Minnesota.

 

The Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, located at 2301 Hardies Lane in Santa Rosa, opened on August 17, 2002. The museum is dedicated to the life and works of Charles Schulz, the creator ot he Peanuts comic strip. The 27,384-square-foot building, which cost $8 million to build, was designed by architectural firm C. David Robinson Architects.

 

More than 6,000-square-feet of gallery space feature permanent and changing exhibitions, culled from the Peanuts Cartoon Strip Collection, numbering nearly 6,000 original strips. A 2,133-square-foot Great Hall features two large-scale Peanuts-inspired works by the Japanese artist Yoshiteru Otani--Morphing Snoopy and the Peanuts Tile Mural. A private outdoor garden features Peanuts-inspired sculptures, and a Snoopy Labyrinth sits out in front of the entrance. Among the museum's permanent exhibits are Christo's Wrapped Snoopy House, Schulz' Bedroom Wall Mural, and a recreation of Schulz' personal studio work area. The museum also features a research center with library and archives, an education room with hands-on activities and class, and a 100-seat theatre featuring animated specials and documentary footage.

One of the many Peanuts on Parade statues you'll find across the state. This one, featuring Linus Blankets, entitled Life is a Bowl Full of Chocolate.

 

Candyland. Stillwater, Minnesota.

This particular Snoopy (Snoopy on Ice) commemorates the 1980 Miracle on Ice, a game in which the amateur team from the USA overcame 1:33 odds to defeat the heavily favored Soviet squad en route to a gold medal. The majority of the players on that team were from Minnesota & Wisconsin, including coach Herb Brooks who was a legendary coach for the Golden Gophers.

 

Another in the Snoopy Doghouse Days of Summer collection which are now scattered all over the world. These Peanuts Gang statues were originally auctioned off, the majority of which are located in Charles Schultz home state of Minnesota.

 

Grand Avenue. St. Paul, Minnesota.

Violet McDonald, 2010, near Hyatt Vineyard Creek Hotel And Spa, Railroad Square, Santa Rosa, California, USA, sculpture

Primary Residence, currently located in at the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, designed by Ann E. Judkins for St. Paul, Minnesota's Doghouse Days, was sponsored by Redwood Empire Ice Arena and originally located at the Science Museum of Minnesota.

 

The Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, located at 2301 Hardies Lane in Santa Rosa, opened on August 17, 2002. The museum is dedicated to the life and works of Charles Schulz, the creator ot he Peanuts comic strip. The 27,384-square-foot building, which cost $8 million to build, was designed by architectural firm C. David Robinson Architects.

 

More than 6,000-square-feet of gallery space feature permanent and changing exhibitions, culled from the Peanuts Cartoon Strip Collection, numbering nearly 6,000 original strips. A 2,133-square-foot Great Hall features two large-scale Peanuts-inspired works by the Japanese artist Yoshiteru Otani--Morphing Snoopy and the Peanuts Tile Mural. A private outdoor garden features Peanuts-inspired sculptures, and a Snoopy Labyrinth sits out in front of the entrance. Among the museum's permanent exhibits are Christo's Wrapped Snoopy House, Schulz' Bedroom Wall Mural, and a recreation of Schulz' personal studio work area. The museum also features a research center with library and archives, an education room with hands-on activities and class, and a 100-seat theatre featuring animated specials and documentary footage.

Crossword Linus, currently located in the garden of the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, designed by Ann E. Judkins for St. Paul, Minnesota's Linus Blankets in 2003, was sponsored by Ecolab, Inc. and originally located in Ecolab Plaza, at Wabasha Street and 5th Street.

 

The Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, located at 2301 Hardies Lane in Santa Rosa, opened on August 17, 2002. The museum is dedicated to the life and works of Charles Schulz, the creator ot he Peanuts comic strip. The 27,384-square-foot building, which cost $8 million to build, was designed by architectural firm C. David Robinson Architects.

 

More than 6,000-square-feet of gallery space feature permanent and changing exhibitions, culled from the Peanuts Cartoon Strip Collection, numbering nearly 6,000 original strips. A 2,133-square-foot Great Hall features two large-scale Peanuts-inspired works by the Japanese artist Yoshiteru Otani--Morphing Snoopy and the Peanuts Tile Mural. A private outdoor garden features Peanuts-inspired sculptures, and a Snoopy Labyrinth sits out in front of the entrance. Among the museum's permanent exhibits are Christo's Wrapped Snoopy House, Schulz' Bedroom Wall Mural, and a recreation of Schulz' personal studio work area. The museum also features a research center with library and archives, an education room with hands-on activities and class, and a 100-seat theatre featuring animated specials and documentary footage.

