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It was difficult to walk around downtown St. Paul in the early 2000s without running into Snoopy, Linus, Lucy and Charlie Brown.
Over five summers, the “Peanuts on Parade” public art campaign peppered the beloved comic strip characters throughout creator Charles Schulz’s hometown. Hundreds of 5-foot-tall statues, each painted and decorated by a local artist, drew more than 2 million visitors to St. Paul, according to the city’s visitors bureau.
After spotting part of the “Peanuts” gang on University Avenue recently, a Star Tribune reader wanted to know what happened to these statues that were once ubiquitous in Minnesota’s capital city. They sought answers from Curious Minnesota, the paper’s reader-fueled reporting series.
The question has additional relevance today as Snoopy is having a moment among Gen Z, which has embraced the cartoon beagle as a nostalgic icon.
The short answer? At the end of each summer, many statues were sold in auctions at the Mall of America and whisked away to private collections. The proceeds were used to fund art scholarships and the bronze “Peanuts” sculptures in downtown St. Paul’s Landmark Plaza.
They’re not all gone, though. People with fond memories of scavenger hunts for statues can still find dozens in their original locations at the businesses that sponsored them. And even more can be found on public display across the metro area and the state, if you know where to look.
Former U.S. Sen. Norm Coleman, who was St. Paul’s mayor when the project took off, said public response to the statues “surpassed our wildest dreams.”