I remember we were threatened that if we talked about them going bankrupt we would be fired, I left before they went belly up, downtown Brooklyn store.
Myself, the Manchester Caldor was crazy. We got new shopping carts a year before we closed the store. I asked my manager why are we buying shopping carts and we are in bankruptcy. A week later, my new job (at CompUSA) opened. Another mismanaged store. I lasted a month before, I was hired by OfficeMax.
Its sad how almost all of these bankrupt companies started as owned by a family who just wanted what was best for their customers and employees. But the more they tried to remain as such the harder it got because truth is most don't care for quality, they only care for quantity, and it was almost impossible for most of those retailers to compete with Kmart and Walmart prices, while still remaining true to their core values.
@@kinocorner976no he wanted to kill small business. He said it. He said if he sold something at a lower price. People would come to him and drive the other business out
My Grandfather worked at the Caldor in Woonsocket, Rhode Island in his later years. He just wanted to stay busy. I used to love going to visit him at work as a child. Great memories.
Its mainly the middle class going down, people go where the can buy cheap junks. I knew it would happen when the junkies degenerate MBAs promoted the stupid idea of moving to a service economy ! These illeterate scumbags didnt understand we first need food, shelter, energy and we better produce these ourselves, therefore earn the money to afgord the rest.
As you mentioned, a lot of these regional department stores benefitted from the fact that Walmart and Target had limited presence in the Northeast until the late 90’s, once they both began expanding aggressively in the market, Ames, Bradlees, Caldors, all fell very quickly
Yep, can agree. Here the Walmart settled in the mid to late 90's. A few years after K-mart had built a Supercenter. First Caldoor in the mall fell, then Ames a few years later, including the Ames that was right next door to Walmart. And then 23 years later, K-mart went.
My dad worked at Caldor for years in the 80's and early 90's, he says he'll sometimes get flashbacks when he walks in to Targets (he thinks it's the red shirts). We even still use Christmas ornaments from a floor model tree he bought there in like '89 or '90! Happy 10 years of Abandoned, looking forward to many more!
@@danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 yet, you encourage it by your engagement. If you truly had a dog in the fight, watching, rating and commenting would certainly not be the way to deal with such a matter. Until served, i think your propaganda and level of engagement do your 'cause' not much more than help your own indulgence in whatever suits you, at the moment and on a daily basis. You are one rotten PATATE sir - yes, it's also shouted as so, whenever it suits ME. Grow up or show us the beans
Man, that sign at 12:40 really hits home. Circuit City, Funco Land, Kid r us, Sports Authority were some of the store I visited when I was a kid and teen. Its a shame people won't be able to experience some of these stores.
My brother still has a box from Funco Land, it used to be my box and had my Yugioh cards in it. XD I hated when Gamestop took over the space. We went to the one in Waterford.
I got to pick my first stuffed bear out at Caldor with my father at like 6 months old and still have it. He said he just asked me if I liked them and I grabbed onto one for dear life and wouldn’t let him go.
Caldor was my first official job. I got hired on my 18th birthday. I made lifelong friends there. I left just before they decided to close. Target was coming to the Long Island area and many of the old Caldor locations were bought by Kohl's. The company had a bad reputation in general. The weekly flyer they released never had many of the sale items in stock. I enjoyed working there mostly for the people. I was also a kid but I have fond memories of the place.
Time goes by so fast. Far too fast. It feels like yesterday I was stepping into a Caldor for mom and then a Sears for dad. I miss the look, the smell, and the fun of those times every day.
Same. I think of stores that arent around anymore and just the experiences of having to go in them for things or just to pass through and it's a real weird feeling to not have that very much anymore.
Congrats on 10 years! This one hit close, my mom was a frequent Caldor shopper so I have lots of memories of going there as a kid. It wasn’t a fancy store at all - the atmosphere was very reminiscent of a K-mart - but I do have a nostalgic fondness for it. (The one nearest to us had a not-quite-escalator inclined moving ramp between the upper and lower floors, which you never see in retail stores around here anymore. 😅) I still see Caldor labels and price stickers on things when rummaging through record shops and thrift stores so they certainly had a lasting impact in the northeast.
@@nb2008nche had already retired about 15 years before Caldor went out of business. The new owners offered him a board seat, but he was ready to hand over the reins for good and completely retire. He and Dorothy built a hugely successful business and retired with a ton of money, and while it probably was sad for them to see Caldor eventually close, they hadn't been involved with the business in over a decade by that point. they should still have felt very satisfied with what they accomplished in their career.
I will never forget when Caldor's closed and on the last day they were open there was a giant pile of CD's on the ground in the music section because everyone had just rifled through them for the $1 sale and threw them everywhere. I remember pushing CD's aside with my legs like walking through snow and digging through them at my ankles, it was surreal.
Seems like a common theme to me, a person creates a good company, keeps debts low, expands relatively slowly, then sells to an investment firm, who takes on huge debt sums, expands quickly, sells on before collapse, and then collapses under the new ownership 🤔
If anyone is ever in the Baltimore area, the Forman Mills on route 40 maintains much of Caldor design like the entrance. Caldor, Ames, K-Mart were all tenants in that order for anyone interested. Great video as always.
I remember Caldor! My most "fondest" memory was getting stickers for a tracker to help me get over an eating disorder I had when I was a kid. It was when the store was closing. A Walmart ended up taking over it shortly after. Always left a bad taste in my mouth.
That Waterbury Caldor building is still there. It sat abandoned for *years* but it was a discount electrics place for a while and then it got converted to a gym about a decade ago if memory serves. It's across the street from the Walmart that replaced the original mall.
That’s normally the case in Connecticut. Beautiful, artistic stores get replaced with dull, bland ones. If you look up interior pictures of the old Naugatuck Valley Mall in Waterbury, it looked beautiful compared to what we have today.
@@Pirategirl4nightwish honestly, that should be a video of this channel tackles. I feel like that mall won’t be around outside of 4 to 5 years and I’m probably being generous.
The Bobs in the Norwichtown mall was gorgeous and had a badass play scape for kids. It was a small mall, my mother bought a computer desk there in 2000 for her new windows millennia HP. But that play scape was insane, we would beg our mom to go just to play there. Of course, she never would and we only went 3 times. On the 3rd time, the playscape was gone. There are some pictures of the entryway, which looked gorgeous online and they're pretty easy to find. I would later go on to build the interior of and work in the Big Lots that took the empty Bobs space after the mall was stretched and made into a strip mall format. Worked there for 4 years while I was in and just after college. The side entrance doors are in roughly the same position. I can stand where that play scape was in Big Lots and it all comes back to me. Hell we even used the old Bobs backroom and mattress racks which were still in there.
