Hall of Fame Barber-
Cel Palayo Wraps up 53 Years as the Merced Mall Barber
When one thinks of barbers, the imagination can take us back to the days of the Andy Griffith Show and the lovable Floyd, who delivered the laughs, an occasional shave, and a haircut.
A few decades later, in the movie Barbershop, Cedric the Entertainer helped define the profession by playing Eddie alongside Ice Cube.
But neither Mayberry’s Floyd nor Barbershop’s Eddie have anything on Cel Pelayo of Merced.
Cel took over the Merced Mall Barber Shop in 1971 and ran it until the end of 2024.
200,000 Hair Cuts!
By his conservative estimates of twelve haircuts a day, six days a week, for fifty-three years, he’s given about two hundred thousand haircuts since opening the shop in the Mall.
Cel’s work journey began in the military where he served first in the Army and then on a Navy ship where he learned about hair cutting from the ship’s barber.
After discharge from the service, he got his state barbering certificate, worked with an established barber on Main Street in Merced, moved up to the Mall shop, and eventually bought out the owner.
Among his hundreds of customers was the current Mayor of Merced, Matthew Serrato.
“(Got my) haircut there multiple times,” the Mayor said. “Longstanding locally owned and operated businesses become a cherished part of who we are as a city.”
With two hundred thousand haircuts to his credit, Cel is bound to have a few stories. When I asked him about specific people, he turned somber as he recalled the story of a young man who worked in Mall security years after he took over the shop.
“A group brought in an exhibit of military hardware that they assured the Mall manager did not include live ammunition. The young man came upon a live grenade stored in the Mall storage room. It went off, and the man was thrown into the walkway near the shop. We called the fire department and tended to the man until they arrived.”
Cel says that the young man died from burns suffered in that explosion. Weeks later, the man’s mother came to the shop to thank Cel for his efforts to help her son until the first responders arrived. Cel remembered the mom would bring her youngster to him for a haircut years earlier.
Fortunately for Cel, his recollections from fifty-three years of cutting hair bring more smiles than sadness.
Actor Paul Newman was a part owner of Merced Mall and occasionally came to the Mall office across the walkway from his shop. Newman occasionally promotes movies and, one time, brought in two actors in full costumes from one of the Planet of the Apes movies.
There was a time when actors dressed like the group Kiss showed up.
“Another time, there were two actors dressed as Disney cartoon characters at the Mall. I looked up, and they were sitting in our shop.”
Cel used the remainder of his GI Bill benefits to get his degree in construction technology from Merced College, going to classes while operating the barber shop.
“I took all the courses: welding, electricity, and the electives,” Cel says. “Twelve credit hours each semester while running the shop.
He raised four daughters, taking them to their school sporting events, dance and music lessons, and just about any other activity, all while keeping his barber chairs filled with customers.
Daughter Annette says she remembers that time well because her dad worked long hours practically every day.
“Many nights, he wouldn’t get home until past ten o’clock,” she says. “The Mall would close, but if he had customers waiting, he’d be sure to take care of them even if it went past closing time.”
Those long days, those two hundred thousand haircuts, and all the memories from his five decades as the Merced Mall Barber are now over.
Cel wants to travel all over California in an RV and visit his hometown in Mexico later in 2025.
Haircuts in 1971, when Cel started, were three dollars. His price in his closing months was fifteen dollars, but the cost didn’t matter as he closed out his time in the Mall.
“In the end, it was more like a hobby,” he adds. “I was just giving everyone a break.”
So, if there is ever a hall of fame for barbers, Cel Palayo belongs there. His shears belong in a display case.
He gave his last haircut to his grandson two days after Christmas, and he hung up the shears for good.-
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His California books are available for purchase at the Merced County Courthouse Museum. His latest book, Jack & Johnny: Benny, Carson and a Friendship Made for Television, is available there as well, or it can be ordered at Jack & Johnny (lulu.com)
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