The North Star Flying Ace, depicting Snoopy as an Ace Pilot with his co-pilot Woodstock perched on his left arm, sits in the Airport Mall of Terminal 1-Lindbergh of the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. In the summer of 2000, the City of Sait Paul hosted the first of its Peanuts on Parade, a city-wide arts and community project featuring 101 5-foot-tall fibergalss statues of Snoopy, as a tribute to its hometown hero, Charles Schulz, the cartoonist who drew the "Peanuts" strip.

 

Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport (IATA: MSP, ICAO: KMSP, FAA LID: MSP) is the largest and busiest airport in the five-state upper Midwest region. In terms of passengers, it is the sixteenth busiest airport in the United States. Lindbergh Terminal is named after native Minnesotan, aviator Charles Lindbergh.

In 2005, to celebrate the 55th anniversary of the Peanuts cartoon, the town of Santa Rosa and Craig Schulz, Charles Schulz' son, presented It's Your Town Charlie Brown, a city-wide arts and community project hosting 55 Charlie Brown statues. In 2006, they followed up with the Summer of Woodstock, featuring 76 Woodstock statues. In 2007, it was Snoopy's "Joe Cool" Summer, featuring 95 Snoopy statues. Mr. Joe Debonair by Barbara Rossini and Gail Robinson was sponsored by and placed outside of the Redwood Empire Ice Arena.

 

The Redwood Empire Ice Arena, commonly known as Snoopy's Home Ice, at 1667 West Steele Lane in Santa Rosa, opened on April 28, 1969 with a gala event starring 1968 Olympic Gold Medallist Peggy Fleming and the The Vince Guaraldi trio. The arena was built by and originally owned by Charles M. Schulz, the creator of the Peanuts comic strip. Schulz' then-wife, Joyce, acted as the project manager and was instrumental in the design, which includes finely crafted replicas of Swiss houses in relief that line the arena.

 

The Arena offers public skating, private ice time, figure skating, junior hockey, and adult hockey. It is also host to the annual Snoopy's Senior World Hockey Tournament, in which 64 teams from all over the world come to Santa Rosa for a week-long hockey tournament in the summer. The arena has about 500 permanent seats for hockey games, but this can be expanded to 3,000 seats for concerts and other events.

 

The Arena also houses the Warm Puppy Cafe where patrons can watch the ice activities from inside the lobby while having anything from a warm cup of cocoa to a complete meal. Schulz would eat breakfast and lunch in the café every day at his own reserved table.

In 2005, to celebrate the 55th anniversary of the Peanuts cartoon, the town of Santa Rosa and Craig Schulz, Charles Schulz' son, presented It's Your Town Charlie Brown, a city-wide arts and community project hosting 55 Charlie Brown statues. In 2006, they followed up with the Summer of Woodstock, featuring 76 Woodstock statues. Woodstock's Morning Routine by Karen Johnson, Miranda Huntsinger, Emma Huntsinger, and Zoe Richardson Brumbaugh was sponsored by and placed inside of the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center.

 

The Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, located at 2301 Hardies Lane in Santa Rosa, opened on August 17, 2002. The museum is dedicated to the life and works of Charles Schulz, the creator ot he Peanuts comic strip. The 27,384-square-foot building, which cost $8 million to build, was designed by architectural firm C. David Robinson Architects.

 

More than 6,000-square-feet of gallery space feature permanent and changing exhibitions, culled from the Peanuts Cartoon Strip Collection, numbering nearly 6,000 original strips. A 2,133-square-foot Great Hall features two large-scale Peanuts-inspired works by the Japanese artist Yoshiteru Otani--Morphing Snoopy and the Peanuts Tile Mural. A private outdoor garden features Peanuts-inspired sculptures, and a Snoopy Labyrinth sits out in front of the entrance. Among the museum's permanent exhibits are Christo's Wrapped Snoopy House, Schulz' Bedroom Wall Mural, and a recreation of Schulz' personal studio work area. The museum also features a research center with library and archives, an education room with hands-on activities and class, and a 100-seat theatre featuring animated specials and documentary footage.