Agree! Waterbury native here! I have been looking for interior pictures of the NVM for ages. There is one video online where the building is half torn down, but that is all I have found. If you know where to find pictures, please let me know.
Im in Connecticut also new mall is gross and old chucky cheeses also a breeding place from germs to nasty feet socks ...and not to mention the vomit or dirty diapers that were in the ball pit also I've seen kids climb up those stairs into that I don't know you could see him through the plexiglass it's disgusting dirty diapers I went and scoped it out before it was even going to bring my child there and there was no way that I was letting him in there she could have gotten lice gross my opinion if others liked it that's great I just don't and didn't because it's junk and like I said in my opinion breeding ground for bacteria.
Back in the day, my family used to go to Caldor weekly. During the holidays it proved to be the one stop shopping for Christmas gifts. Near the end, things took a turn for the worse. No matter what was in their sale flyer, you would not find the item in house and would have to get rainchecks at the service desk. After a while, the staff would post flyers at the desk showing what was in stock and had rainchecks already made out for the other items. During that time, the store made some serious mistakes, on one holiday shopping trip, I found the Atari video game system on sale for an insanely low price. I snapped up 6 of them for less that $100 and gave them out as gifts. I later learned that the store had transposed the numbers on the sale sign and took the remaining stock off the shelves, but it seemed they realized the mistake too late, since most of the stock was already gone. This happened not long before they shut their doors for good, so the original owners had already left.
I remember circling what I wanted for Christmas from the Caldor catalog! I think one of the reasons they did so well for so long is that they were based locally, and folks liked the friendly, local feel even though it was a store that had "everything". Being founder-led was a blessing, but also a curse as no one but a founder would have the same passion for making the stores successful. The makeover to red and grey seemed to be aimed at competing more with Walmart and Kmart, and didn't do the brand any favors. Additionally, by the mid 90's many of the stores were dirty, disorganized and had lost what made Caldor special in the first place. By that time enough people were traveling regularly to see how much nicer the Walmart and Target stores were in other parts of the country, and frankly expectations were higher. Today, in the former Norwalk Caldor we now have a small, now fairly run-down Walmart, and still no supercenters in Fairfield County. A real shame.
idk what you are talking about. Caldor was like target lol even towards they end. i dont remember their stores being modern clean and nice looking. what you described is how i remember kmart looking back then
I've been waiting for this one! I grew up 10 minutes away from a Caldor in upstate NY, so many memories of perusing the toy aisle while mom did her shopping. Great episode, congrats on your tenth anniversary!
When I was a kid in '70s Maine, Caldor was the Exotic Out-of-State Store we would hit when we visited my great-grandparents in Connecticut. Our local equivalents were Woolco (later replaced by Ames) and Zayre. All four are gone now. Sic transit gloria retail.
Ahhh, yes I remember Caldor. One winter the ceiling caved in on our local Caldor and blew the front brick face of the building across the parking lot. Good times :) Seriously, the nostalgia oozing from this video is quite thick. 10/10
Always great to see a new Abandoned episode! I've never heard of Caldor, thank you Jake for covering it, and helping people like me, who grew up in the part of the U.S that didn't have Caldors, learn about these places and the stories behind them! 😊
@@daniellewoolley8607 I've lived in Massachusetts my whole life and the first time I've heard of Caldor, Bradlee's, etc was on this channel. There's just nothing left of them... not even an abandoned building for curious kids to ask what it was. Almost all of the locations were quickly bought up and redeveloped by big box stores so all that's left are the memories.
Jake, a little known fact...Carl Bennett & George Seedman (from TSS - Times Square Stores) had entered in2 a gentlemens agreement way back in the day that Bennett would never open a Caldor in the TSS market. They both honored that agreement until TSS filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy & ADG had bought out Caldor. Another interesting fact the Caldor store in Flushing, NY had originally been an Alexander's b4 that went belly up. I've think even b4 Alexander's that location had been an S Klein Department Store. Now it's a mall that has mainly Asian businesses catering to the large Asian population in Flushing. But I used to love shopping at Caldor. Great prices & great quality also
Great trip down memory lane. I spent many days of my childhood with my mom at Caldor, as well as some other regional favorites like Zayre, Ames, Bradlees, and Stuarts.
Oddly enough about Stuart's. That was a fairly nice place that closed in Timonium, Md in the mid 70s only to be replaced by Caldor a few years later. Never "well loved", I think there was a Circuit City there later (perhaps just the ground floor).
We had a Caldors in our town that closed in the 1990s (The store got replaced by a Burlington Coat Factory). I worked at a different regional chain in the northeast (The Fair). It flamed out in a similar manner. I think they went out of business because all the retailers get their stuff from the same source but they could not keep up with the massive advantage that Walmart and Target have.
Caldors was my favorite store to go to as the toy department was always pretty large ( im in my 30s so I remember them during my childhood) and here in Westchester County NY we had a large number of them
I’m in Westchester too yeah we did have a lot of them!!! And like I wrote in my post everyone I know called it Caldors They did have a great toy department I spent a lot of time in that department as a kid!!!
6:44 I noticed the slogan, "where shopping is always a pleasure" on the ad which immediately made me think of Florida based Publix supermarkets which have used, "where shopping is a pleasure" as their slogan for decades.
I'm in the midwest so I've never heard of Caldor and I don't think Ames either but seeing the Venture store, that brought back memories just as much as Kmart!! Thanks for covering another great abandoned episode
I still have a notebook from when I was in third grade in 1994, where I wrote a journal entry that said, "today we went to Caldoor and then we had lunch at McDonalds." My mom made me write it down because she wanted to encourage me to practice writing more often. It was in the central NJ area, but I totally don't remember which town. I never thought so many stores that existed when I was a kid wouldn't be around anymore. There was actually a Simpsons Halloween episode from years ago, where the town was taken over by zombies and Bart did a chant to get rid of them, where he said the names of a bunch of stores that don't exist anymore. One was Caldoor. To bad the guy who made this video didn't include that clip.
Watching this series is so enjoyable, I love hearing about companies that went through so much, especially chains that you don’t even hear being discussed, as if they never existed.
@@Grimmes12 I spent a pretty decent chunk of time from about 1998-2019 just walking to and from Main St. Station. Watched downtown grow, evolve, get fancy, fall apart, get fancy again. It was a trip to see how often it would change. That Caldor was a constant until the New World Mall opened, and then the flux started all over again, especially when Skyview opened mid-teens. Its pretty much unrecognizable from 2007, which was unrecognizable from 1999. Only constant was the food and the church.
I grew up in southeastern Mass. Caldor, Bradlees, Ames (I worked there for 4 years before they closed) and Ann & Hope. These stores were such a staple in this area. I miss them. Watching this brings back such nostalgia.
