Statue Of Meat-Packing Magnate Beheaded In Sacramento

Investigators found the severed head of the Charles Swanston statue a few feet away, but have no motive.
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The statute of Charles Swanston, a 19th-century Northern California meat-packing magnate was beheaded earlier this week in Sacramento (Hector Amezcua/The Sacramento Bee via AP)
via Associated Press

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — 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.

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.

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Before You Go

The World's Ugliest Statues
'Peace And Brotherhood' -- Turkey (01 of11)
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Turkey began demolishing the 100-feet "Peace And Brotherhood" monument near its eastern border after the prime minister slammed it a "monstrosity." The entire demolition process of the statue -- dedicated to friendship with neighboring Armenia -- is expected to take about 10 days, although sculptor Mehmet Aksoy is said to have vowed to re-build it elsewhere, the AFP is reporting. (Photo: Getty) (credit:Getty )
Kim Il-Sung -- North Korea (02 of11)
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A bronze statue of former North Korean president Kim Il-Sung is the centerpiece of the Mansudae Grand Monument in Pyongyang. (Photo: Getty) (credit:Getty )
Victory Arch -- Iraq(03 of11)
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Also referred to as the "Swords of Qādisīyah," the "Arc of Triumph," and the "Hands of Victory" in some Western sources, this pair of triumphal arches were constructed in Baghdad 1989 to commemorate then-President Saddam Hussein's declaration of victory over Iran in the Iran-Iraq war, and was deemed by the New York Times as one of the "most audacious symbols...of Hussein's long, violent and oppressive rule."
Peter the Great -- Russia (04 of11)
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Moscow's (in)famous Peter the Great statue was designed to commemorate 300 years of the Russian navy. The eighth tallest statue in the world, it was voted the tenth ugliest building in the world in 2008, and included in Foreign Policy's list of the world's ugliest statues two years later -- perhaps one of the reasons St. Petersburg is said to have refused Moscow's offer to relocate the statue there. (Photo: Getty) (credit:Getty )
'Tear Of Grief' Sculpture -- Bayonne, NJ (05 of11)
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The "Tear Of Grief" or "Teardrop" monument, dedicated to the victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks and "the struggle against world terrorism," was unveiled in Bayonne, NJ in 2006 as a gift from Russia. Though the monument was intended for a Jersey City location, city officials rejected it once they actually saw it; one 9/11 survivor even likened it to "a cross between a scar and a female sexual organ," according to Foreign Policy. (Photo: Getty) (credit:Getty )
Michael Jackson -- England (06 of11)
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It's doubtful the King of Pop would've been honored by this heinous tribute, commissioned by Mohamed Al Fayed (pictured) for the Craven College Stadium in England. Still, Al Fayed has reportedly told critics they can "go to hell" if they don't like the statue, according to the BBC. (Photo: Getty) (credit:Getty )
Rocky Balboa -- Serbia (07 of11)
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A statue of Sylvester Stallone as Rocky Balboa was erected in Zitiste, 60 kilometers (36 miles) north of Belgrade, in 2007 as a reported effort to give the village "a more positive image." (Photo: Getty) (credit:Getty )
'Patient Zero' -- Mexico(08 of11)
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Five-year-old Edgar Hernandez, better known as Mexico's "Patient Zero" after becoming the first known person to contract the H1N1 virus (or "swine flu"), was recognized in his poor village of La Gloria with a small statue based on Brussel's "Manneken Pis." (Photo: Getty) (credit:Getty )
Yury Gagarin -- Russia (09 of11)
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This statue of Soviet cosmonaut Yury Gagarin is currently displayed at the All-Russian Exhibition Center (VVTs) in Moscow. But the statue -- a replica of the Gagarin monument in in Lyubertsy, a city in Moscow's southern outskirts -- is due to move to London July 14 as part of celebrations for the 50th anniversary of the first manned flight into space, according to the Daily Mail. (Photo: Getty) (credit:Getty )
Johnny Depp -- Serbia (10 of11)
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A life-size statue of the Oscar-nominated actor is featured in the western Serbian mountain settlement Drvengrad, Mokra Gora and was unveiled to coincide with the opening of the a local film and music festival. (Photo: Getty) (credit:Getty )
Frank Zappa -- Lithuania(11 of11)
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In 1995, a bust of the legendary musician was unveiled in a public square in Vilnius. The nation later donated a replica of the monument to his hometown of Baltimore. (Photo: Getty) (credit:Getty )