This is one of the two statues of the Minnesota native, Snoopy, located at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport (MSP), Lindberg Terminal. This one is harder to get a shot of for those of us who rarely use Delta. Now that NWA and Delta have merged, and I don't really use United much anymore, I was finally able to trek all the way down that side of the terminal. Also, it is one of the few Snoopy statues that I can think of in which he has a prop in both hands.

  

A Charlie Brown statue entitled Dog's Best Friend from the Peanuts on Parade series. These are more easy to access now that they are outside, but they also have taken more damage.

 

University of Minnesota Small Animal Hospital. St. Paul, Minnesota.

Crossword Linus, currently located in the garden of the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, designed by Ann E. Judkins for St. Paul, Minnesota's Linus Blankets in 2003, was sponsored by Ecolab, Inc. and originally located in Ecolab Plaza, at Wabasha Street and 5th Street.

 

The Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, located at 2301 Hardies Lane in Santa Rosa, opened on August 17, 2002. The museum is dedicated to the life and works of Charles Schulz, the creator ot he Peanuts comic strip. The 27,384-square-foot building, which cost $8 million to build, was designed by architectural firm C. David Robinson Architects.

 

More than 6,000-square-feet of gallery space feature permanent and changing exhibitions, culled from the Peanuts Cartoon Strip Collection, numbering nearly 6,000 original strips. A 2,133-square-foot Great Hall features two large-scale Peanuts-inspired works by the Japanese artist Yoshiteru Otani--Morphing Snoopy and the Peanuts Tile Mural. A private outdoor garden features Peanuts-inspired sculptures, and a Snoopy Labyrinth sits out in front of the entrance. Among the museum's permanent exhibits are Christo's Wrapped Snoopy House, Schulz' Bedroom Wall Mural, and a recreation of Schulz' personal studio work area. The museum also features a research center with library and archives, an education room with hands-on activities and class, and a 100-seat theatre featuring animated specials and documentary footage.

Youll need to pay admission to see this Charlie Brown--located inside the Minnesota Transportation Museum. I highly recommend it, however. On Saturdays, admission includes a short train ride which originates from the roundhouse.

 

Minnesota Transportation Museum. St. Paul, Minnesota.

In 2005, to celebrate the 55th anniversary of the Peanuts cartoon, the town of Santa Rosa and Craig Schulz, Charles Schulz' son, presented It's Your Town Charlie Brown, a city-wide arts and community project hosting 55 Charlie Brown statues. It's Your Museum, Charlie Brown by Pam Drucker and Mich Harris was sponsored by and placed outside of the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center.

 

The Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, located at 2301 Hardies Lane in Santa Rosa, opened on August 17, 2002. The museum is dedicated to the life and works of Charles Schulz, the creator ot he Peanuts comic strip. The 27,384-square-foot building, which cost $8 million to build, was designed by architectural firm C. David Robinson Architects.

 

More than 6,000-square-feet of gallery space feature permanent and changing exhibitions, culled from the Peanuts Cartoon Strip Collection, numbering nearly 6,000 original strips. A 2,133-square-foot Great Hall features two large-scale Peanuts-inspired works by the Japanese artist Yoshiteru Otani--Morphing Snoopy and the Peanuts Tile Mural. A private outdoor garden features Peanuts-inspired sculptures, and a Snoopy Labyrinth sits out in front of the entrance. Among the museum's permanent exhibits are Christo's Wrapped Snoopy House, Schulz' Bedroom Wall Mural, and a recreation of Schulz' personal studio work area. The museum also features a research center with library and archives, an education room with hands-on activities and class, and a 100-seat theatre featuring animated specials and documentary footage.

One of 10 Peanuts statues commissioned for the 2014 All-Star Game at Target Field in Minneapolis. TivoliToo, which created many of the Peanuts on Parade statues, was supposed to design these, but according to historian William Johnson, MLB's contractual obligations prevented this. Sadly, I missed the Pig Pen and Franklin statues.

 

Target Field. Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Classic Snoopy, currently located in the lobby of Redwood Empire Ice Arena, was designed by Charles M. Schulz for St. Paul, Minnesota's Heeeeeeeeeere's Snoopy in 2000, was sponsored by Tami and Roger Aker.

 

The Redwood Empire Ice Arena, commonly known as Snoopy's Home Ice, at 1667 West Steele Lane in Santa Rosa, opened on April 28, 1969 with a gala event starring 1968 Olympic Gold Medallist Peggy Fleming and the The Vince Guaraldi trio. The arena was built by and originally owned by Charles M. Schulz, the creator of the Peanuts comic strip. Schulz' then-wife, Joyce, acted as the project manager and was instrumental in the design, which includes finely crafted replicas of Swiss houses in relief that line the arena.