Having lived in the south western US, I never even knew this place existed. It's so crazy to see places that were this big just vanish into obscurity. Congrats on the 10 year anniversary, Jake! Each year just gets better and better. Here's to many more! 🎉🎉🎉
Great video. I remember going to Caldor in Vails Gate, NY quite a bit when I was a kid. Unfortunately, it shut down in the late 90s and the building was demolished. Ironically, a K-Mart was built in its place in the early 2000s, but it's now closed as well.
The memories you brought back with this episode!!! And you should the 2 Caldors I went to! Grand Concourse in the Bronx and the Caldor in Flushing! Thank you!
Never heard of Caldor before but it seemed like a nice place to go to. It seems like these kind of retail chains always go under either before or a bit after the turn of the new millennium like Ame's and Bardlee's.
Nikitation if you hear what Jake said they were only on the East coast. That's why you haven't heard about Caldor. People from different states don't always have the same things that the e East coast
Congratulations on 10 years! 🎉 The first video I watched of yours was the Discovery Island one 8 years ago. Can’t believe it’s been that long! Love your channel, it’s still the only channel I’ve ever signed up to Patreon for! Good luck for another 10 years 🥂
Kindys Christmas Factory Outlet in South Philly uses Caldor shopping carts and checkout stations. Fans of this channel would enjoy exploring this store.
I grew up with Caldor and Bradlees ...I remember just before Caldor Closed .... the fleet of brand new shopping carts at my 2 local stores. My Bradlees is now Walmart and one Caldor is Walmart and the other became Khols'
Man, I grew up in New York and I remember going to Caldor all the time with my mom. There was one near us in Westchester. I had no idea that they originally started in Port Chester! I have relatives right near there.
Caldor is a chain that existed before my time but my grandma used to shop there a lot. Mostly for their Christmas decorations. She has these Christmas motionette of Santa and Mrs Claus that are still working today and we still put them up every year.
My ears perked up when you mentioned Venture. I remember that store from my childhood. The one up in Oklahoma City closed, then became a K-mart which closed and then became a Burlington Coat Factory. I believe it still is today, but I can't be sure, I don't get up to OKC all that much anymore.
While I never did visit a Caldor store this video did mention Venture which was a store that I spent a LOT of time at in the 80s and 90s! Our local Venture store is where I bought my first cassette tape with my own money, the first place I bought a CD and also where I bought my SNES a week after it was first released! The location started off as a Turn Style, and became a Venture in 1978. After Venture went under in 1998 it became a Big K-mart for about 15 years until that also closed. Now that location is Theisen's, which I always thought was odd since Theisen's is more of a farm supply store but this location is near the middle of the metro area, miles away from any farmland.
There's a Menards in what used to be a large Zayre near where I used to live. I remember shopping at Zayre when we were kids. Dang, I miss Menards and Meijer!
My mom actually worked there, and she took me there a couple of times when I was really young before it closed! Man, takes me back! Another great video! Congrats on 10 years!
I just want to say thank you for this video and the amount of research you do. My dad is a former employee for one of the NJ warehouses. He kept telling me stories about the store and how the owners announced they went bankrupt one day. I showed my dad this video and it brought back so many memories for him. The workplace environment and people he met. He also told me that Walmart/Kohl’s and target bought some of their locations. One of the reasons I don’t go to Walmart lol But thank you for this because now I can see what my dad was talking about when he told me those stories.
Congrats on the big 10! That store in Flushing, Queens was a big part of my childhood!!! I later remember, through most of my teen years, staring at the big red logo. After they took it down, it was really weird to see that a mall took is place. Crazy nostalgic to see those pictures after all these years.
You mentioned "Ventures". That was my hometown big box in the 80s and early 90s. I still smell the popcorn popping as you walk in the store. Be nice to touch on that store. My old store is currently a Home Depot.
Was happy to see Venture mentioned. I'll never forget as a kid the striped building it had and my mom taking me and my brother shopping there once and awhile.
Congratulations on the 10 year anniversary! I loved watching all of these! I started watching these in college, and I continue to watch them. I remember the first few videos. Keep it up!
Customer experience has gone out the window with stores like this. Would be nice if stores would become people-centric again rather than only sales-centric.
Caldors are one of my favorite past time stores of my childhood, along with Bradlees, Woolworths and Alexanders. I have LOTS of memories especially of Bradlees, and boy i have LOTS of stories about Bradlees to! I wish that they still here today but we must know that in this darn life nothing last forever. My guess is that as soon as the nafta trades started it was the beginning of the end of these stores i mentioned. Happy 10th Anniversary BTW! Always love all your work!
The stock offering was actually 120,000 shares at 5 dollars per share ($600,000), not 5 cents per share ($6,000). The $600,000 provided the money to expand their footprint in Fairfield County CT (where I grew up and where we shopped at the Norwalk store regularly).
Meanwhile the mall that opened in the former Flushing Caldor ALSO had massive turnover and suffers from some retail death. I remember when it opened as a supermarket/food court/dim sum restaurant, and then it started showing the same decline as the Flushing Mall a decade prior. Eh, I got so many CDs from Flushing Caldor before it closed...then stared at the abandoned front for years as the neighborhood transformed.
Used to go to Caldors and Bradleys all the time in the 90s with my parents. I have fond memories of those stores, I pass an abandoned one every once in a while.
Caldor was my childhood. There was one next door to my elementary school, so after school let out on Friday my parents would take me to the carousel in the foyer and I would ride it for as long as they allowed. I remember little of the store itself, I must admit. But it still left an impact on me.
I feel the same way as you, Caldor was such a nice store. There’s really nothing like it now, maybe Target is the closest thing to a Caldor now. I only been inside the Morris Plains Caldor one time back when it was closing down in 1999 for liquidation sales, but the store had so much character to it. Unlike the boring stupid Walmart stores we have now 😒
@@tweetingsparks It sure was, I really like their last logo they did too. It's a shame they are not around anymore. That's why I only go to Target or a different store and never step foot in a Walmart ever again. Last time I been inside a Walmart was 3 years ago lol
I remember when Caldor opened up at the old Macy's Plaza (Flatbush Av and Regent Pl in Brooklyn NY) back in the 90's. Didn't even last that long......lol.
The moment you said that they saw themselves as a one-stop shop, I said, "That sounds like Walmart..." and sure enough, the Waltons were their downfall 😅
10:16 and 11:57 brought back so many memories of the 2501 Grand Concourse Fordham Bronx, NY location with my parents because it was an Alexander's before Caldor there.
The advertisement for the opening of the Long Island store in Rocky Point NY! That was my family's local location that I remember as a child. It's a Kohl's now. I have vivid memorys of the day I finished reading The Silver Chair in one of the clothing racks while my sister and mom shopped.
