Cuts, not bruises: Former MMA fighter opens barber shop in Spartanburg

She once doled out uppercuts. Now she gives haircuts.

But Ashley Rushing is still tough — covered in tattoos all the way up to her neck and a blue-green pixie cut, she’s opened up the Bareknuckle Barbershop in Drayton Mills Marketplace, the name a nod to her MMA fighting career.

Once known as Doll Face in the MMA world, Rushing fought for a little more than a decade, starting with an amateur career at a North Carolina gym. She began her professional career when she moved to South Carolina and fought in two professional fights with Invicta Fighting Championships, a women’s MMA organization.

A photo of Ashley Rushing, known as Doll Face during her MMA career. Provided by Ashley Rushing.

But she’s always had a passion for cosmetology, too, and has worked as a cosmetologist for about 15 years.

“My family’s always done hair, so I’ve kind of always been around it,” Rushing said.

When Rushing broke a lower vertebrae ending her fighting career, she decided to focus on hair full time which led to the opening of Bareknuckle Barbershop.

Ashley Rushing, stylist and co-owner of Bareknuckle Barbershop, works with customer Leon Wilkie in the newly-opened shop at the Drayton Mills Marketplace, in the Drayton community of Spartanburg, Wednesday, August 12, 2020. TIM KIMZEY / Spartanburg Herald-Journal

She co-owns the shop with Tyler Maupin, who isn’t a stylist, but works on the business and financial side. He created the name and helped with the design for the shop.

Artist Leon Wilkie created the logo – two fists (or bare knuckles) grasping a pair of scissors. The shop also displays some of Rushing’s belts from her fighting career.

However, Maupin and Rushing don’t go way back. Maupin was just a client of Rushing’s when she worked at a different Spartanburg barber shop before opening up her own.

Tyler Maupin and Ashley Rushing, co-owners of Bareknuckle Barbershop, in the newly-opened shop at the Drayton Mills Marketplace, in the Drayton community of Spartanburg, Wednesday, August 12, 2020. TIM KIMZEY, TIM KIMZEY/Spartanburg Herald-Journal

“I scheduled an appointment with her when she worked at the Black Derby (in downtown Spartanburg),” Maupin said. “And then she noticed that I was coming in every week and then we just started talking.”

Rushing and Maupin opened up shop Aug. 1, behind Dray Bar & Grill, and business has been successful for the almost two weeks since they’ve opened, they said.

Bareknuckle Barbershop hasn’t faced too many challenges due to COVID-19 either, Rushing said. It opened after Gov. Henry McMaster reopened salons and barber shops in South Carolina.

“I think with men’s grooming, it’s always gonna be around,” Rushing said. “Men have to get their hair cut.”

Bareknuckle Barbershop is newly-opened at the Drayton Mills Marketplace, in the Drayton community of Spartanburg, Wednesday, August 12, 2020. TIM KIMZEY, TIM KIMZEY/Spartanburg Herald-Journal
Ashley Rushing, stylist and co-owner of Bareknuckle Barbershop, in the newly-opened shop at the Drayton Mills Marketplace, in the Drayton community of Spartanburg, Wednesday, August 12, 2020. TIM KIMZEY, TIM KIMZEY/Spartanburg Herald-Journal

And if this barber shop isn’t tough enough for you yet, there’s a whiskey tap right when you walk in.

“So I give complimentary beverages with all services,” Rushing said pointing to the tap and a beer fridge next to it. “So when guys come to check in they literally help themselves, pour themselves (a drink), grab whatever and just hang out.

Rushing found she prefers doing men’s cuts and women’s pixie cuts over a traditional women’s color and highlights that can take hours at a salon.

“I didn’t like standing behind someone’s head for four hours,” Rushing said. “I’ve only had my barbers license for about a year. But when I got into barbering, and started shaving, I got super addicted.”

There’s no specific demographic that comes into the shop, co-owner Maupin said, mostly men of all ages, races and ethnicities come to Bareknuckle Barbershop.

“Ashley really works with all types of ethnicities and hair,” Maupin said.

It may seem like a drastic career change, but to Rushing, her life is pretty simple.

“That’s it,” she said with a laugh. “Just an MMA background and hair.”

Contact Genna at gcontino@gannett.com or on Twitter @GennaContino.

Drayton Mills Event Space Relaunched as Eighteen Hundred Drayton

Former Larkin’s Restaurant Group executive to lead catering & events venue

 

Spartanburg, S.C. (Aug. 08, 2019) – The event space at Drayton Mills has expanded as Eighteen Hundred Drayton Catering & Events, an evolution that will keep pace with the growing demand for the exceptional venue in Spartanburg County.

