The iconic Anheuser-Busch sign was lifted off and taken down from the top of the brewery in Newark on Thursday.
The sign contains a large letter A with an eagle. It was slowly freed from the post it had been sitting on for the last 25 years. In 2001, the current sign replaced a nearly identical sign posted on the building when build in 1951.
All of the heavy lifting was done by a large crane alongside the Anheuser-Busch building, which sits on Route One and Nine in Newark.
It took only a few minutes for the 35,000-pound sign, which is 10 feet thick, to be lowered to the ground.
Former employee Mike Bissel was watching the process take place.
For 32 years, Bissel worked in the quality assurance lab at the brewery, testing beer and watching over the fermentation process and packaging.
“It’s a sad day…really sad. Grandfathers, fathers and sons worked with myself in the brewery. It was a legacy that just disappeared now,” said Bissel.
The sign being taken down from the building in Newark signals the end. After 75 years, the “King of Beers” is no longer brewing in New Jersey. The property has been sold. And some 475 employees are being offered jobs at other Anheuser-Busch sites across the U.S.
This was the second-largest Anheuser-Busch brewery, second only to the main brewery in St. Louis.
Retired employee Mark Miller worked in quality assurance for 39 years.
“A lot of people dedicated their lives to making a good glass of beer,” said Miller.
That sign on the building was a source of pride and one that was known to millions who drove by or flew into New Jersey and could spot it glowing in the night sky.
As the sign was pulled from the building, Miller said he thought of his coworkers.
While he wanted the sign to stay in Newark, it’s headed for the Anheuser-Busch headquarters in St. Louis.