For me as a German, the stories are very interesting. There are not so many huge chains here. Currently, they are once again trying to save Galleria Kaufhof. A department store chain, which was already subsidized by the state. Someone fills his pocket and the workers are later still on the street.
My favorite childhood memory of Caldor is the little merry go round they had in the front. You didn’t have to put any money in it, so my mom let me go on every time we went there! I have a vague memory of her trying to get me off so we could go home 😅 Great video!!
When the history of commerce in the US is written, it will undoubtedly show that Walmart destroyed the concept of competition and drove many a chain store out of business - while enriching one family as the end result. Someone explain to me why Walmart shouldn't be treated as a monopoly at this point. Congrats Jake on 10 amazing years.
It’s hard to get mad at them for being super adept at gaming the capitalistic system! They put on a clinic on how to grow and absolutely dominate their competition. Don’t hate the player, hate the game…
Caldor weighed heavy in my formative years in the 80s. That brown rainbow is seared into my memory permanently. It's where I discovered the Commodore 64 and developed a lust for computers in general. I'd immediately run for the TV dept where they kept the computers. I'd be on there the entire time while my parents shopped. It's the first place I saw a Sega Master System and really played it. It's where I bought our first NES with R.O.B. and Kung Fu. I realize, in retrospect, it's special qualities were likely DUE to being so young, and it being my first real department store. But there's just something about that 1980s brown rainbow stripe design. It still looks amazing when I see those photos from inside the store. It was a good look. :)
I LOVED Calor. The Bloomingdale of Discount department stores at people have said..Can you do G. Fox at one point ! ?? Thanks for the upload !! They were a Connecticut company !!
I worked in the Flushing, Queens Caldors for 4 years. Definitely was one of my Best Job Experiences ever! Was a great store and great people to work with. Miss those days sometimes
My wife was a retail executive, not at Caldor. One night about 30 years ago she had dinner with an executive from Caldor. She asked him how business was. His reply? "As long as someone needs a $2.00 shirt, there will be a Caldor!" I guess Walmart filled that need.
I can't believe this has been going for ten years. I can't say I've watched from the start but I saw the iconic River Country video pretty near to its release and I binged the backlog during COIVD, really helped me get through. Love Closed for Storm too. Keep going Jake, these are great.
I haven't watched this yet, but this was my second job as a kid. Loved this store. Warwick Mall, Rhode Island.1988? So much fun, I hope to learn more about it's demise later. Love your vids. Keep on keeping on. Quick aside, I was in toys, hardware, and seasonal 2nd floor, but dang if I didn't find myself learning all the other departments on my floor. Music, video, etc. I was everywhere, had to be, we were seriously understaffed. Still a ton of fun!
As a former Caldor employee, you must have spoken with a LOT of former employees. Very fair and balanced report. I worked for the company from 87-94.
I remember we were threatened that if we talked about them going bankrupt we would be fired, I left before they went belly up, downtown Brooklyn store.
Please do jcrew!!!!
Myself, the Manchester Caldor was crazy. We got new shopping carts a year before we closed the store. I asked my manager why are we buying shopping carts and we are in bankruptcy. A week later, my new job (at CompUSA) opened. Another mismanaged store. I lasted a month before, I was hired by OfficeMax.
@@arthurpasseri4761 didn't know caldor spreaded to the UK
@@arthurpasseri4761 didn't know caldor spreaded to the UK
Its sad how almost all of these bankrupt companies started as owned by a family who just wanted what was best for their customers and employees. But the more they tried to remain as such the harder it got because truth is most don't care for quality, they only care for quantity, and it was almost impossible for most of those retailers to compete with Kmart and Walmart prices, while still remaining true to their core values.
Till you find out that Walmart and Kmart are small family owned stores.
Sam Walton would be ashamed of his company now.
@@kinocorner976no he wanted to kill small business. He said it. He said if he sold something at a lower price. People would come to him and drive the other business out
My Grandfather worked at the Caldor in Woonsocket, Rhode Island in his later years. He just wanted to stay busy. I used to love going to visit him at work as a child. Great memories.
At this rate, Jake's gonna need to do Ann & Hope soon.
PS. Hi neighbor!
@@MajorOutageHey neighbor! I grew up right off of Broad Street in south Cumberland. I rode my bike in that parking lot quite often.
I was born in Woonsocket and have memories of it sitting in the corner of that strip mall on top of the hill.
fellow rhode islander. you better have had coffee milk with him
@@hughneutron5303 coffee milk and some hot weiners with the meat sauce, mustard, onions and celery salt. 😁
I love how a lot of these big retail downfall stories can be summed up as "Everything was going great until Walmart showed up"
That's why I dislike Walmart
@@Insane_kicks cant stop progress though
Its mainly the middle class going down, people go where the can buy cheap junks. I knew it would happen when the junkies degenerate MBAs promoted the stupid idea of moving to a service economy ! These illeterate scumbags didnt understand we first need food, shelter, energy and we better produce these ourselves, therefore earn the money to afgord the rest.
It’s called progression. Either find a way to keep up, or die off, simple.
@@KimiFan2002 it’s called homogenization. Conform or die.
As you mentioned, a lot of these regional department stores benefitted from the fact that Walmart and Target had limited presence in the Northeast until the late 90’s, once they both began expanding aggressively in the market, Ames, Bradlees, Caldors, all fell very quickly
Yep, can agree. Here the Walmart settled in the mid to late 90's. A few years after K-mart had built a Supercenter. First Caldoor in the mall fell, then Ames a few years later, including the Ames that was right next door to Walmart. And then 23 years later, K-mart went.
There was also Clover, although I think their fall might have been tied to Strawbridge's?
Caldor was aquired by Target and some of the stores were abandoned,turned into Target or sold some of the locations to Burlington Coat Factory.
@@Darth_Baggins Clover was Strawbridge & Clothier's discount chain, so yes, the two went down together.
Ames over expanded by taking over nearly every former Hills location. Plus they were too cheap for their own good.
My dad worked at Caldor for years in the 80's and early 90's, he says he'll sometimes get flashbacks when he walks in to Targets (he thinks it's the red shirts). We even still use Christmas ornaments from a floor model tree he bought there in like '89 or '90! Happy 10 years of Abandoned, looking forward to many more!
I wouldn’t be surprised if I see Chuck E. Cheese on the series in the future. There’s a bunch of abandoned locations around the world
"Where a kid can be a kid" !! 🤣🤣
That’d be a great idea for an Abandoned episode ^^
God I hope so
The Jersey City one is still going strong. For us it's GameStop.
It should be a crossover with Defunctland!
