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  • The water tower in Eshbach was taken down on Friday,...

    Martha Gehringer — For Digital First Media

    The water tower in Eshbach was taken down on Friday, June 23, after standing watch for almost 70 years.

  • The inside of the 75,000 gallon tank on the Eshbach...

    Martha Gehringer — For Digital First Media

    The inside of the 75,000 gallon tank on the Eshbach water tower. The welders make most of the cuts prior to the arrival of the crane. The day the crane arrived they finished the cuts to allow the crane to safely lower the pieces to the ground.

  • Piece-by-piece, the Eschbach water was dismantled on Friday.

    Martha Gehringer — For Digital First Media

    Piece-by-piece, the Eschbach water was dismantled on Friday.

  • The 106-foot tower as marked the center for Eshbach for...

    Martha Gehringer — For Digital First Media

    The 106-foot tower as marked the center for Eshbach for decades. It was taken down on June 23.

  • Matthew Hutcheson, one of the welders on the project took...

    Martha Gehringer — For Digital First Media

    Matthew Hutcheson, one of the welders on the project took down the Eshbach water tower, explains how they disassembled the tower.

  • The water tower in Eshbach was taken down after standing...

    Martha Gehringer — For Digital First Media

    The water tower in Eshbach was taken down after standing watch for almost 70 years.

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It is visible from Route 100 and has faithfully marked the center of Eshbach since the late 1940s. But the water tower in the small town reached the end of its life on Friday, June 23, when the 106-foot tower was taken down.

Michael Croyle, owner of the property where the tower was located, said the tower reached the end of its life. “It was empty, old and out of use,” he said. C & D Batteries, the original owner of the property, constructed the 75,000-gallon tower for fire protection, probably in the late 1940s, he said.

Croyle, who now makes hydraulic control systems at the site, said the tower will be sold to a recycling dealer.

Allstate Towers from Henderson, Ky., have been given the job of taking down the tower.

Gary Harmon of Allstate Towers said it was a routine job. Allstate takes down structures like the Eshbach water tower across the country. The routine is to either collapse it and lay it on the ground when space permits or precut and then the pieces down with a crane. Because of the tight quarters, they opted to use the crane for safety purposes. The entire process from pre-cutting to taking down and cleanup normally takes about a week.

Harmon noted the Eshbach water tower stood 86 feet to the catwalk and 1006 feet to the top of the tank.

The day the tank came down, piece by piece, was rainy and cloudy. The crew worked expertly to finish cutting the tank into manageable pieces and in less than six hours.

See additional photos here.