Northern California Statue of Meat-Packing Magnate Beheaded

Northern California Statue of Meat-Packing Magnate Beheaded
The historic statue of Charles Swanston, its head recently decapitated, stands in William Land Park in Sacramento, Calif., on Dec. 27, 2022. Hector Amezcua/The Sacramento Bee via AP
The Associated Press
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SACRAMENTO, Calif.—The statue of a 19th-century Northern California rancher and meat-packing magnate was decapitated earlier this week, leaving investigators in the state’s capital city scratching their heads to find a motive behind the vandalism.

Tipsters could receive a $1,000 reward for information about what befell the nearly century-old granite statue of Charles Swanston in Sacramento’s William Land Park on Monday. The severed head was found on the ground nearby.

The head of the Charles Swanston statue rests on the ground near a bush in William Land Park in Sacramento, Calif., on Dec. 27, 2022. (Hector Amezcua/The Sacramento Bee via AP)
The head of the Charles Swanston statue rests on the ground near a bush in William Land Park in Sacramento, Calif., on Dec. 27, 2022. Hector Amezcua/The Sacramento Bee via AP

Swanston traveled west from Ohio as part of the California Gold Rush and quickly realized he'd make more money as a butcher, according to Sacramento City Historian Marcia Eymann.

Police are investigating whether the vandal—or vandals—had a beef with the Swanstons or if it was a random act.

“I have no idea why anyone, unless they’re vegetarians and didn’t like meat-packers” would do this to the statue, Eymann said Wednesday. “I find this very bizarre.”

The statue is the work of the late sculptor Ralph Stackpole, a famous San Francisco artist during the Great Depression era.

An early Sacramento pioneer and settler, Swanston then became a rancher and started a meat-packing business that made him rich. His son in the 1920s commissioned the statue, which is part of a fountain, and donated it to the city after Swanston’s death in 1911 at 101 years old, The Sacramento Bee reported.

The family’s ranch was located on what’s now William Land Park. Eymann said if not for his son’s donation, the city would likely have never put up a piece for Swanston.

“Not that anybody knows who he is, but that’s something very special that Sacramento had and now it’s destroyed,” she said.