Congratulations on the 10th anniversary! I’ve been watching for 7 years now, glad to still be here. 🎉
I'm glad you're still here too!
@@BrightSunFilms its been nearly 10 years damn I didn't realize how long time has flown by.
@@BrightSunFilms Still no comment on your crimes of trespassing? its not as if you dont know you are doing it!
@@danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 yet, you encourage it by your engagement. If you truly had a dog in the fight, watching, rating and commenting would certainly not be the way to deal with such a matter. Until served, i think your propaganda and level of engagement do your 'cause' not much more than help your own indulgence in whatever suits you, at the moment and on a daily basis. You are one rotten PATATE sir - yes, it's also shouted as so, whenever it suits ME. Grow up or show us the beans
@@danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 Jake is still a good guy, he doesn't deserve to be arrested
Man, that sign at 12:40 really hits home. Circuit City, Funco Land, Kid r us, Sports Authority were some of the store I visited when I was a kid and teen. Its a shame people won't be able to experience some of these stores.
My brother still has a box from Funco Land, it used to be my box and had my Yugioh cards in it. XD I hated when Gamestop took over the space. We went to the one in Waterford.
@@BeigeEyesCroissantDragon .
FUNCOLAND OMG. I used to go there to buy Sega Genesis games. ;o;
Forgot about Funcoland
One time I was at a Funco land and found a bag of Nintendo games just sitting on the curb. Greatest night of my life
I got to pick my first stuffed bear out at Caldor with my father at like 6 months old and still have it. He said he just asked me if I liked them and I grabbed onto one for dear life and wouldn’t let him go.
I shopped at Caldor, as my family did. We were always impressed with their selection, prices and quality. Miss the store to this day.
Caldor was my first official job. I got hired on my 18th birthday. I made lifelong friends there. I left just before they decided to close. Target was coming to the Long Island area and many of the old Caldor locations were bought by Kohl's. The company had a bad reputation in general. The weekly flyer they released never had many of the sale items in stock. I enjoyed working there mostly for the people. I was also a kid but I have fond memories of the place.
Time goes by so fast. Far too fast. It feels like yesterday I was stepping into a Caldor for mom and then a Sears for dad. I miss the look, the smell, and the fun of those times every day.
Same. I think of stores that arent around anymore and just the experiences of having to go in them for things or just to pass through and it's a real weird feeling to not have that very much anymore.
I know exactly how you feel?
I was very young when I was in the second Port Chester store. Carl Bennett was so welcoming and charismatic that I never forgot the experience.
Congrats on 10 years! This one hit close, my mom was a frequent Caldor shopper so I have lots of memories of going there as a kid. It wasn’t a fancy store at all - the atmosphere was very reminiscent of a K-mart - but I do have a nostalgic fondness for it. (The one nearest to us had a not-quite-escalator inclined moving ramp between the upper and lower floors, which you never see in retail stores around here anymore. 😅) I still see Caldor labels and price stickers on things when rummaging through record shops and thrift stores so they certainly had a lasting impact in the northeast.
The reminds me of the Best Products store in Toms River, NJ - I loved watching products come down that moving ramp!
@@AllisonDancerChick1982 Oh wow, I've been in that exact store when I was young.
Another great episode. What’s crazy is Carl Bennett lived to be 101, he passed in Dec of 2021.
wow 101 god bless him he was as old as my grandmother who is 101 soon to be 102
The couple lived long enough to see their dream die. How sad.
@@nb2008nc they also saw massive success while they were running it. Id be dissapointed it closed but atleast id know it wasnt my fault.
@@nb2008nche had already retired about 15 years before Caldor went out of business. The new owners offered him a board seat, but he was ready to hand over the reins for good and completely retire. He and Dorothy built a hugely successful business and retired with a ton of money, and while it probably was sad for them to see Caldor eventually close, they hadn't been involved with the business in over a decade by that point. they should still have felt very satisfied with what they accomplished in their career.
I worked for Caldor in NJ from 1983-1984. I enjoyed it very much! I miss Caldor & Bradlees the most.
I will never forget when Caldor's closed and on the last day they were open there was a giant pile of CD's on the ground in the music section because everyone had just rifled through them for the $1 sale and threw them everywhere. I remember pushing CD's aside with my legs like walking through snow and digging through them at my ankles, it was surreal.
Seems like a common theme to me, a person creates a good company, keeps debts low, expands relatively slowly, then sells to an investment firm, who takes on huge debt sums, expands quickly, sells on before collapse, and then collapses under the new ownership 🤔
UNLESS YOUR SEARS
If anyone is ever in the Baltimore area, the Forman Mills on route 40 maintains much of Caldor design like the entrance.
Caldor, Ames, K-Mart were all tenants in that order for anyone interested.
Great video as always.
A good old fashioned failed retail episode of Abandoned?? Count me in!
I remember Caldor! My most "fondest" memory was getting stickers for a tracker to help me get over an eating disorder I had when I was a kid. It was when the store was closing. A Walmart ended up taking over it shortly after. Always left a bad taste in my mouth.
That Waterbury Caldor building is still there. It sat abandoned for *years* but it was a discount electrics place for a while and then it got converted to a gym about a decade ago if memory serves. It's across the street from the Walmart that replaced the original mall.
Now the replacement mall, the Brass Mill Center, is rapidly descending into dead mall territory.
That’s normally the case in Connecticut. Beautiful, artistic stores get replaced with dull, bland ones. If you look up interior pictures of the old Naugatuck Valley Mall in Waterbury, it looked beautiful compared to what we have today.
Yea, the Brass Mill Center has gone downhill quickly in the last 10 years.
@@Pirategirl4nightwish honestly, that should be a video of this channel tackles. I feel like that mall won’t be around outside of 4 to 5 years and I’m probably being generous.
The Bobs in the Norwichtown mall was gorgeous and had a badass play scape for kids. It was a small mall, my mother bought a computer desk there in 2000 for her new windows millennia HP. But that play scape was insane, we would beg our mom to go just to play there. Of course, she never would and we only went 3 times. On the 3rd time, the playscape was gone. There are some pictures of the entryway, which looked gorgeous online and they're pretty easy to find.
I would later go on to build the interior of and work in the Big Lots that took the empty Bobs space after the mall was stretched and made into a strip mall format. Worked there for 4 years while I was in and just after college. The side entrance doors are in roughly the same position. I can stand where that play scape was in Big Lots and it all comes back to me. Hell we even used the old Bobs backroom and mattress racks which were still in there.
Agree! Waterbury native here! I have been looking for interior pictures of the NVM for ages. There is one video online where the building is half torn down, but that is all I have found. If you know where to find pictures, please let me know.
