The giant Pabst Blue Ribbon sign that once towered over downtown Chicago

The giant Pabst Blue Ribbon sign that once towered over downtown Chicago

This week's "History Mystery" features a long-lost photo of a neon beer sign that once welcomed people to downtown Chicago.

  • The Pabst Blue Ribbon billboard lit up the night sky at Randolph Street and Michigan Avenue decades before Millennium Park existed.
  • Photo: Heritage Art/Heritage Images via Getty Images

    The intrigue: The nighttime photo doesn't offer many clues, but a daytime shot gives us everything we need.

  • When this photo was taken in 1943, the Carbide & Carbon Building was one of the few prominent towers along that stretch of Michigan Avenue.
  • You can see the Wrigley Building and the Tribune Tower in the distance.
  • The railroad depot sat below Randolph Street, but it was filled in for the park, which now sits at the same level as the street.
  • GIF: Getty Images & Justin Kaufmann/Axios

    State of play: The sign sat above the Illinois Central Railroad's South Water Street freight terminal, which stretched to the corner of Randolph Street and Michigan Avenue.

  • It was mostly freight trains, bringing goods to the famed South Water Street Market and other downtown locations.
  • The sign was removed in the early 1950s for construction of the iconic Prudential Building.
  • Freight trains stopped operating there in the 1970s.
  • Today, Millennium Park covers what was one of the country's largest downtown rail yards, but Metra Electric and South Shore trains still run beneath the park.

    More History Mystery photos solved:

  • Palmer House, 1924
  • South Water Street, 1904
  • Board of Trade, 1929
  • Madison Street, 1918
  • West Loop, 2012
  • Rush Street, 1954
  • 47th Street, 1973
  • Roosevelt Road, 1910
  • Bughouse Square, 1915
  • Little Poland, 1905
  • Randolph Street, 1962
  • Union Station, 1925
  • Madison Street, 1900s
  • Tribune Tower, 1925