Advertisement

Harlon Brooks

Advertisement

Harlon Brooks

Birth
Nacogdoches, Nacogdoches County, Texas, USA
Death
20 Aug 2023 (aged 79)
Nacogdoches, Nacogdoches County, Texas, USA
Burial
Nacogdoches, Nacogdoches County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Harlon Brooks, 80, of Nacogdoches, died on August 20, 2023, in Nacogdoches, TX. He was born December 19, 1943 in Nacogdoches.
Funeral: 11 a.m. Friday August 25, 2023, at Iron Wheel Baptist Church with the Rev. Jam Es Irvin pastor/eulogist
Burial: Pine Grove Cemetery, Hwy 7 West, Nacogdoches, Tx
Sadler Funeral Home.
The Daily Sentinel August 23, 2023
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Harlon Brooks, who rose from humble beginnings as a self-described "chicken catcher" to create an empire of barbecue restaurants that spanned the nation, died Sunday at his Nacogdoches home. He was 80.

Brooks was a pioneering Black entrepreneur who founded Harlon's Bar-B-Que House in 1977 in a formerly abandoned gas station at Selinksy Road and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard in Houston's South Park neighborhood.

Brooks and his wife, Alfreddie, owned more than two dozen Harlon's locations at the peak of their business, which they both told The Daily Sentinel they learned through trial and error.

"We were barely making bills. We learned how to survive in tough times," Brooks said in 1996 when he and his wife returned to Nacogdoches.

But a major break came when they were approached by then-state Sen. Rodney Ellis, D-Houston, about opening a restaurant in what is now George Bush Intercontinental Airport.

"He came to my daddy in South Park in 1988 and asked him, 'Do you want to be one of the first Black-owned companies to go into Houston International Airport?'" Brooks' daughter, Candace, recalls. "My dad said, 'I've got no money to do that. How am I going to do that?'"

Ellis made the deal work, and Harlon's opened in the airport in the early 1990s.

"It was the first Black-owned barbecue business there ever. From there he opened 27 other restaurants," she said. "It just went and went."

During his first year in the restaurant business, Brooks grossed $380,000, according to the Houston Chronicle, and in 1999 revenues had increased to $13.7 million.

Brooks was excited to move back to his home town once business took off, his daughter said.

"He just loved where he was raised. He just loved this town," she said.

In 2000, Brooks received the African-American Pinnacle Award from the Houston Chamber of Commerce for overcoming almost insurmountable odds to create a successful business.

"It really means a lot when people think that much of you," he told The Daily Sentinel in October 2000.

Harlon Brooks was born Dec. 19, 1943, the son of Gaylon and Topsie Brooks. He was the only boy among the couple's five children.

He grew up on Smith Street in south Nacogdoches, which was renamed for his father in 2013.

The hometown he loved wasn't always so kind to him. As a child, Brooks was not allowed in the movie theater on Main Street in downtown Nacogdoches because of his race.

"So when he moved back home, one of the first accomplishments that he made was buying that theater," said the Rev. James Ervin, Brooks' longtime pastor at Iron Wheel Baptist Church.

Brooks carried on a hardworking tradition that had been handed down by their father, his sister, Ella Jean Whitaker, said.

"Back then times were hard, but he believed that a man was supposed to take care of his family. He instilled that in us to make sure that we had good work ethic and do the right thing," Whitaker said.

During high school, Harlon worked as a golf caddy and would catch chickens for farmers as a way to earn money, Whitaker said.

"He would dream at night about catching those chickens and one time he was dreaming about it and jumped out the window," his daughter said.

Despite Gaylon Brooks' hardworking ways, the family never had much money.

"My dad was always behind his peers. He didn't have all the clothes and he didn't have what his peers had," his daughter, Candace, said. "He worked doing all kinds of jobs just to save enough money to follow his friends. Everyone was going to Texas Southern University in Houston."

Harlon and Alfreddie left for Houston after graduating in 1961 from E.J. Campbell High School, where they were sweethearts. They married in 1965.

Upon returning to Nacogdoches, the couple purchased several properties in addition to the former movie theater and opened Harlon's Bar-B-Que on Old Tyler Road. The restaurant closed in early 2011. They also built a 27-room, 16,000-square-foot home with nine bedrooms and 10 bathrooms on FM 226.

"We had hopes of coming back, but not in this grand style," Brooks said when the home was being built in 1996.

He became heavily active in Iron Wheel Baptist Church and a variety of community organizations including Concerned Black Men of Nacogdoches.

"So many in our community were so delighted that he came back. He blessed so many and he helped so many. We look forward to celebrating his life and his legacy," Ervin said.

Brooks is survived by his wife; a daughter, Candace; a son, Marlon; sisters, Rose Mary Anders, Ella Jean Whitaker and Anita Lemeral Pharr; and five grandchildren, Gabriel, Jordan, Michael, Isaac and Jacob.

He was preceded in death by his parents and a sister, Mary Sue Anderson.