Im in Connecticut also new mall is gross and old chucky cheeses also a breeding place from germs to nasty feet socks ...and not to mention the vomit or dirty diapers that were in the ball pit also I've seen kids climb up those stairs into that I don't know you could see him through the plexiglass it's disgusting dirty diapers I went and scoped it out before it was even going to bring my child there and there was no way that I was letting him in there she could have gotten lice gross my opinion if others liked it that's great I just don't and didn't because it's junk and like I said in my opinion breeding ground for bacteria.
Back in the day, my family used to go to Caldor weekly. During the holidays it proved to be the one stop shopping for Christmas gifts. Near the end, things took a turn for the worse. No matter what was in their sale flyer, you would not find the item in house and would have to get rainchecks at the service desk. After a while, the staff would post flyers at the desk showing what was in stock and had rainchecks already made out for the other items. During that time, the store made some serious mistakes, on one holiday shopping trip, I found the Atari video game system on sale for an insanely low price. I snapped up 6 of them for less that $100 and gave them out as gifts. I later learned that the store had transposed the numbers on the sale sign and took the remaining stock off the shelves, but it seemed they realized the mistake too late, since most of the stock was already gone. This happened not long before they shut their doors for good, so the original owners had already left.
I remember circling what I wanted for Christmas from the Caldor catalog! I think one of the reasons they did so well for so long is that they were based locally, and folks liked the friendly, local feel even though it was a store that had "everything". Being founder-led was a blessing, but also a curse as no one but a founder would have the same passion for making the stores successful. The makeover to red and grey seemed to be aimed at competing more with Walmart and Kmart, and didn't do the brand any favors. Additionally, by the mid 90's many of the stores were dirty, disorganized and had lost what made Caldor special in the first place. By that time enough people were traveling regularly to see how much nicer the Walmart and Target stores were in other parts of the country, and frankly expectations were higher. Today, in the former Norwalk Caldor we now have a small, now fairly run-down Walmart, and still no supercenters in Fairfield County. A real shame.
idk what you are talking about. Caldor was like target lol even towards they end. i dont remember their stores being modern clean and nice looking. what you described is how i remember kmart looking back then
Happy 10 year anniversary! Can't believe it's already been this long!
I know right!
I feel old now. Doesnt feel like ive been watching him that long
@@everythingsalright1121 Honestly! I feel like it's only been at most like 3 years AT MOST ya know haha!
I've been waiting for this one! I grew up 10 minutes away from a Caldor in upstate NY, so many memories of perusing the toy aisle while mom did her shopping. Great episode, congrats on your tenth anniversary!
It wouldn’t be the one in White Plains on Tarrytown Road would it? That’s the one we visited often.
When I was a kid in '70s Maine, Caldor was the Exotic Out-of-State Store we would hit when we visited my great-grandparents in Connecticut. Our local equivalents were Woolco (later replaced by Ames) and Zayre. All four are gone now. Sic transit gloria retail.
Ahhh, yes I remember Caldor. One winter the ceiling caved in on our local Caldor and blew the front brick face of the building across the parking lot. Good times :) Seriously, the nostalgia oozing from this video is quite thick. 10/10
aka the Mahopac store
@@Charmedone9805 YES. EXACTLY. ☺️
Always great to see a new Abandoned episode! I've never heard of Caldor, thank you Jake for covering it, and helping people like me, who grew up in the part of the U.S that didn't have Caldors, learn about these places and the stories behind them! 😊
Owlgirl 26 like Jack said Calder was only on the east coast. That's why you never heard of Calder
@@daniellewoolley8607 I've lived in Massachusetts my whole life and the first time I've heard of Caldor, Bradlee's, etc was on this channel. There's just nothing left of them... not even an abandoned building for curious kids to ask what it was. Almost all of the locations were quickly bought up and redeveloped by big box stores so all that's left are the memories.
Jake, a little known fact...Carl Bennett & George Seedman (from TSS - Times Square Stores) had entered in2 a gentlemens agreement way back in the day that Bennett would never open a Caldor in the TSS market. They both honored that agreement until TSS filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy & ADG had bought out Caldor. Another interesting fact the Caldor store in Flushing, NY had originally been an Alexander's b4 that went belly up. I've think even b4 Alexander's that location had been an S Klein Department Store. Now it's a mall that has mainly Asian businesses catering to the large Asian population in Flushing. But I used to love shopping at Caldor. Great prices & great quality also
Great trip down memory lane. I spent many days of my childhood with my mom at Caldor, as well as some other regional favorites like Zayre, Ames, Bradlees, and Stuarts.
Same here, but it was Zayre, Venture, and Turn-style
Oddly enough about Stuart's. That was a fairly nice place that closed in Timonium, Md in the mid 70s only to be replaced by Caldor a few years later. Never "well loved", I think there was a Circuit City there later (perhaps just the ground floor).
We had a Caldors in our town that closed in the 1990s (The store got replaced by a Burlington Coat Factory). I worked at a different regional chain in the northeast (The Fair). It flamed out in a similar manner. I think they went out of business because all the retailers get their stuff from the same source but they could not keep up with the massive advantage that Walmart and Target have.
Please leave off the last s for savings….it’s Caldor
@@druwpack5351 amen 😂. Hate when people say caldors from way back to Krogers or meijers now..there is no s . So please stop 🙏 😂
The Fair was in Killingly, CT. Interesting store, just like Fishers Big Wheel....
Caldors was my favorite store to go to as the toy department was always pretty large ( im in my 30s so I remember them during my childhood) and here in Westchester County NY we had a large number of them
I’m in Westchester too yeah we did have a lot of them!!! And like I wrote in my post everyone I know called it Caldors They did have a great toy department I spent a lot of time in that department as a kid!!!
6:44 I noticed the slogan, "where shopping is always a pleasure" on the ad which immediately made me think of Florida based Publix supermarkets which have used, "where shopping is a pleasure" as their slogan for decades.
I'm in the midwest so I've never heard of Caldor and I don't think Ames either but seeing the Venture store, that brought back memories just as much as Kmart!! Thanks for covering another great abandoned episode
This man started a massive store and lived all the way till 2021.. truly Carl lived a great life.
I still have a notebook from when I was in third grade in 1994, where I wrote a journal entry that said, "today we went to Caldoor and then we had lunch at McDonalds." My mom made me write it down because she wanted to encourage me to practice writing more often. It was in the central NJ area, but I totally don't remember which town. I never thought so many stores that existed when I was a kid wouldn't be around anymore. There was actually a Simpsons Halloween episode from years ago, where the town was taken over by zombies and Bart did a chant to get rid of them, where he said the names of a bunch of stores that don't exist anymore. One was Caldoor. To bad the guy who made this video didn't include that clip.
Was it the one on route 35 in Holmdel?
