Local barber wins businessman award

Martin “Marty” Watson, owner of Watson’s Barbershop, hovers about his storefront shop chatting with customers as he styles a man’s hair, clippers buzzing. Watson never seems to touch the ground, despite the fact that he’s been standing all day.

Watson, 24, jokes back and forth with a steady stream of customers flowing in and out the door. Business for him is as good as usual, something he attributed mainly to quality work and professionalism.

photo

Martin "Marty" Watson trims a customer's hair Thursday afternoon. Watson was named the Lawrence 2008 NAACP Minority Businessman of the Year.

“If I sit anybody down I know they’re coming back,” Marty said. “Within 15 minutes you get good conversation, a quality cut and your time — my full attention.”

Watson, also the Lawrence 2008 NAACP Minority Businessman of the Year, said he has somewhat of a monopoly in Lawrence. Watson says only two licensed black barbers reside in Lawrence: him and his employee Tim “Nellie” Nelson.

Marty serves about 15 to 20 customers a day, ranging from KU athletes and coaches to business professionals. No matter who the customer is, Marty’s gift of gab will put them at ease, Kasey Cullors, Wichita senior and Marty’s roommate, said. Marty is the same person at home as he is at work.

“Marty is probably the youngest old person I know,” Cullors said. “You think this person has got to be 50.”

Equally important to some patrons is Marty’s role as a counselor. Earle Mosley, a former KU football coach, said most coaches and players do not live a normal life.

Coming to Marty’s provides him and his players a comfortable place to relax, often with talk about sports, women, politics and the occasional gossip.

“Everybody needs somebody to talk to, someone they trust,” Mosley said. He also said that the players can find some normalcy.

Marty’s outgoing personality and eagerness to get to know people, is what Camellia Watson, his mother, said made him a special child.

As a child she said he could talk to anyone.

“He enjoyed talking to older people,” Camellia said.

His sister, Kendra Watson, 30, also said the fun-loving jokester that customers see today is the same outgoing, chunky kid she nicknamed “Fat” growing up in Parsons, a small town in southeast Kansas. She watched as he started up his first business, “Watson’s Back-Porch Barbershop,” as an eighth grader.

There, Kendra said she saw Marty’s personality and haircutting skills culminate. Every day after school, friends, family, teachers and community members lined their backyard for Watson’s $2 haircuts. People came from across southeast Kansas for haircuts.

“People still ask for him,” Kendra said. “People come all the way from the Pittsburg area because they remember he cut hair.”

His brother, Ronald Watson, Jr., 27, said Marty was always the most creative one in the family.

He said when he and Marty weren’t playing baseball or basketball or wrestling each other in a heated exchange, Watson would always draw designs for his customer’s hair.

“He has always seemed to be his own free spirit,” Ronald, Jr., said. “He kind of made his own path of how to do things.”

photo

Tim "Nellie" Nelson, left, Martin "Marty" Watson, center, and Benjamin "Vinnie" Van Sickle, right, serve a variety of customers from KU football players to business professionals in Watson's Barber Shop. Watson has been cutting hair for most of his life.

All three alluded to how much their father Ronald Angelo Watson, also a business owner, influenced Watson. His father died when he was 16 years old.

Ronald, Jr. said Marty often felt snubbed because his father missed part of his life.

“It was kind of a chip on his shoulders,” he said. “I think it motivates him to be a businessman.”

Marty won’t be missing any parts of his sons’ lives. He has three sons: Kyle, 3, and Adric and Gabriel, both 1. All three boys live with their mother. They often spend time with him in his shop, just like he did with his dad.

He spent countless hours working side-by-side with his dad, every day before school, washing, pressing and mending clothes at his dad’s cleaners, working to beat the day’s heat. The business was run by Ronald and his family and serviced all of southeast Kansas.

“He showed us the value of hard work at an early age,” Marty said.

A large portrait of Ronald, alongside Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X with an image of the cleaners, hung opposite Marty’s barber chair as he recalled the day his father died.

In August 2000, Ronald, an outgoing, humorous man, who always wore his “good hair” neatly slicked back, woke up early one morning with chest pains. Later that day, Marty, then at basketball practice, got the worst call of his life: his mother was rushing his father to the hospital. He was having a heart attack.

Marty rushed to see his dad. As he arrived, doctors were trying to stabilize him and move him to a Missouri heart hospital. They couldn’t. Ronald died shortly after.

“When I got there they were still working on him,” Marty said. “After a few hours of fighting, his heart just gave out.”

Camellia said her husband’s death devastated Marty. He was so distraught, his grandmother bought him a car, just to keep him motivated to graduate from high school.

She said Marty began working harder than usual to compensate for his dad not being around. He took up a job at a local printing press. Suddenly, Marty felt like the family’s provider, the man of the house. His brother and sister were already in college. His mother was in a state of shock.

Three weeks after graduating from Parsons High in May 2002, Marty moved to Wichita to attend Old Town Barber and Beauty College. Only nine weeks later, Marty graduated from the barber school as the youngest licensed barber in Wichita at 19. Marty moved to Lawrence in 2004 and worked as a barber in several shops. He opened his own shop in 2005.

“When he starts something he’ll finish it,” Camellia said. “And he finished it in a hurry.”

Patrons say Marty’s get-it-done business style as well as his fun-loving attitude and the overall friendly atmosphere at Watson’s Barbershop, keep them coming back.

Marty said he has only been able to do this by getting their respect, not just their money.

“They don’t have to choose me,” Marty said. “The fact that they do is an accomplishment.”

— — Edited by Arthur Hur

 

Related articles

Barber shop offers more than just haircuts

African-American barber shop creates a community experience for customers.

