Black Barbershops: More than a haircut

Rodney Brower, a barber at Signature Kutz, cutting 6-year-old Elijah Warren’s hair. The two talk about sports and crack jokes throughout the haircut. “I put a little laugh in their life,” Brower said about his customers. “Showing the positive side of the atmosphere that we have in here.” (Staff photo by Ryan Wilusz)


Six-year-old Elijah Warren climbed into a booster seat, grinning as barber Rodney Brower covered him with an apron. As snow started falling outside of Signature Kutz Barber Shop on South Driver Street, his older brother, Jacquez,  waited in the corner for the haircut to finish.

Trying to start a conversation with Elijah, Brower asked if he was going to be better than his brother at football one day.

“I already am,” Elijah said.

After the laughs settled, he continued to talk about football and Brower continued to listen. Elijah said he wants to be a running back.

“We’re listeners really,” Brower said about barbers. “A lot of people come in the barbershop and it’s not really about the cut, it’s about the conversation.”

But black-owned barbershops have evolved since the 19th century, transforming from a service business for white clientele into a social gathering space in black communities.

THE BACK STORY

Quincy Mills, a history professor at Vassar College, chronicled black-owned barbershops in his book, “Cutting Along the Color Line: Black Barbers and Barber Shops in America.”

In the 19th century, most black-owned barbershops served white clients exclusively. Wealthy white businessmen and politicians in the South refused to get a haircut next to a black man, Mills said.

Even in Durham, John Merrick served white clients in his barbershop to make money for future investments. In 1898, he started North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, the nation’s oldest and largest black-owned insurance company.

“In many ways, he made these compromises in his barbershop to help build enterprises and build black institutions for African-Americans,” Mills said.

From 1890 to 1930, a new generation of black men sought to change the face of black-owned barbershops.

Mills explains, “They wanted to open barbershops in black communities to serve black men and to provide a space in an emerging Jim Crow America that would escape the surveillance of whites.”

At the time, a major focus for barbers was shaving, an act that involved touching another man’s face. Many viewed this as slave labor until the mass-production of the Gillette safety razor in 1903 allowed men to shave at home. With the focus shifting to haircuts, more white men entered the barbering business, Mills said.

And by the 1930s, during the Great Migration, most black barbers had moved into black communities. With few places for blacks to interact freely, barbershops became a gathering place.

Black residents who moved to a new area would stop by the barbershop to make connections. And if a customer needed someone to do a job, he would go to the barber and ask who was reliable, Mills said.

“Much like a preacher, a barber is this sort of central person that has a pulse on their local communities,” Mills said. “When folks come in, they’re talking.”

Black-owned barbershops were places for men to interact with their community and relax.

“There’s the barber and there’s the people sitting in the chair,” Mills said. “But it’s the waiting public that I think gives black barbershops their character.”

Customers would sit for hours waiting for a haircut, leading to conversations about politics, the community and religion. While these topics are still covered today, people also talk about sports, cars and relationships.

A GATHERING PLACE

“The shop is a place that people can come and they can be debatable,” Brower said. “You can be yourself and another person can be themselves. And at the same time, you can meet in the middle and shake hands without animosity.”

Although customers often start the conversations, the barber plays a major role in the discussion.

“The barber makes a balance,” said Samuel Jenkins, owner of Samuel and Sons Barber Shop on Angier Avenue. “If you are talking too much, maybe he lets someone else get a turn. He is like the director of the opera inside this space.”

Different barbershops have different rules. Signature Kutz does not allow foul language and avoids conversations about religion. But both Samuel and Sons and Signature Kutz agree that being a role model for children is important.

When Jenkins began barbering, he would ask children if they have ever been fishing. He said it’s surprising how many have not.

“I don’t know about the white community, but there are a lot of broken families in the black community,” Jenkins said. “Sometimes the only mentors you end up having are the local drug dealers or the barber because you go to the barbershop.”

When children are struggling, mothers often ask the barber to direct them on the right path, Jenkins said.

“One reason you come into barbering is because you want to cut hair,” Jenkins said. “The other reason you want to do it is because you want to see people do better.”

LOOKING FORWARD

But the uncertain future of barbering is making it difficult for barbershops to stay open, including Samuel and Sons, which will move into Jenkins’ house on Dec. 18.

Mills said that living standards, an increase in appointments and technology have changed black-owned barbershops over recent years.

With more families living in poverty, getting a haircut has become less of a priority. And if someone is going to the barbershop, they could be working multiple jobs and have only 30 minutes to get a haircut, according to Mills.

In-and-out appointments have taken away from the “waiting public” and the conversations that happen in barbershops. Mills said technology has had a similar effect.

“I have noticed that even inside barbershops there could be four, five or six people in the shop all on their cellphones,” Mills said. “Public interaction, I think, is something that is changing.”

But conversations have not completely disappeared. Brower and Elijah talked back and forth about the Superbowl throughout the haircut. Elijah said he will play in the big game one day, and Brower said he wants tickets.

After the haircut, Brower rubbed alcohol on the child’s hairline, causing a stinging sensation and a scowl from Elijah.

“You’re supposed to be a football player. You’re not getting soft on me, are you?” Brower asked.

Elijah responded with a smile.

Although the future of barbershops is unclear, Brower said he always wants to make a difference.

“I do this to be a productive member of society,” Brower said. “If you provide a safe environment for a kid like this, they’ll come to you the rest of their life.”

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Ryan is a UNC-CH junior journalism major from Statesville. He is serving as a co-editor of the Durham VOICE.


2 thoughts on “Black Barbershops: More than a haircut

  1. Mr. Brower is my Husband an am very proud of him. He Rodney came along way. He inspire these young men that comes in contact with him. We the black community needs more men like Rodney..

  2. I am a barber in Oklahoma City , Oklahoma and I feel what Rodney is saying I grew up on the black Barbershop experience but it has since left it seems people is more anger I want to own me a shop and have it like the old where we all people of different color will be able to come together and I can get paid doing it

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