Could be problematic for copyright I guess since it's a popular big show. Better not risk it.
@@willd4731 I don't think so. I think it was probably near the Bridgewater/Somerville area.
Watching this series is so enjoyable, I love hearing about companies that went through so much, especially chains that you don’t even hear being discussed, as if they never existed.
Also, thank you for showing Flushing Caldor. Huge part of the first 24 years of my life, both open AND abandoned.
Is Old Navy still there?
@@Grimmes12 Closed about ten years ago. Before the mall opened. It's a super fancy Walgreens now.
@@TenguTalks I would meet my old boss every week back in 2007 on Main Street to drive up to ESPN up in Bristol, CT
@@Grimmes12 I spent a pretty decent chunk of time from about 1998-2019 just walking to and from Main St. Station. Watched downtown grow, evolve, get fancy, fall apart, get fancy again. It was a trip to see how often it would change. That Caldor was a constant until the New World Mall opened, and then the flux started all over again, especially when Skyview opened mid-teens. Its pretty much unrecognizable from 2007, which was unrecognizable from 1999. Only constant was the food and the church.
@@TenguTalks is the New World Mall a Chinese spot or what type of shops do they have in there?
I grew up in southeastern Mass. Caldor, Bradlees, Ames (I worked there for 4 years before they closed) and Ann & Hope. These stores were such a staple in this area. I miss them. Watching this brings back such nostalgia.
This one was so touching. I loved the storytelling.
Thank you!
I worked at Caldor in
Port Chester NY in 1983. Made many friends then and it was a fun job. It was a great store.
I was JUST talking about Caldor the other day! I remember my mother dragging me to Caldor growing up.
Having lived in the south western US, I never even knew this place existed. It's so crazy to see places that were this big just vanish into obscurity.
Congrats on the 10 year anniversary, Jake! Each year just gets better and better. Here's to many more! 🎉🎉🎉
I'd only heard of it from Cinnemasacre
Great video. I remember going to Caldor in Vails Gate, NY quite a bit when I was a kid. Unfortunately, it shut down in the late 90s and the building was demolished. Ironically, a K-Mart was built in its place in the early 2000s, but it's now closed as well.
Yep, that's the same one I went with my mom when I was 10 years old! Also used to frequent that Kmart. Now it exists as a Planet Fitness I believe.
They had one in the Newburgh Mall, too.
The memories you brought back with this episode!!! And you should the 2 Caldors I went to! Grand Concourse in the Bronx and the Caldor in Flushing! Thank you!
Never heard of Caldor before but it seemed like a nice place to go to. It seems like these kind of retail chains always go under either before or a bit after the turn of the new millennium like Ame's and Bardlee's.
Nikitation if you hear what Jake said they were only on the East coast. That's why you haven't heard about Caldor. People from different states don't always have the same things that the e
East coast
@@daniellewoolley8607 I'm from The East Coast
Congratulations on 10 years! 🎉 The first video I watched of yours was the Discovery Island one 8 years ago. Can’t believe it’s been that long!
Love your channel, it’s still the only channel I’ve ever signed up to Patreon for!
Good luck for another 10 years 🥂
Thank you so much!!
I always liked the Caldor at the Voorhees mall. Nice movie rental place there, workers were angry nerds
Kindys Christmas Factory Outlet in South Philly uses Caldor shopping carts and checkout stations. Fans of this channel would enjoy exploring this store.
I grew up with Caldor and Bradlees ...I remember just before Caldor Closed .... the fleet of brand new shopping carts at my 2 local stores.
My Bradlees is now Walmart and one Caldor is Walmart and the other became Khols'
Man, I grew up in New York and I remember going to Caldor all the time with my mom. There was one near us in Westchester. I had no idea that they originally started in Port Chester! I have relatives right near there.
Caldor is a chain that existed before my time but my grandma used to shop there a lot. Mostly for their Christmas decorations. She has these Christmas motionette of Santa and Mrs Claus that are still working today and we still put them up every year.
My ears perked up when you mentioned Venture. I remember that store from my childhood. The one up in Oklahoma City closed, then became a K-mart which closed and then became a Burlington Coat Factory. I believe it still is today, but I can't be sure, I don't get up to OKC all that much anymore.
While I never did visit a Caldor store this video did mention Venture which was a store that I spent a LOT of time at in the 80s and 90s! Our local Venture store is where I bought my first cassette tape with my own money, the first place I bought a CD and also where I bought my SNES a week after it was first released! The location started off as a Turn Style, and became a Venture in 1978. After Venture went under in 1998 it became a Big K-mart for about 15 years until that also closed. Now that location is Theisen's, which I always thought was odd since Theisen's is more of a farm supply store but this location is near the middle of the metro area, miles away from any farmland.
Memory unlocked about Venture! I had completely forgot about them.
There's a Menards in what used to be a large Zayre near where I used to live. I remember shopping at Zayre when we were kids. Dang, I miss Menards and Meijer!
My mom actually worked there, and she took me there a couple of times when I was really young before it closed! Man, takes me back! Another great video! Congrats on 10 years!
I just realized that I like your content so much because it reminds me so much of what the educational channels like discovery and TLC once were.
I just want to say thank you for this video and the amount of research you do. My dad is a former employee for one of the NJ warehouses. He kept telling me stories about the store and how the owners announced they went bankrupt one day. I showed my dad this video and it brought back so many memories for him. The workplace environment and people he met. He also told me that Walmart/Kohl’s and target bought some of their locations. One of the reasons I don’t go to Walmart lol But thank you for this because now I can see what my dad was talking about when he told me those stories.
Congrats on the big 10! That store in Flushing, Queens was a big part of my childhood!!! I later remember, through most of my teen years, staring at the big red logo. After they took it down, it was really weird to see that a mall took is place. Crazy nostalgic to see those pictures after all these years.
Remember the one that was in Atlantic Mall in Brooklyn.
The Bridgehampton store in the ad at 5:18 is now the site of one of the three remaining Kmarts in the US mainland.
You mentioned "Ventures". That was my hometown big box in the 80s and early 90s. I still smell the popcorn popping as you walk in the store. Be nice to touch on that store. My old store is currently a Home Depot.
Great work guys! So happy to see a large channel give props to Caldor.
Was happy to see Venture mentioned. I'll never forget as a kid the striped building it had and my mom taking me and my brother shopping there once and awhile.
Congratulations on the 10 year anniversary! I loved watching all of these! I started watching these in college, and I continue to watch them. I remember the first few videos. Keep it up!
Thank you so much!!
Bought my first large TV from the Caldor in Rosedale, Queens , NY, great store great memories what a store.
I was just talking about caldor with my parents like a week ago and they told me how it was the only store they would buy electronics from !
