Chattanooga Times Free Press

Three generation­s work together to honor matriarch

Three generation­s work together in honor of an Alton Park matriarch

- BY MARY FORTUNE STAFF WRITER

The three businesses Greg Dixon Jr. launched when he bought a commercial building in Alton Park in 2019 are an investment in his family’s future — and a tribute to its past.

“My granny, I named it after her,” said Dixon, who is the grandson of the late Elizabeth Dixon, a fierce advocate for her community in the decades she lived in McCallie Homes and then, after the demolition of the city’s largest public housing developmen­t nearly 20 years ago, the Villages at Alton Park.

In May 2019, Dixon bought the building at 107 W. 38th St., and a multigener­ational team of Dixons and their extended family renovated it through the summer, putting in new flooring and walls and fixtures to prep the space for their stores.

“I loved my granny, she was my everything, and I hate she passed and didn’t get to see this,” said Dixon, whose grandmothe­r died in 2008 at age 79. “I miss her. I

Dixon runs MayNell’s Restaurant — named for his mother Mary Nell Dixon — while his son, Greg Dixon III, runs the Legacy Barbershop. Dixon’s sister, Crystal Dixon Crawford, operates Ki-Bre Accessorie­s, a clothing and accessorie­s store she started in her home a decade ago and named for her two daughters.

Crawford started her business as a sideline to her full-time job caring for people with mental disabiliti­es, and eventually began selling accessorie­s at a nearby flea market. She was hurt on her full-time job around the time her brother bought the building in their neighborho­od, and she decided it was time to pursue the store and expand the business.

“When I got hurt and was able to start doing this 100%, it grew,” Crawford said. “This summer I started selling clothes. The mall is so far out of the way.”

Social media and word of mouth have helped her grow the shop, and she asks her daughters, who are 31 and 27, for their opinions on the clothes she buys and stocks.

“I love it, I’ve got a passion for it,” she said. “I love my customers, helping them match the barrettes to the socks to the outfit.”

Members of the Dixon family — including Greg Sr. and Mary Nell— are in and out of each other’s stores all day long, helping run errands and handle tasks, often with grandbabie­s or great-grandbabie­s in tow.

“It’s a family thing, all of it,” said Greg Dixon Sr., the son of Elizabeth Dixon. “We see each other every day.”

In addition to running Legacy Barbershop, Greg Dixon III mentors students who live in Alton Park and attend Chattanoog­a Prep, a charter school for boys from urban and underserve­d communitie­s.

“I grew up right here in the neighborho­od,” Greg Dixon III said. “I want to be an inspiratio­n to the people I grew up with and the people around me.”

Greg Dixon III played basketball for Lookout Valley High School, and went to Middle Tennessee State University to play there, but was sidelined by injuries. He came home and attended Chattanoog­a State Community College to become a master barber. He dreamed of owning his own shop, and that led his father, who had a long career in constructi­on and experience flipping houses, to invest in the building.

“My father put it in motion when I told him what I was trying to do,” Greg Dixon III said. “My dream was to have my own business.”

The pandemic has delivered a blow to the businesses, slowing them down just as they were beginning to thrive, said Greg Dixon Jr. But the family will work together and persist, he added, and they’ll eventually hang the sign they have in storage that officially names the building for his grandmothe­r.

“I’m trying to create jobs for the community,” Greg Dixon Jr. said. “I’m just trying to get something started.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY MATT HAMILTON ?? Crystal Dixon Crawford works at her store, Ki-Bre, in Alton Park.
STAFF PHOTOS BY MATT HAMILTON Crystal Dixon Crawford works at her store, Ki-Bre, in Alton Park.
 ??  ?? Greg Dixon Sr. stands beside the sign that pictures his mother, whose name appears on the complex that houses the businesses his family runs.
Greg Dixon Sr. stands beside the sign that pictures his mother, whose name appears on the complex that houses the businesses his family runs.
 ??  ?? MayNell’s Restaurant in Alton Park, run by Greg Dixon Sr., named for his mother, Mary Nell Dixon.
MayNell’s Restaurant in Alton Park, run by Greg Dixon Sr., named for his mother, Mary Nell Dixon.
 ??  ?? Greg Dixon III, left, cuts the hair of Nathan Earl, 14, at the business he runs, Legacy Barbershop, in Alton Park.
Greg Dixon III, left, cuts the hair of Nathan Earl, 14, at the business he runs, Legacy Barbershop, in Alton Park.

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