© Copyright 2023 The Daily Sentinel 4920 Colonial Dr., Nacogdoches, TX
Harlon Brooks, 80, of Nacogdoches, died on August 20, 2023, in Nacogdoches, TX. He was born December 19, 1943 in Nacogdoches.
Funeral: 11 a.m. Friday August 25, 2023, at Iron Wheel Baptist Church with the Rev. Jam Es Irvin pastor/eulogist
Burial: Pine Grove Cemetery, Hwy 7 West, Nacogdoches, Tx
Sadler Funeral Home.
The Daily Sentinel August 23, 2023
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Harlon Brooks, who rose from humble beginnings as a self-described "chicken catcher" to create an empire of barbecue restaurants that spanned the nation, died Sunday at his Nacogdoches home. He was 80.

Brooks was a pioneering Black entrepreneur who founded Harlon's Bar-B-Que House in 1977 in a formerly abandoned gas station at Selinksy Road and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard in Houston's South Park neighborhood.

Brooks and his wife, Alfreddie, owned more than two dozen Harlon's locations at the peak of their business, which they both told The Daily Sentinel they learned through trial and error.

"We were barely making bills. We learned how to survive in tough times," Brooks said in 1996 when he and his wife returned to Nacogdoches.

But a major break came when they were approached by then-state Sen. Rodney Ellis, D-Houston, about opening a restaurant in what is now George Bush Intercontinental Airport.

"He came to my daddy in South Park in 1988 and asked him, 'Do you want to be one of the first Black-owned companies to go into Houston International Airport?'" Brooks' daughter, Candace, recalls. "My dad said, 'I've got no money to do that. How am I going to do that?'"

Ellis made the deal work, and Harlon's opened in the airport in the early 1990s.

"It was the first Black-owned barbecue business there ever. From there he opened 27 other restaurants," she said. "It just went and went."

During his first year in the restaurant business, Brooks grossed $380,000, according to the Houston Chronicle, and in 1999 revenues had increased to $13.7 million.

Brooks was excited to move back to his home town once business took off, his daughter said.

"He just loved where he was raised. He just loved this town," she said.

In 2000, Brooks received the African-American Pinnacle Award from the Houston Chamber of Commerce for overcoming almost insurmountable odds to create a successful business.

"It really means a lot when people think that much of you," he told The Daily Sentinel in October 2000.

Harlon Brooks was born Dec. 19, 1943, the son of Gaylon and Topsie Brooks. He was the only boy among the couple's five children.

He grew up on Smith Street in south Nacogdoches, which was renamed for his father in 2013.

The hometown he loved wasn't always so kind to him. As a child, Brooks was not allowed in the movie theater on Main Street in downtown Nacogdoches because of his race.

"So when he moved back home, one of the first accomplishments that he made was buying that theater," said the Rev. James Ervin, Brooks' longtime pastor at Iron Wheel Baptist Church.

Brooks carried on a hardworking tradition that had been handed down by their father, his sister, Ella Jean Whitaker, said.

"Back then times were hard, but he believed that a man was supposed to take care of his family. He instilled that in us to make sure that we had good work ethic and do the right thing," Whitaker said.

During high school, Harlon worked as a golf caddy and would catch chickens for farmers as a way to earn money, Whitaker said.

"He would dream at night about catching those chickens and one time he was dreaming about it and jumped out the window," his daughter said.

Despite Gaylon Brooks' hardworking ways, the family never had much money.

"My dad was always behind his peers. He didn't have all the clothes and he didn't have what his peers had," his daughter, Candace, said. "He worked doing all kinds of jobs just to save enough money to follow his friends. Everyone was going to Texas Southern University in Houston."

Harlon and Alfreddie left for Houston after graduating in 1961 from E.J. Campbell High School, where they were sweethearts. They married in 1965.

Upon returning to Nacogdoches, the couple purchased several properties in addition to the former movie theater and opened Harlon's Bar-B-Que on Old Tyler Road. The restaurant closed in early 2011. They also built a 27-room, 16,000-square-foot home with nine bedrooms and 10 bathrooms on FM 226.

"We had hopes of coming back, but not in this grand style," Brooks said when the home was being built in 1996.

He became heavily active in Iron Wheel Baptist Church and a variety of community organizations including Concerned Black Men of Nacogdoches.

"So many in our community were so delighted that he came back. He blessed so many and he helped so many. We look forward to celebrating his life and his legacy," Ervin said.

Brooks is survived by his wife; a daughter, Candace; a son, Marlon; sisters, Rose Mary Anders, Ella Jean Whitaker and Anita Lemeral Pharr; and five grandchildren, Gabriel, Jordan, Michael, Isaac and Jacob.

He was preceded in death by his parents and a sister, Mary Sue Anderson.

© Copyright 2023 The Daily Sentinel 4920 Colonial Dr., Nacogdoches, TX


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement

  • Created by: twar10
  • Added: Aug 23, 2023
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/258214969/harlon-brooks: accessed ), memorial page for Harlon Brooks (19 Dec 1943–20 Aug 2023), Find a Grave Memorial ID 258214969, citing Pine Grove Cemetery, Nacogdoches, Nacogdoches County, Texas, USA; Maintained by twar10 (contributor 47001944).