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    For 50 years, Sweetwater stylist beautifies Randolph ladies

    Lucy Richardson started working in the Randolph Air Force Base beauty salon 50 years ago and overcame prejudices of the time.

    Photo By Sabrina Fine | Lucy Richardson started working in the Randolph Air Force Base beauty salon 50 years...... read more read more

    RANDOLPH, TX, UNITED STATES

    11.15.2019

    Story by Sabrina Fine 

    502nd Air Base Wing

    Hairstyles come and go, but one thing remained persistent at the Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph beauty salon for 50 years: Lucy Richardson.

    “One afternoon, my husband came home and I told him I am going to run to the BX and I will be right back,” she said. “He had no idea I was going to apply for a job.”

    Richardson is thought to be the first African-American hair stylist at the salon. The salon manager Annette Vasquez believes Richardson’s presence changed perceptions of the time, making patrons and colleagues feel more beautiful.

    “People are inspired by her,” said Vasquez. “She is a trailblazer, she makes everything else in life seem trivial, if she can overcome this … we all can. She is living history we don’t want people to go on without knowing.”

    Born in Sweetwater, Texas, Richardson attended beautician school and ran her own salon.

    “My husband was in the military and we got stationed here at Randolph,” said Richardson. “We have been here ever since.”

    Grandparents raised Richardson after her mother died in childbirth. Her grandfather was a minister and taught her faith; at Randolph, she became active at church.

    “I would meet people at the chapel and they would ask ‘what do you do’,” recalled Richardson. “I said I am a hair operator, and they said ‘do you work on base?’”

    That innocent question planted a seed. Her passion was styling hair and she wanted to continue.

    “[BX Management] told me to go to the beauty shop and they would call and tell the manager that they were sending an operator over,” said Richardson. “Honestly, [the salon manager] didn’t know that I was black so when I came in she kind of just looked at me.”

    She was scheduled to work the nighttime shift.

    “When she first started working here, she wasn’t allowed to work on the floor,” said Vasquez. “She had to work behind a closed door. She wasn’t allowed to come out until a certain time of day.

    “It was very challenging and hurtful and [she] shed many tears but again she continued to persevere through the strength of family that supported her and encouraged her.”

    One evening after work, Richardson returned home and told her husband that she had to quit. She told him she could not take it anymore.

    “He said no, you have to make the way for the others,” Richardson said. “Sure enough as life and years went on we got more and more blacks in to the shop, getting their hair done and working.”

    When a client started to question why she was only allowed to style hair in the evening, Richardson recalls, those questions reached upper management. Some of her coworkers also stood up for her, insisting Richardson also have a spot in the front at the salon.

    “We’ve been through thick and thin together,” said Verna Webb, who has been getting her hair cut by Richardson for 45 years. “We know each other’s lives inside and out.”

    A quiet, confidence radiates from Richardson’s kind-hearted demeanor. Many of her customers know her story, feel her strength, and keep coming to see her, Vasquez says.

    “[Her story] is history,” said Yolanda Shaw, a hair stylist colleague. “Even through the midst of it, in the hard times, the persecution, she kept going. She kept her head up and now she even shares it with the ladies. She encourages and builds us up.”

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 11.15.2019
    Date Posted: 11.15.2019 15:16
    Story ID: 351956
    Location: RANDOLPH, TX, US

    Web Views: 14
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN