The fate of many stolen plaques and sculptures is the scrap yard where they are sold for their metal value. This case comes from 1961 when 1376 bronze plaques were stolen from the Fawkner Cemetery; the value of the plaques was £4,306. To put that in perspective, you could actually buy a house in Fawkner at the time for around the same amount of money.
The Age newspaper of July 3, 1961 reported on the theft. The plaques had been jemmied from the wall niches which held cremated remains, but interestingly they left the plaques belonging to ex-servicemen. The plaques were either ten inches square of five and a half inches square. The article also notes that two weeks previously, 400 brass flower urns, worth £600 were taken from the Melbourne General Cemetery. The Police were of the opinion that the plaques would be melted down.
Plaque stolen from Fawkner Cemetery.
The Age, July 3, 1961, p. 14.
The Police were correct in their assumption as the plaques were indeed sold to a scrap merchant, but thankfully recovered before they were melted down. The £4,306 worth of plaques were sold to a Brunswick dealer for £207 and the £600 worth of brass urns were sold to a Preston dealer for £53. The Police were following a lead that the gang responsible for similar thefts at Ballarat and Geelong may have been involved in these thefts.
Plaques recovered
The Age, July 15 1961, p. 3
What we can learn from this is that the theft of community assets is nothing new; that thieves are prepared to sell their loot cheaply and that some scrap merchants, then and now, are prepared to turn a blind eye to the source of some of the material they accept. And therein lies the cause of many of the recent thefts of statues, such as those from
Parkdale,
Frankston,
Hoppers Crossing and
Rowville - treasured community art works, stolen for their metal value.
More recently, 80 plaques were stolen from the Altona Memorial Park, read about this
here.
Sources
- The Age, July 3, 1961, p. 14 from newspapers.com
- The Age, July 15 1961, p. 3 from newspapers.com
- Sale advertisements for houses in The Age in 1961
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