To see images of the various snow sculptures, come to Rauner and ask for the "Snow" photo file.
1924: First carnival sculpture to be built on the Green
1930: Tower of ice / When completed it stood taller than its framing
1931: Temple of Love / designed by Abner Dean, ’31
1932: Dartmouth College’s founder and first president, Eleazar Wheelock
1938: Mr. Satyr / Half man, half devil
1939: Eleazar Wheelock, again, looking less presidential than in 1932. / Designed by Dick Brooks, ’40, the sculpture was estimated to weigh 40 tons.
1940: Starshooter / Designed by Nat Sample ’40, and standing 32 feet
1941: Heyerdahl / Designed by Charles Weisker ’41, and, at 40 feet, the tallest sculpture constructed to that time
1947: Schuss-teufel, the speed devil / Designed by ski coach Walter Prager, with engineering assistance from Thayer School students for the cantilevered front
1949: Stiefelmannchen (Little man in a boot)
1950: Wunderbar!
1951: Alpendoodler / The construction of this sculpture, with its long alpenhorn, inspired an article in Popular Science.
1955: Nanook of the North / Designed by Lou Miano, ’55. His original drawing had Nanook on an igloo, until someone suggested “put him on a whale.” To see the original drawings at Rauner, ask for MS-1140 (Lou Miano papers), Box 4. For a clay model, ask MS-1140 (Lou Miano papers), Box 7.
1956: Ullr
1958: Space Age
1960: Swiss Holiday
1961: Prohibition Blues
1969: In the Land of Fire and Ice / The dragon had a gas line installed so it could actually breathe fire.
1977: Spirit of Wintergreen
1972: Winterland of Oz
1976: A Star-Spangled Carnival
1980: The 1980 Dartmouth Games: Winter Takes All / A snow gun was brought in from Killington to make snow on the green for the sculpture.
1981: Hanover Hears a Who
1986: Where the Wild Things Are
1987: Blizzard on Bourbon Street / The height of Dartmouth’s snowman broke the Guinness World Record, and an enterprising person sold pieces of it on Main Street during Carnival.