Natchez, MS, USA / ListenUpYall.com
(Dec 22, 2023 | 2:07 PM)
The marker is located at Winston’s home at 81 E. Franklin St., a few yards east of the Natchez Stew Pot. It is also the site of the barbershop that he opened behind his home in 1942.
The late Jessie Winston (1910 - 2020) worked as a barber for 89 years. He was 101 when he gave his last haircut. He was considered the oldest barber in Natchez. |
Mayor Dan Gibson, Alderwoman Valencia Hall, and members of Winston’s family dedicated the marker Thursday, Dec. 21, in a special ceremony in front of the Winston property. They were joined by friends and others from the community.
“Since the beginning of our administration, we have been
working to better tell our whole story and feature those individuals who have
made a lasting impact on Natchez,” said Gibson. “Mr. Winston’s long life and
amazing career as a barber is an inspiration to all of us.
“How fitting it is that we should celebrate this
occasion, and this new marker, on the eve of what would have been his 113th
birthday.”
Winston was born on Christmas Day in 1910. He died
on April 15, 2020, at the age of 109.
The mayor thanked Winston’s daughter, Helen Winston, for her “persistence in honoring Mr. Jeff’s historic life.” He said Jessie Winston was Natchez’s oldest citizen and “quite possibly one of the longest serving barbers in our nation’s history.”
Jessie Winston was 101 when he gave his last haircut, according to Helen
Winston. She said he “cut hair for 89 years,” which reportedly made him the
longest-working barber in the City of Natchez.
Helen Winston said that she and the Winston family are
all happy about the marker and the recognition shown to her father. “I am so
overwhelmed,” she said. “ This is a blessing to the family. I am grateful to
Alderwoman Valencia Hall and Mayor Dan Gibson for making this possible.”
Helen Winston said she was in Walmart one day when she
approached Hall about doing something to honor Jessie Winston. Three days
later, she heard back from Hall, who said she had met with the mayor and that a
marker would be approved.
Helen Winston said her father will be remembered for his
“good works” and for being “good to a lot of people.” When people without money
came for haircuts, he told them not to worry about it, she said.
“He was a happy camper,” Helen Winston recalled. “He
loved to laugh.”
Following Thursday’s ceremony, the Winston family gave a
tour of the barbershop to the mayor and others who wanted to know more about
Jessie Winston’s history.
Jessie Winston worked for many years at Armstrong Tire
and Rubber Company, from where he retired. Over the years, people would ask him
about the secret to his longevity. His reply, said Helen Winston, was a verse
in the Bible: “Honor thy father and mother that thy days may be long.”
Hall described Jessie Winston as a “devoted husband and
father and spiritual individual.”
“It is most fitting that Mr. Jeff, as he was
affectionately known, be memorialized with this historical marker in front of
his home and barbershop,” she said on Friday.
Hall noted he “was not just a barber for 89 years of his
109 years of life, but a fixture in the community and friend to many a boy,
man, woman, and girl.” He was fortunate in many ways, she explained, adding “he
died at the age of 109 with all of his faculties.”
For a life that was long and well-lived, Hall said of
Jessie Winston, “Well done, Faithful Servant!”
The self-guided history tour, of which the Winston
property is now a part, features nearly 30 sites related to African American
history. The project was unveiled in a special ceremony in February 2023. The
tour is a joint initiative of the City of Natchez and NAPAC Museum. Gibson has
said the project is one of many ways through which the city is telling its
complete history.
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