 

The Arena offers public skating, private ice time, figure skating, junior hockey, and adult hockey. It is also host to the annual Snoopy's Senior World Hockey Tournament, in which 64 teams from all over the world come to Santa Rosa for a week-long hockey tournament in the summer. The arena has about 500 permanent seats for hockey games, but this can be expanded to 3,000 seats for concerts and other events.

 

The Arena also houses the Warm Puppy Cafe where patrons can watch the ice activities from inside the lobby while having anything from a warm cup of cocoa to a complete meal. Schulz would eat breakfast and lunch in the café every day at his own reserved table.

Under Construction Charlie Brown, currently located in the garden of the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, designed by Ellerbe Becket Design Team for St. Paul, Minnesota's Charlie Brown Around Town in 2001, originally stood outside the Science Museum of Minnesota.

 

The Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, located at 2301 Hardies Lane in Santa Rosa, opened on August 17, 2002. The museum is dedicated to the life and works of Charles Schulz, the creator ot he Peanuts comic strip. The 27,384-square-foot building, which cost $8 million to build, was designed by architectural firm C. David Robinson Architects.

 

More than 6,000-square-feet of gallery space feature permanent and changing exhibitions, culled from the Peanuts Cartoon Strip Collection, numbering nearly 6,000 original strips. A 2,133-square-foot Great Hall features two large-scale Peanuts-inspired works by the Japanese artist Yoshiteru Otani--Morphing Snoopy and the Peanuts Tile Mural. A private outdoor garden features Peanuts-inspired sculptures, and a Snoopy Labyrinth sits out in front of the entrance. Among the museum's permanent exhibits are Christo's Wrapped Snoopy House, Schulz' Bedroom Wall Mural, and a recreation of Schulz' personal studio work area. The museum also features a research center with library and archives, an education room with hands-on activities and class, and a 100-seat theatre featuring animated specials and documentary footage.

Another Charlie Brown statue in the "Peanuts on Parade" series... This one, entitled "Carlitos Brown," in the Del Sol District of St. Paul along Cesar Chavez Street (outside of Boca Chica's Taco House).

 

District del Sol. St. Paul, Minnesota.

The North Star Flying Ace, depicting Snoopy as an Ace Pilot with his co-pilot Woodstock perched on his left arm, sits in the Airport Mall of Terminal 1-Lindbergh of the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. In the summer of 2000, the City of Sait Paul hosted the first of its Peanuts on Parade, a city-wide arts and community project featuring 101 5-foot-tall fibergalss statues of Snoopy, as a tribute to its hometown hero, Charles Schulz, the cartoonist who drew the "Peanuts" strip.

 

Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport (IATA: MSP, ICAO: KMSP, FAA LID: MSP) is the largest and busiest airport in the five-state upper Midwest region. In terms of passengers, it is the sixteenth busiest airport in the United States. Lindbergh Terminal is named after native Minnesotan, aviator Charles Lindbergh.

In 2005, to celebrate the 55th anniversary of the Peanuts cartoon, the town of Santa Rosa and Craig Schulz, Charles Schulz' son, presented It's Your Town Charlie Brown, a city-wide arts and community project hosting 55 Charlie Brown statues. In 2006, they followed up with the Summer of Woodstock, featuring 76 Woodstock statues. Dots the way, uh-huh uh-huh, I like it, uh-huh uh-huh by Tom Everhart was sponsored by All Wheel Sports and placed at the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center. Today is sits in Snoopy's Gallery & Gift Shop.

 

Snoopy's Gallery & Gift Shop, located next to the Redwood Empire Ice Arena at 1665 West Steele Lane in Santa Rosa, features 2,400 square feet of a wide range of Peanuts products.

Classic Snoopy, currently located in the lobby of Redwood Empire Ice Arena, was designed by Charles M. Schulz for St. Paul, Minnesota's Heeeeeeeeeere's Snoopy in 2000, was sponsored by Tami and Roger Aker.

 

The Redwood Empire Ice Arena, commonly known as Snoopy's Home Ice, at 1667 West Steele Lane in Santa Rosa, opened on April 28, 1969 with a gala event starring 1968 Olympic Gold Medallist Peggy Fleming and the The Vince Guaraldi trio. The arena was built by and originally owned by Charles M. Schulz, the creator of the Peanuts comic strip. Schulz' then-wife, Joyce, acted as the project manager and was instrumental in the design, which includes finely crafted replicas of Swiss houses in relief that line the arena.

