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More About
Roi
AIDS activist brings
volunteerism to Cape Region
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Milton’s model citizen... Roi
Barnard
By Kevin
Spence
Many
Milton residents might know Roi
Barnard from his pink and green
1830s home on Federal Street
that he jokingly calls the
dollhouse. Others connect
Barnard with Salon Roi, his hair
salon at the corner of
Connecticut Avenue and Calvert
Street in Washington, D.C.,
where a huge painting of Marilyn
Monroe is emblazoned on the side
of building. The popular,
upscale salon has become a
tourist attraction, with buses
regularly stopping so visitors
can view the mammoth mural.
Barnard,
now 72, says the scourge of the
AIDS epidemic in the 1980s
claimed many of his friends.
“I’m the only guy left out
of all those guys, and I don’t
know why. I feel I gotta do good
stuff the rest of my life. You
don’t get left for no reason,”
he said. “People don’t talk
about the fallout from AIDS, but
there is. It’s like napalm.”
Still, he doesn’t dwell on
it, but instead, he recalls a
life of opportunity, switching
the conversation to past and
recent successes.
Tough beginnings
Barnard was born near the
Outer Banks in Poplar Branch,
N.C., where he lived with seven
other siblings. He said his home
had no indoor plumbing, and his
parents, while they could read
and write, only had a
sixth-grade education.
In
1956, he said the FBI came to
his sleepy little town, seeking
employees. After examining his
church attendance and
neighborhood involvement, the
FBI recruited Barnard to work in
Washington, D.C. where they paid
for his courses at George
Washington University.
“Actually, the government came
and got me. I was one
impoverished kid,” he said.
“They gave me a job and sent me
to school. I owe the government
an awful lot,” he said.
In D.C., Barnard worked from
1956 to 1959 in fingerprinting
and classification. In 1957,
then-director of the FBI J.
Edgar Hoover presented Barnard
with a meritorious service award
for the volume of fingerprinting
he performed, he said.
The Federal Trade Commission
also employed him, but he quit
after two years. “I thought,
‘What was I going to do with my
life?’ Everyone kept telling me,
‘You should be a clothing
model,’” he said.
In
1962, he began modeling and soon
became the top male model in
D.C., a profession that lasted a
decade. “It’s funny about life,”
he said.
Barnard
eventually moved to New York
City where he became acquainted
with Andy Warhol. “He was trying
to get me into the Factory,”
said Barnard. The Factory was
Warhol’s studio, which quickly
became a gathering place for
movie stars, artists and rampant
drug use.
“Something kept
telling me don’t get involved –
maybe my North Carolina
upbringing. I didn’t do drugs,”
he said. Still, he became
friends with Factory regulars
Edie Sedgwick, Joe Dalessandro
and Holly Woodlawn. “I even got
a signed Warhol,” he said.
Wanting to get out of the
modeling business, Barnard said
he met a friend who owned a hair
salon, who encouraged him to
study cosmetology. “I was
becoming less enchanted by
modeling and all the drug use.
The business was becoming
terrifying. I was sure if I
didn’t get out of New York
something bad would happen. I
could see there was trouble
coming,” said Barnard, who moved
back to D.C. as a hair stylist.
The AIDS war
Sitting at his kitchen
table, Barnard’s fingers are
adorned with large, rectangular
gold rings. On his wrists are
flat gold bracelets, which match
large, square cuff links. His
tone turns somber as he recalls
friends who become sick and soon
died.
“In 1982, things
started happening,” said
Barnard.
In the salon he
owned with his partner, he said
five colleagues died at nearl y
the same time. Then, the disease
struck his partner, who died of
an AIDS-related brain tumor.
“From 1980 to 1993, there
was a big shock. I stood there
and watched friends die,” he
said.
Barnard became an
AIDS activist, working with the
Whitman-Walker Clinic, a
hospital specializing in HIV
infection and AIDS. In 1982, he
received a letter of recognition
from Georgetown University
School of Medicine for helping
provide them with information
about how AIDS was spreading in
the gay community and helping
them identify other high-risk
groups.
Former Washington
Mayor Marion Barry and former
Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld also recognized
Barnard’s contributions to AIDS
policy.
A move to
Milton
In 1988,
Barnard first came to Milton,
although his eyes were
originally set on Lewes. “Well,
to put it bluntly, my lover died
of AIDS. I had an insurance
check. We had always talked
about coming to the shore and
buying a place. When I came to
Lewes, I realized my time had
passed. I said to myself, ‘I’m
not going to pay $150,000 for a
house,” he said. Balking at
prices in Lewes, he said his
agent suggested Milton, 15
minutes away.
“In 1988,
Milton was hours away from the
beach,” he said.
“I came
down Cave Neck Road by the
church and the hair on the back
of my neck stood up. I saw this
house and said, ‘Oh my God. What
a cute house,’ and it had a for
sale sign. A half hour later, I
bought it,” he said.
In
2007, he sold his business and
became a part-time employee at
his own salon. Three days a
week, he still styles 45 clients
– many of them third generation,
he said.
“I still have a
clientele. If I gave you the
names, there would be a security
breach,” he said. “I know
everything about them. It’s
sacred. And, we’re growing old
together,” he said.
In
Milton, Barnard volunteers with
Milton Historical Society. He
recently teamed up with Salon
Milton where he cut hair and
donated the proceeds to the
society.
At Cadbury at
Lewes, Barnard cuts hair for
free for elderly clients – one
client has been with Barnard for
40 years. He also volunteers in
Wilmington at Ingleside Home
Health Care, doing the same.
“I can’t let these people
go. They built me. They
supported me,” he said. “You
have to give back. If not, the
house of cards falls down, and
you end up on the sidewalk,” he
said.
“Everyone has a
story. Isn’t it great? I’m one
of the lucky ones. I get to tell
it,” he said.
Why
the hat?
Roi Barnard of Milton said
his father never left the family
home without a hat on. Barnard
said his father always bought a
matching hat for his son, which
led to Barnard’s like of cowboy
hats.
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