Customer experience has gone out the window with stores like this. Would be nice if stores would become people-centric again rather than only sales-centric.
12:41 So many businesses on that sign are also gone 😢
Perfect timing having lunch and watching a new video by Jake 😊
Caldors are one of my favorite past time stores of my childhood, along with Bradlees, Woolworths and Alexanders. I have LOTS of memories especially of Bradlees, and boy i have LOTS of stories about Bradlees to! I wish that they still here today but we must know that in this darn life nothing last forever. My guess is that as soon as the nafta trades started it was the beginning of the end of these stores i mentioned. Happy 10th Anniversary BTW! Always love all your work!
The stock offering was actually 120,000 shares at 5 dollars per share ($600,000), not 5 cents per share ($6,000). The $600,000 provided the money to expand their footprint in Fairfield County CT (where I grew up and where we shopped at the Norwalk store regularly).
Caldor was THE store when I was a kid in the 70s!
My grandfather worked in the Norwalk CT store for years!
Meanwhile the mall that opened in the former Flushing Caldor ALSO had massive turnover and suffers from some retail death. I remember when it opened as a supermarket/food court/dim sum restaurant, and then it started showing the same decline as the Flushing Mall a decade prior.
Eh, I got so many CDs from Flushing Caldor before it closed...then stared at the abandoned front for years as the neighborhood transformed.
In Henrietta, NY the Caldor building still stands! It’s Sutherland Global Services now, but it still has those distinct bulbous sides.
So far amazing work as always! I love your content. Keep it up! Cant wait for the eventual Chippawa Lake amusement park vid
Used to go to Caldors and Bradleys all the time in the 90s with my parents. I have fond memories of those stores, I pass an abandoned one every once in a while.
Caldor was my childhood. There was one next door to my elementary school, so after school let out on Friday my parents would take me to the carousel in the foyer and I would ride it for as long as they allowed.
I remember little of the store itself, I must admit. But it still left an impact on me.
I feel the same way as you, Caldor was such a nice store. There’s really nothing like it now, maybe Target is the closest thing to a Caldor now. I only been inside the Morris Plains Caldor one time back when it was closing down in 1999 for liquidation sales, but the store had so much character to it. Unlike the boring stupid Walmart stores we have now 😒
@@TimurD1905: I think that’s why I like Target. This is really a good comparison. Caldor was really ahead of itself.
@@tweetingsparks It sure was, I really like their last logo they did too. It's a shame they are not around anymore. That's why I only go to Target or a different store and never step foot in a Walmart ever again. Last time I been inside a Walmart was 3 years ago lol
I remember when Caldor opened up at the old Macy's Plaza (Flatbush Av and Regent Pl in Brooklyn NY) back in the 90's. Didn't even last that long......lol.
You should do either a Bankrupt or Abandoned for The Sports Authority
This is one of the best channels on youtube.
The moment you said that they saw themselves as a one-stop shop, I said, "That sounds like Walmart..." and sure enough, the Waltons were their downfall 😅
My local mall had a Caldor. We shopped there a lot when I was younger
Great story and video as always! Feel like this was an crossover between you "Bankrupt"-series and "Abandoned".
10:16 and 11:57 brought back so many memories of the 2501 Grand Concourse Fordham Bronx, NY location with my parents because it was an Alexander's before Caldor there.
Many memories of my mother taking me to the Caldor in Stoneham, Massachusetts. Congrats on 10 years! 🍺
The advertisement for the opening of the Long Island store in Rocky Point NY! That was my family's local location that I remember as a child. It's a Kohl's now. I have vivid memorys of the day I finished reading The Silver Chair in one of the clothing racks while my sister and mom shopped.
Love your content! Can you consider doing a piece on Borders Books & Music? I think it would be a great topic!
For me as a German, the stories are very interesting. There are not so many huge chains here. Currently, they are once again trying to save Galleria Kaufhof. A department store chain, which was already subsidized by the state.
Someone fills his pocket and the workers are later still on the street.
Only been watching for a few months but your content is amazing Jake
Thanks so much!
You should do a video on Gordmans! Perfect example of why you should take expansion slow and steady.
I simply adore this series so much Jake
Glad you’re here watching!
@@BrightSunFilms Yeah. Caldor closed when I was only 3
My favorite childhood memory of Caldor is the little merry go round they had in the front. You didn’t have to put any money in it, so my mom let me go on every time we went there! I have a vague memory of her trying to get me off so we could go home 😅 Great video!!
When the history of commerce in the US is written, it will undoubtedly show that Walmart destroyed the concept of competition and drove many a chain store out of business - while enriching one family as the end result. Someone explain to me why Walmart shouldn't be treated as a monopoly at this point. Congrats Jake on 10 amazing years.
It’s hard to get mad at them for being super adept at gaming the capitalistic system! They put on a clinic on how to grow and absolutely dominate their competition. Don’t hate the player, hate the game…
Caldor weighed heavy in my formative years in the 80s. That brown rainbow is seared into my memory permanently. It's where I discovered the Commodore 64 and developed a lust for computers in general. I'd immediately run for the TV dept where they kept the computers. I'd be on there the entire time while my parents shopped. It's the first place I saw a Sega Master System and really played it. It's where I bought our first NES with R.O.B. and Kung Fu. I realize, in retrospect, it's special qualities were likely DUE to being so young, and it being my first real department store. But there's just something about that 1980s brown rainbow stripe design. It still looks amazing when I see those photos from inside the store. It was a good look. :)
I LOVED Calor. The Bloomingdale of Discount department stores at people have said..Can you do G. Fox at one point ! ?? Thanks for the upload !! They were a Connecticut company !!
Man, I haven’t thought about G.Fox in so long!
I worked in the Flushing, Queens Caldors for 4 years. Definitely was one of my Best Job Experiences ever! Was a great store and great people to work with. Miss those days sometimes
My wife was a retail executive, not at Caldor. One night about 30 years ago she had dinner with an executive from Caldor. She asked him how business was. His reply? "As long as someone needs a $2.00 shirt, there will be a Caldor!" I guess Walmart filled that need.
What a great reply!!!
I can't believe this has been going for ten years. I can't say I've watched from the start but I saw the iconic River Country video pretty near to its release and I binged the backlog during COIVD, really helped me get through. Love Closed for Storm too. Keep going Jake, these are great.
I haven't watched this yet, but this was my second job as a kid. Loved this store. Warwick Mall, Rhode Island.1988? So much fun, I hope to learn more about it's demise later. Love your vids. Keep on keeping on. Quick aside, I was in toys, hardware, and seasonal 2nd floor, but dang if I didn't find myself learning all the other departments on my floor. Music, video, etc. I was everywhere, had to be, we were seriously understaffed. Still a ton of fun!