In July, Bob Munnich, formerly of the Larkin’s Restaurant Group, signed a lease to assume the operation, management and become master chef of the venue, formerly Events at Drayton Mills. Munnich’s success has always been firmly rooted in his belief that the best ingredients make the best food, and happy team members make happy guests.

“I have always appreciated all that Spartanburg has to offer,” Munnich said. “Having been the Food & Beverage Director at the Country Club of Spartanburg in the early 2000s, I really bonded with the city. I am excited to see the changes and development, and can’t wait to be a part of Spartanburg’s growth.”

“Spartanburg County is the 19th fastest growing metropolitan area in the country,” Munnich added. “That tremendous growth is fueling a demand for high-quality events, programming and culinary excellence. We believe this further investment in the event space at Drayton will help exceed people’s expectations.”

Press Release: 1800 Drayton PR

LOOK INSIDE: Events at Drayton Mills holds grand opening

From GoUpstate.com – Nov. 15, 2018

Events at Drayton Mills, a 34,800-square-foot indoor/outdoor event venue at the renovated textile mill on Spartanburg’s east side, celebrated its grand opening Thursday night.

Attendees toured the space and met with local vendors, including caterers, florists, bakers, photographers and event rental companies, according to a statement from the company.

The space is billed as a “premiere venue” for weddings, corporate gatherings and special events.

“At Drayton Mills, we are all about community, so we are incredibly proud to be able to offer such an amazing space for community events, family milestones and corporate gatherings,” TMS Development Managing Principal Tara Sherbert said in the statement. “We look forward to hosting Spartanburg’s most celebrated events and playing an even larger role in the fabric of this wonderful community.”

Events at Drayton Mills’ Great Hall can seat up to 300 and includes a cocktail lounge and private green rooms, the statement said.

The 8,800-square-foot indoor space includes a dance floor, catering kitchen and a fleet of mobile beverage stations. Elevated boardwalks, courtyards and covered gathering areas add an additional 6,000 square feet, and a 20,000-square-foot natural lawn is also available.

Holly Richter, program manager for Drayton Mills, said response and interest in Events at Drayton Mills ahead of the opening was “tremendous.”

“We can’t wait for even more people to see what Events at Drayton Mills has to offer,” Richter said in the statement. “We are an extremely versatile space, so we can accommodate larger and smaller events. And, of course, everything is set against the historic elegance of Drayton Mills.”

To make a reservation or for more information, call 864-573-0092, visit DraytonMills.com or email events@draytonmills.com.

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New brewery, Lauren Ashtyn HQ on tap for Drayton Mills

From Spartanburg Herald-Journal by Adam Orr

 

 

A little West Coast flavor should arrive in the Upstate before year’s end.

The team at Drayton Mills Marketplace announced Thursday the project has signed the new flagship location for Holliday Brewing, a nano brewery expected to feature more than 25 different beers. It’ll occupy the more than 2,400-square-foot Suite 125, and plans call for a roughly 1,900-square-foot tasting room, comfy seating, large TVs and an outdoor, dog-friendly biergarten.

Drayton Mills also said Thursday at least two other area businesses, Hypersign and the Lauren Ashtyn Collection, will use the mill to expand their current operations. It’s the latest business buzz at Drayton Mills, which recently announced big menu changes at The Standard and a second location for direct-pay medical provider Palmetto Proactive.

Holliday Brewing is the brainchild of brothers Jim and John Holliday, who grew up in San Diego, which has a reputation as a kind of ocean-side craft beer mecca.

The duo’s creations have names like Aloha Beach, a hazy India pale lager, and Hannah, an orange blossom honey ale, which they say are inspired by the Holliday family’s love of adventure and travel. You can also expect a variety of India pale ales.

“San Diego now has over 200 breweries,” Jim Holliday, who will lead operations for the company, said in a statement. “It’s just saturated. We talked about this area, which is near the thriving craft beer scene in Western North Carolina, and just said this is ideal. Drayton Mills is the perfect location for us, and it will give us the opportunity to introduce our West Coast-style beers to South Carolina.”

Head Brewer John Holliday said the company would offer up a large selection of IPAs, in addition to an amber and a “well-rounded palate of beers for every consumer.”

The pair have cultivated a set of skills over the years that might just make them ideal to get a nano brew startup off the ground.

John Holliday has worked for five years as a maintenance manager for San Diego-based White Labs, a company that provides yeast and quality testing for breweries nationwide, and Jim Holliday has more than three decades of experience as a manufacturing manager.