 

The Arena offers public skating, private ice time, figure skating, junior hockey, and adult hockey. It is also host to the annual Snoopy's Senior World Hockey Tournament, in which 64 teams from all over the world come to Santa Rosa for a week-long hockey tournament in the summer. The arena has about 500 permanent seats for hockey games, but this can be expanded to 3,000 seats for concerts and other events.

 

The Arena also houses the Warm Puppy Cafe where patrons can watch the ice activities from inside the lobby while having anything from a warm cup of cocoa to a complete meal. Schulz would eat breakfast and lunch in the café every day at his own reserved table.

In 2005, to celebrate the 55th anniversary of the Peanuts cartoon, the town of Santa Rosa and Craig Schulz, Charles Schulz' son, presented It's Your Town Charlie Brown, a city-wide arts and community project hosting 55 Charlie Brown statues. In 2006, they followed up with the Summer of Woodstock, featuring 76 Woodstock statues. Reflecting Santa Rosa by Craig, Judy, Lindsey and Bryan Schulz was sponsored by United Media and placed in Snoopy's Gallery & Gift Shop.

 

Snoopy's Gallery & Gift Shop, located next to the Redwood Empire Ice Arena at 1665 West Steele Lane in Santa Rosa, features 2,400 square feet of a wide range of Peanuts products.

A Snoopy statue entitled Key to My Heart from the Peanuts on Parade series. These are more easy to access now that they are outside, but they also have taken more damage.

 

University of Minnesota Small Animal Hospital. St. Paul, Minnesota.

Steve Rustad, 2006, near North Bay Corporation, Southwest Santa Rosa, Santa Rosa, California, USA, sculpture

Lines of Lucy, currently located in the Snoopy's Gallery & Gift Shop, by Stephanie A. Johnson for St. Paul, Minnesota's Looking for Lucy, was sponsored by Snoopy's Family Fund and originally in Mattocks Park.

This is a Snoopy I themed as a Riverboat Captain for the Peanuts on Parade Project in St. Paul, MN Summer 2000.

In 2005, to celebrate the 55th anniversary of the Peanuts cartoon, the town of Santa Rosa and Craig Schulz, Charles Schulz' son, presented It's Your Town Charlie Brown, a city-wide arts and community project hosting 55 Charlie Brown statues. In 2006, they followed up with the Summer of Woodstock, featuring 76 Woodstock statues. Woodstock's Reflections of the Stone Grandfathers by Wendy Brayton was sponsored by David & Christina Poulsen and placed at 1160 Fourth Street.

In 2005, to celebrate the 55th anniversary of the Peanuts cartoon, the town of Santa Rosa and Craig Schulz, Charles Schulz' son, presented It's Your Town Charlie Brown, a city-wide arts and community project hosting 55 Charlie Brown statues. Make Tracks to Railroad Square by Susan Cornelis was sponsored by the Historic Railroad Square Association and placed at the corner of Fourth street and Davis.

Patricia Healey & Kid Street Learning Center, 2005, near Kid Street Learning Center, West End, Santa Rosa, California, USA, sculpture

Candyland, in Downtown St. Paul, has three of the famous Peanuts Gang statues outside their front door. St. Paul is a great place to find several of these, including the "Doghouse Days of Summer" (2004) collection featuring Snoopy sitting on top of his doghouse.

 

Candyland. St. Paul, Minnesota.

The North Star Flying Ace, depicting Snoopy as an Ace Pilot with his co-pilot Woodstock perched on his left arm, sits in the Airport Mall of Terminal 1-Lindbergh of the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. In the summer of 2000, the City of Sait Paul hosted the first of its Peanuts on Parade, a city-wide arts and community project featuring 101 5-foot-tall fibergalss statues of Snoopy, as a tribute to its hometown hero, Charles Schulz, the cartoonist who drew the "Peanuts" strip.

 

Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport (IATA: MSP, ICAO: KMSP, FAA LID: MSP) is the largest and busiest airport in the five-state upper Midwest region. In terms of passengers, it is the sixteenth busiest airport in the United States. Lindbergh Terminal is named after native Minnesotan, aviator Charles Lindbergh.

Looking for Lucy / Peanuts on Parade (2002) St. Paul, Minnesota

Lolly Petroni, 2005, near Southwest Community Health Center, Wright, Santa Rosa, California, USA, sculpture

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