/news/2010/aug/07/barber-shop/

Lawrence mayor makes the cut

Mayor Mike Amyx keeps the family barber shop running, continuing local tradition.

/news/2010/aug/30/lawrence-mayor-makes-cut/

The hunt for hairdressers

/news/2005/nov/03/hunt_hairdressers/

Lawrence's landlord: a developer's story

Doug Compton, owner of First Management, has helped guide Lawrence's development for ...

/news/2011/may/05/lawrences-landlord/

Tragedy in transition: Ed's story

Ed Schroer cared for his ailing father while he was alive and ...

/news/2011/may/10/tragedy-transition-eds-story/

Family remembers KU student killed in car ...

Neil Hockenbarger, 26, died early Thursday morning. His wife said he was ...

/news/2008/oct/07/family_remembers/

Unlicensed: A T-Shirt Tale

Meet Larry Sinks, the man behind JoeCollege.com and its controversial T-shirts.

/news/2008/dec/08/joecollege/

The man behind the frying pan

Jim Carroll, induction cook at GSP, is a lifelong cook with a ...

/news/2008/nov/25/man_behind_frying_pan/

Historic Murphy-Bromelsick House now open to public

John Speer built the house and advocated for University and rebuilding Lawrence ...

/news/2009/jul/13/house/

Red Raiders bring new name, same legacy ...

Texas Tech coach Knight makes his Allen Fieldhouse debut at 8 p.m.

/news/2008/mar/03/pat_knight/

The art of making money

Even with the economy in turmoil, KU students prove there’s still a ...

/news/2008/oct/13/entrepreneurship/

Tragedy in transition: Lindy's story

Lindy Anderson had to deal with the death of her father mostly ...

/news/2011/may/10/tragedy-transition-lindys-story/

Smith: Tykes and suits don’t mesh

Formal wear is fun as an adult, but not as a child.

/news/2007/oct/08/smith/

Business savvy earns scholarship award

Julio Mata Jr. took first place in a national competition for his ...

/news/2007/nov/02/julio/

Fear, interrupted

How one man’s love helped undo the damage of another.

/news/2010/nov/18/fear-interrupted/

Former KU tackle finds new calling in ...

Keith Loneker left the University expecting a career in the NFL but ...

/news/2008/dec/10/lonaker/

Living Art

The tattoos Joe McGill inks on his customers are almost as interesting ...

/news/2007/mar/15/living_art/

A staggering tragedy

Friends and family look for answers while struggling to cope with an ...

/news/2009/apr/28/staggering_tragedy/

Van Slyke begins major league career

/news/2005/jun/22/VanSlyke/

Players make own decision when choosing schools

/news/2006/feb/03/fathers/

Hiding Daddy

I tried to block the person I needed most

/news/2007/apr/26/hiding_daddy/

The Buc starts here

After troubled past, former Jayhawk Talib is ready to live his dream ...

/news/2008/oct/01/talib/

Father-daughter pair enters law school together

/news/2005/sep/20/on_the_boulevard/

Jeweler turns simple metals into treasures

Lance Williams wanted to surprise his wife, Amber, with a one-of-a-kind necklace ...

/news/2006/may/09/jewler_profile/

Athletes with children

These KU athletes must find time to excel in both sports and ...

/news/2008/jan/23/athletes_children/

Coach starts small to dream big

Coach Ritch Price reflects on his experiences throughout the years that led ...

/news/2008/apr/29/coach_starts_small_dream_big/

Taxidermist gets down and dirty in raw ...

Taxidermist Cindy Cunningham owns her own shop in Bonner Springs and continues ...

/news/2006/dec/07/taxidermy/

Man tanning in Lawrence heats up

Tanning salons across Lawrence have experienced increases in sales for male tanning ...

/news/2008/mar/05/man_tanning_lawrence_heating/

Internet provider appeals to city

A Lawrence businessman claims he was left out of bidding process for ...

/news/2011/oct/25/internet-provider-appeals-city/

Who’s Who at KU

Jordan Watson- Constituent Services intern at the Kansas governor’s office in Topeka.

/news/2009/feb/17/who_jordanwatson/

Living the Wright life

Wright left Kansas for the NBA last year. His life outside of ...

/news/2008/apr/17/julian/

Satisfying Lawrence’s late-night sweet tooth

New bakery delivers cookies from oven to doorsteps.

/news/2011/feb/10/satisfying-sweet-tooth/

Father calls for change after son's death

Jay Wren says both fraternity environment and his son are partially to ...

/news/2009/mar/11/father_change/

C.J. Henry steps from brother’s shadow

C.J. Henry is looking to prove he’s more than just Xavier Henry’s ...

/news/2009/aug/20/cj_henry_steps_brothers_shadow/

Field supervisor takes pride in work

George Barnes has worked as the University of Kansas’ official field supervisor ...

/news/2007/oct/31/littlepeople/

Student juggles family, education without getting lost ...

R.J. Rowley has four kids, a wife and is working on his ...

/news/2008/jun/17/father/

No time for jersey chasers

/news/2005/sep/08/no_time_jersey_chasers/

Keeping up appearances

Fancy cremes and badger brushes—it’s not always easy preservin’ your sexy.

/news/2007/aug/23/keeping_appearances/

Former player finds many successes despite rampant ...

/news/2006/mar/08/king_profile/

Leaving a lasting legacy

As Hemenway prepares to retire, he and others look back at how ...

/news/2009/may/04/leaving_legacy/

Comments

Use the comment form below to begin a discussion about this content.

Sign in to comment