After nearly a year of debate, the Northern California city of Placerville's City Council voted to remove the noose from its logo.
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[View in browser]( Good morning, and welcome to the Essential California [newsletter](. Itâs Thursday, April 15, and Iâm writing from Los Angeles. In the heart of Californiaâs Gold Country, debate has seethed in Placerville for nearly a year over the presence of a macabre symbol in the background of the cityâs official logo. Above the words âOld Hangtownâ (a reference to Placervilleâs Gold Rush-era moniker) and behind an illustration of a miner panning for gold, a noose hangs ominously from a tree. As my colleague [Lila Seidman writes]( the symbol âhas been equally described as an indelible part of the areaâs history and a shameful reminder of itâ in the Sierra foothills town. On Tuesday, after hours of heated public comment, Placervilleâs City Council voted unanimously to remove the noose from the cityâs logo. Hereâs a look at how they got there. [Read the story: [âGold Rush past, post-George Floyd present: Placerville drops noose on city logo after months of debateâ]( in the Los Angeles Times] Anyone with even a passing knowledge of California history is familiar with the events of Jan. 24, 1848, when a man named James W. Marshall discovered gold while building John Sutterâs sawmill. The story takes place a few miles away in a town that sprang into being in the months after Marshallâs discovery, as newcomers poured into the not-yet state in search of the Motherlode. The fledgling city that would become Placerville earned the enduring nickname âHangtownâ in 1849, after three men accused of robbery and attempted murder were sentenced to death by hanging. All three men â a Chilean national and two French nationals â spoke no English and were not present at the trial where a group of miners sentenced them to death. Itâs also worth noting that no evidence against the trio was presented, âbeyond their fitting a general description,â according to a history presentation [prepared at the request of Placerville officials](. Far from an isolated event, the extralegal killing was how justice was often meted out in mining camps. More than a century and a half later, the violent iconography of Placervilleâs history as âOld Hangtownâ has morphed into a kind of kitschy civic branding. The words âOld Hangtownâ greet visitors from a large sign looming above Highway 50 and echo on murals throughout town, as my colleague Erika D. Smith observed [on a visit to Placerville last year](. Now reduced to a stump, the white oak tree that once served as a gallows sits in the cellar of a bar on Main Street. A dummy named George hangs from a noose above the second story of the bar. Calls to remove the cityâs nickname â and the imagery associated with it â began circulating last summer shortly after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis sparked widespread racial justice protests. âLetâs not pretend to be tone-deaf,â the originator of a [petition to remove âOld Hangtownâ]( from the cityâs welcome sign wrote last year. âThe name âHangtownâ is threatening, outdated and offensive, and suggests that racial hate crimes are acceptable.â [As Seidman reports]( those urging the city to âlose the nooseâ said they werenât trying to erase local history but rather glorify more worthy aspects â namely ones that donât evoke violence, death and mob justice. âHanding my card to somebody with this noose on it thatâs from a city with a high African American or Latino population, what signal does that send?â Placerville City Councilmember Michael Saragosa asked [during Tuesdayâs meeting]( shortly before the unanimous vote to remove the noose from the cityâs logo. âYes, I could maybe try and have a history lesson with everybody, every time. But thatâs not really something thatâs going to happen.â Saragosa said the issue had âcome up in Placerville for at least the last 40 years, in different iterationsâ and suggested that âif there was Twitter in 1980" the city might have seen different outcomes at an earlier time. And now, hereâs whatâs happening across California and the nation: Former Minnesota cop charged in shooting of Daunte Wright: Prosecutors announced a charge of second-degree manslaughter against Kim Potter, who a day earlier resigned from the Brooklyn Center Police Department. [Los Angeles Times]( Note: Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing. ADVERTISEMENT BY ONE NIGHT IN MIAMI⦠from Amazon Studios
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HEALTH AND THE ENVIRONMENT Deaths among Latino immigrants soared by 90% as COVID-19 tore through this Central Valley county. The data include all Latino immigrants who died in Kings County, whether or not they were county residents. [Fresno Bee]( CALIFORNIA CULTURE Were you against getting the COVID-19 vaccine before changing your mind? Or know anyone like this? My colleague Maya Lau would like to speak with you for a story. [Contact Lau](mailto:maya.lau@latimes.com) Mayor London Breed challenges San Franciscans to patronize only the cityâs pandemic-battered small businesses for 30 days. âThe challenge is geared toward making city residents think twice when spending their money, and to spotlight our beloved, character-filled local shops and restaurants.â [San Francisco Chronicle]( Thereâs a fight over the direction of Black Lives Matter. As my colleague Erika D. Smith writes in a new column, the timing couldnât be worse. [Los Angeles Times]( âThe Sonoma County wine industry has never before dealt with a public scandal quite like this one.â How Wine Countryâs insular nature played a role in Windsor Mayor Dominic Foppoliâs alleged misconduct. [San Francisco Chronicle]( A poem to start your Thursday: âColorâ by Tina Chang. [Poets.org]( Free online games Get our free daily crossword puzzle, sudoku, word search and arcade games in our new game center at [latimes.com/games](. CALIFORNIA ALMANAC Los Angeles: nothing special, 66. San Diego: intervals of sun and clouds, 64. San Francisco: sunny, 57. San Jose: sunny, 68. Fresno: sunny, 77. Sacramento: sunny, 75. AND FINALLY Todayâs California memory comes from Sue Firestone: I grew up in the paradise we call Malibu in the 1960s and early â70s. No one can debate the incredible beaches and natural beauty! But the combination of âswingingâ parents (absent from any real supervision) and an abundance of drugs, alcohol and firearms available to us teens led to three suicides, murders and several overdoses in 1969. And this was only on Point Dume. My hope is for people to understand why that combination of teens being left alone will self-destruct in a beautiful place unless looked after and loved! If you have a memory or story about the Golden State,[share it with us](. (Please keep your story to 100 words.) Please let us know what we can do to make this newsletter more useful to you. Send comments, complaints, ideas and unrelated book recommendations to [Julia Wick](mailto:julia.wick@latimes.com). Follow her on Twitter [@Sherlyholmes](. ADVERTISEMENT
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