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Budweiser Tower, Washington Street, Manitowoc, Wisconsin, November 8, 2009
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann |
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Found: Busch Agricultural Resources, Inc. Manitowoc Malt Plant, circa 1970 |
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Making the RPPC of the "Bud Tower" November 8, 2009
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann
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If the Busch Malt Plant wasn't there, the view at the end of the main street into downtown Manitowoc would be Lake Michigan. A surreal oddity, the tower exuded the warm aroma of roasting barley and the roar of its machinery lent an industrial ambiance to downtown. A work of "hand painted pop", the giant bottle and two cans of Budweiser ("3 Buds short of a 6-pack" wrote Jeff Felshman in the
Chicago Reader in 1992) depicted were so much a part of the landscape that the natives didn't see it. An oddity of the town, it appeared on postcards sold at drugstores and shops until recently when corporate shufflings and alcohol awareness made it perhaps too complex an image to stock at the Walgreens. Despite being covered with an updated vinyl photographic mural about a decade ago, it remains a Manitowoc icon obliterated in 2012 due to a City Ordinance according to an article in the
Manitowoc Herald Times Reporter published November 7, 2012. We made a photograph
"Trish & Matt Downtown, Manitowoc, Wisconsin, 1995" to record life in its shadow.
Thanks for recording this for posterity.
ReplyDeleteFight! http://www.change.org/petitions/city-of-manitowoc-preserve-the-iconic-budweiser-mural-as-significant-manitowoc-history?utm_campaign=autopublish&utm_medium=facebook&utm_source=share_petition&utm_term=33653148
ReplyDeletei think this is one of the coolest things the two of you have done. while people ended up being focused on saving the original mural, you were documenting the one they took down to almost no complaint. the three bottles. is the old ad art just because it is old? does that make it any more valid than the 3 bottles design that took its place for the entire lives of thousands of manitowoc citizens, that was discarded almost without thought?
ReplyDeleteThe hand-painted sign has come to be a sign of a craft and skill now virtually lost. The digital banner may be the same as technology continues to evolve. It is what it is.
ReplyDelete