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THE UNMARKED HISTORIC SITE OF THE FAMOUS JACK'S OF DALLAS

By
Real Estate Agent with Bill Cherry, Realtor 0124242

Former Home of Jack's of Dallas
8307 Preston Road near Northwest Highway

There is a historic site in Dallas that isn’t noted on Google, and I couldn’t find any mention of the man who built from scratch what became an iconic and copied men’s barber shop.

Before you pass judgment, please hear me out.

He was Jack Pitts and his fancy men’s hair salon was named Jack’s of Dallas.

Prior to Jack's of Dallas, for years and years, white men’s hairdos were reduced to about five styles:  white walls, tapered, DAs, crew, and butch cuts. 

Men like Bill Haley of Bill Haley and the Comets had slight adaptations – Haley had a hair squiggle that hung down on his forehead – but in the main, you went into the barber shop and picked white wall, tapered, DA, crew or butch. 

And you hoped the barber hadn't made too big of a mess before he massaged Wild Root Cream Oil (Charlie) on the top to plaster it down with the hopes of hiding his mistakes from you.

As far as parts go, the barber never remembered were it was.  He picked a place he liked best.

Of course every haircut was finished with brushing your neck with Jeris talc so that small pieces of the cut hair would go down the backside of your shirt collar and cause you to itch for the remainder of the day.

My hair was both course and thick – I had lots of it. 

And nothing much made the top ever look orderly. 

When I was in the 7th grade, I became sure it wasn’t because I was 5’5” and weighed 120 lbs. that kept me from being a strong competitor against the football players for the pretty girls’ attention.

Bill with Crew Cut in 1954 ===>>

It was definitely the unruly hair.

So I went to a crew cut, held standing straight up and level across the top with a product heretofore used by black men called Royal Crown Hair Dressing.  There were two more"  Murray's Pomade and Peach Hair Dressing.

All of the stuff smelled, so I tried covering it up with extra blasts of Old Spice cologne.

I noticed no one got too close to me.  But what was I to do?

Then a hair miracle happened in 1964! 

Jack’s of Dallas appeared on the scene, and with it came the razor cut and the finished product styled and held in place with a new product called Dep.

No one’s hair would dare move after a dose of Dep jell, cooked in place with a hot bonnet hair dryer, and then that hold further guaranteed afterwards by five long spray can spritzes of lacquer.

Jack Pitts became my hero.  I was able to have a regular haircut, and it would stay in place, and I could look like a grown man.

Never mind it cost $7 plus tip a week when regular barbers were will getting $1.50.  He transformed me into the man I had dreamed I could be --- if only I could wear a regular hair style.

<<== Bill 1965, Jacks' of Dallas Hairstyle

Boys and men by the droves fought for appointments with Jack.  Norris of Houston brought the same concept there.

While better hair products have come, and my hair has gotten less course and thinner, nevertheless, without Jack Pitts and his Jack’s of Dallas, I would have been a hairstyle outcast for at least the first forty years of my life.

So I am lobbying the City of Dallas to install a historical marker on the site of Jack’s of Dallas, 8307 Preston Road.

It’s the right thing to do.

BILL CHERRY, REAL ESTATE BROKER

Dallas = Park Cities
Since 1964
214 503-8563

Comments(4)

Brian Schulman
Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage, Lancaster PA - Lancaster, PA
Lancaster County PA RealEstate Expert 717-951-5552

I always wondered whether Bill Haley's squiggle was trying to copy Superman's curl?  I remember Dep.  I also made use of Butch Wax back in the day!

Feb 10, 2012 07:07 AM
BILL CHERRY
Bill Cherry, Realtor - Dallas, TX
Broker & Wealth Coach

Brian, I don't know about Haley's motivation.  I always thought he was dorky, squiggle or not.

I was in Walmart a couple of weeks ago looking for some sort of hair product for Patty.  My eyes drifted to the bottom shelf, and I did the left to right study of lables.  When I got to the end, lo and behold, there was Dep!!!

The next time I go there, I'm going to buy a bottle for old time's sake.

Bill

Feb 10, 2012 10:15 AM
Wayne Johnson
Coldwell Banker D'Ann Harper REALTORS® - San Antonio, TX
San Antonio REALTOR, San Antonio Homes For Sale

Bill-Your recollections brought a smile to my face. I remember Royal Crown Hair Dressing. It was a big seller in the black community.

Nice how new techniques and products improve our lives only to discarded when even better things are intorduced. Good luck on getting the historical marker.

Feb 11, 2012 03:39 AM
BILL CHERRY
Bill Cherry, Realtor - Dallas, TX
Broker & Wealth Coach

Wayne, I couldn't resist going back and adding Peach Dressing and Murray's Pomade.  I'll bet you remember both of them, too!

Thanks for your post.

Feb 11, 2012 04:07 AM