Cayadutta Tanning Company: Inside Gloversville's Dead Tannery

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The Pink Flamingo on Harrison Street Whether it is a dead mill or tannery, a car will always be sitting in a discrete corner.  Gloversville, New York, earned its name for a reason. For decades, it was the undisputed glove capital of the world. But today, the massive tanneries, dressers, stitching factories, and dyers that built this city are quietly disappearing. One of the most fascinating casualties was the former Cayadutta Tanning Company Inc. Locals called it the Pink Flamingo. Before that, it was E.S. Parkhurst & Company, a place workers simply knew as the Hair Mill. Sitting at the southwest corner of Harrison Street and NY-30A, the property spanned two parcels. A private owner held one piece of the land, while the city owned the other. Visiting the abandoned site felt like stepping into a forgotten tannery that just needed a bit of TLC and elbow grease to restart operations sans a pocketed overhead roof. Just outside the main tanning building, a junked Mercedes sa...

Club Charisma










I spotted the club by accident. I was driving back from another location in Hartford’s North End when the building caught my eye. It had that look some places get when their story is almost over. The windows were boarded. The lot was empty save for a few piles of illicit trash dumping. The sign still clung to the facade as if nothing had changed.


I pulled over.


From the outside, it did not look impossible to enter. I walked the perimeter, hoping for an unlocked door or a broken panel someone had already discovered. No luck. Every entrance was sealed tight, save for an open window in full view of a busy road. I stood there for a moment, camera in hand, feeling that familiar mix of curiosity and frustration. All I left with were a few exterior shots and a quiet promise to myself.


I will come back. I never did.


Somewhere between 2021 and 2024, the building was demolished. Just like that, it was gone. No farewell. No ceremony. Just another vacant patch of land in a neighborhood that has seen too many of them.


By the time it came down, the club had already been closed for years. News reports suggest it shut its doors sometime in the 2010s after a steady stream of violence tied to the property. The Hartford Courant documented shooting after shooting, stretching back to at least 2008. The parking lot seemed to draw trouble. So did the back door.












In March 2010, a man was shot in the neck in the club’s parking lot. He was rushed to the hospital in critical condition.


A year earlier, in February 2009, another man was shot four times. The wounds were not life-threatening, but the scene was chilling. Police found two .38 caliber shell casings near the back door. There were six bullet holes in the glass. Four projectiles were recovered from inside the club. On the sidewalk outside, officers located four .40 caliber shell casings.


In April 2008, three people were found with gunshot wounds to their legs.


It is hard to imagine any business surviving that pattern. Each incident pulled officers away from other calls. Each ambulance ride meant another hospital bed filled. Over time, the club became less a place for music or gathering and more a headline waiting to happen.


When people ask why certain buildings close, the answer is not always complicated. Safety matters. For customers. For neighbors. For the city.


Still, demolition leaves its own questions behind.








What replaces a place like that? In a thriving district, the answer might be obvious. Condos. Retail. Something polished and new. But the North End does not always move at that pace. The area has struggled in recent years, facing economic headwinds and a rise in crime that has proven stubborn.


Now the lot sits open to the sky. Or perhaps a developer will take a chance and build something that serves the community better than what stood there before.


I think back to that afternoon when I walked around the perimeter, hoping for a way in. I thought I had time. I thought the building would wait for me.


It did not.


If you have a connection to Club Charisma—whether you spent late nights here, or have preserved a fragment of their history in your family's life, a photo, a video, a product, an employee badge, a flyer, or an old advertisement—I would be honored to share your piece of the story here. These tangible memories and personal accounts are what truly animate the silent shells we see today; they give voice to the past in a way that maps, news articles, and corporate filings never can. Every image or recollection you share helps to fill the gaps, honoring the skill and community that once filled these now-quiet spaces. Please feel welcome to contribute, and know that you will be fully credited for helping to preserve this important chapter of our local heritage.



šŸŽµ More Abandoned Connecticut Sites

šŸ’ƒ Did You Party at Club Charisma?

Before the violence, before the closure, before the demolition—this was a nightlife destination. Do you have photos from inside? Flyers from events? Stories from the dance floor? Share them below.

Drop a comment below or contact me directly. Full credit given to all contributors.



Source(s):




1. (n.a). Man hurt in shooting at Walnut Street club. (2009, February 26). Hartford Courant. https://www.courant.com/2009/02/26/man-hurt-in-shooting-at-walnut-street-club/

2. Beals, S. R. (2010, March 1). 2 shootings in Hartford leave one dead; one injured. Hartford Courant. https://www.courant.com/2010/03/01/2-shootings-in-hartford-leave-one-dead-one-injured-2/

3. In our towns. (2008, April 5). Hartford Courant. https://www.courant.com/2008/04/05/in-our-towns-549/

4. Goode, S. (2008, April 8). Insult set off shootings, police say. Hartford Courant. https://www.courant.com/2008/04/08/insult-set-off-shootings-police-say/


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