- Originally published in the Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) February 27, 2005 Broward Metro Edition
Copyright 2005 Sun-Sentinel Company
By Gregory Lewis and Alva James-Johnson Staff Writers
Madam C. J. Walker knew a moneymaker when she saw it.
The
first American woman to become a self-made millionaire, Walker founded
her empire a century ago on products and processes to straighten black
hair.
Today the business is a billion-dollar industry, attracting mega-corporations and business-savvy entrepreneurs.
In
South Florida's black neighborhoods, sprawling beauty supply
super-stores offer row after row of artificial hair, relaxers,
coloring, and shampoos.
"The only regret I
have is that blacks no longer control the business, especially when
there's so much money involved," said Hopeton Kenton, a West Palm Beach
businessman who sold his black beauty supply store to an Arab-American
businessman in 1996.
Hair care
historically was the cornerstone of black enterprise and blacks
controlled the black hair care market. "Doing hair" was a mom and pop
business run in kitchens and on porches as often as in stand-alone
shops. Black-owned companies manufactured many of the hair care
products.
In the 1950s and 1960s "most
women who had businesses were hairdressers," said scholar Niara
Sudarkasa, a Fort Lauderdale native who served as president of Lincoln
University in Pennsylvania. "There's no question that beauty salons and
hairdressing were a big economic item in the black community."
Today, black women
are flocking to cosmetology schools, often to perfect a craft they
learned at home, said Deniece Henry, who teaches at the Sheridan
Technical Center for Cosmetology in Hollywood.
Many
of the women have jobs waiting for them at a relative's shop, but after
schooling, some opt for more lucrative salons that have mostly white
clientele.
"I don't teach black hair
care," Henry said. "I teach them it's a business and after they are
educated they see where the money really is."
The
time-consuming process of braiding hair may bring $200 for a day's work
done on the back porch, but professionals in New York get $900 for a
similar job. A Las Olas hairdresser doing strand-to-strand hair weaves
can command $1,600 a head, Henry said.
While
black beauticians and barbers still have a corner on the service side
of the industry, the manufacturing, wholesale and retail side have gone
mainstream.
Many of the beauty supply
stores in black neighborhoods in Broward and Palm Beach counties are
now owned by Arab-American businessmen. Korean-American entrepreneurs
control the distribution of many of the products, said Sue Lee of Super
City Discount Beauty Supply in Oakland Park.
Competition is tough.
"We
can't compete with the Arabs," said Andrea Edwards, who has worked for
black-owned beauty supply stores since the 1990s. "They have six or
seven different stores and buy in much larger quantities."
At
the Beauty Supply Warehouse, a 15,000-square-foot, black beauty
supplies superstore in Lauderhill, a constant stream of women arrive
emptyhanded and leave with bags of hair and other products.
Nadine
Whitaker, 29, of Lauderhill, said she was there for a year's supply of
Jehri curl weave that was on sale for $4.99. "Discounts, and whoever
has the best price" get the business, she said.
Manager
and part-owner Chris Hani, a Jordanian-American, said he and his
associates made the transition from grocery stores to beauty supplies
when they opened four years ago, and he prefers the latter.
"Grocery stores you sell alcohol and that's against our religion," he said. "This is clean, and you don't have any trouble."