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Statue of Vancouver's Gastown founder torn down during women's memorial march

VANCOUVER — Police say they are investigating after a statue commemorating the founder of a Vancouver neighbourhood was pulled down during the annual Women's Memorial March on Monday.
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A person stands on top of the Gassy Jack statue after it was toppled and covered in red paint during the annual Women's Memorial March, in Vancouver, on Monday, February 14, 2022. The statue is a monument to "Gassy" Jack Deighton, a Vancouver saloon owner in the 1860s, whom Vancouver's Gastown neighbourhood is named after. The march is held to honour missing and murdered women and girls from the community with stops along the way to commemorate where women were last seen or found. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

VANCOUVER — Police say they are investigating after a statue commemorating the founder of a Vancouver neighbourhood was pulled down during the annual Women's Memorial March on Monday. 

Police say several hundred people gathered around the statue of John Deighton, better known as “Gassy Jack,” as the march wound past the landmark.

They say in a statement that demonstrators tied ropes around the statue, pulled it down and then covered it in red paint.

Deighton, who came to Vancouver from England in the mid-1800s is known for establishing Gastown, and his statue was given as a gift to the city on Valentine's Day in the early 1970s. 

The city said in a statement in June 2020 that it was reaching out to the area's First Nations about the future of the statue following a previous petition that called for it to be removed.

The memorial march, which has been held since 1992, honours missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls. 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 14, 2022.

The Canadian Press