Tara Sherbert, managing principal of TMS Development and owner of Dratyon Mills Lofts and Marketplace, said the deal with the Holliday brothers has been in the works for more than a year-and-a-half. She described the nano brewery concept as one that allows brewers to bring their creativity to life through smaller batches.

She said the brothers will move into the residential side of Drayton Mills in September and should have the brewery off the ground by November. You can expect tastings and sneak peaks of the brewery in action before that, she said.

Michael Spangenberg, an architect who has worked on the Drayton Mills project, joked that the brewery might be the project’s worst kept secret, but he called it the perfect size for the marketplace.

“It’s a right-sized brewery for Drayton, a community-based brewery,” Spangenberg said. “That’s one thing about this craft beer movement; where once you had the neighborhood bar, now you’ve got the neighborhood brewery.”

The brewery will share a common wall with Drayton Mill’s new event space, and Spangenberg said the goal of adding the brewery is to build a hub for not only Drayton Mills residents, but the wider Spartanburg community.

“I think it’s going to be a wonderful place to be,” Spangenberg said.

 

A new HQ

Drayton Mills also said it’ll now host the new headquarters for the Lauren Ashtyn Collection.

A nationally recognized brand, the Spartanburg-based company was formed in 2015 by Lauren Ashtyn Guest and her husband, Christopher Guest.

The company, which sells luxury hairpieces for men and women, launched a downtown salon in 2017, saw its products added to Grammy Awards gift bags in the same year, and has expanded to multiple markets in the United States, Canada and Europe. It also boasts a massive social media presence, with some 170,000 followers on Instagram alone.

The company has developed tour and wholesale departments to accommodate its growth.

“The Lauren Ashtyn Collection is honored to partner with Drayton Mills and their other rapidly growing businesses on their campus,” the company said in a statement. “Drayton Mills is a perfect fit with the luxury of the Lauren Ashtyn Collection. The company anticipates a strong and prosperous collaboration with Drayton MIlls as both continue to grow.”

 

Hypersign arrives

High-tech will also call Drayton Mills home with the expansion of Spartanburg-based Hypersign, according to company founder Neil Willis. The company will be relocating from its current corporate office on Daniel Morgan Avenue in downtown to Drayton Mills.

Willis previously owned Cynergi Systems, the largest audio-visual integrator in the Southeast, and said he realized the need for a quick, simple digital sign platform, an idea which later led to Hypersign’s digital software solution.

The initiative expanded into its own company in 2013, and has consumers in all 50 states, Canada, Mexico, Europe, the Middle East, Africa and Asia, with customers ranging from educational institutions, healthcare, government, sports and businesses.

“With its historic architecture and great location on Spartanburg’s east side, Drayton Mills Marketplace is a beautiful campus with great amenities,” Willis said in a statement. “Its location is also convenient for our current employees, which is important to us as a company.”

Sherbert confirmed earlier this month her sole ownership of Dratyon Mills Lofts and Marketplace. The project’s residential spaces are fully leased, and Thursday’s announcements means the majority of the project’s commercial spaces are now booked.

She said in a statement the goal has always been to provide an “it’s all here” destination for the community, where residents and visitors can enjoy the mill’s amenities from “dusk to dawn.”

“With our luxury apartments now full, we believe our combined marketplace tenants create the optimal mix for this thriving community,” Sherbert stated. “We could not be more thrilled and honored to make these announcements today.”

Drayton Mills, a Sherbert Group Development in Spartanburg, S.C. Used as Model for Success in Congressional Tax Credits Debate

CHARLOTTE, N.C.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–The historic renovation of Drayton Mills is becoming a national model for success in using tax credits to revitalize communities, with Sen. Tim Scott showcasing the project during the Nov. 16, 2017, Senate Finance Committee hearings.

Historic Tax Credits (HTC) encourage private sector investments in the rehabilitation and re-use of historic buildings. With industry professionals responding to policy shifts in tax reform that jeopardized the Historic Tax Credit, Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., offered Drayton Mills as an example of how tax credits can be used to renovate an historic structure and transform a community. See www.HTCisnotHistory.com.

On Nov. 6, 2017, Senator Tim Scott and Secretary Dr. Ben Carson of Housing and Urban Development visited Drayton Mills to witness firsthand the successful historic renovation project. “I had the good pleasure and privilege of taking Sec. Ben Carson to Drayton Mills in Spartanburg, S.C., an old factory that has benefited from historic preservation dollars and vision that has brought new life back into an old community, a dilapidated part of the community,” Scott told committee members.

Tara Sherbert, CEO of The Sherbert Group, stated, “Senator Scott’s support of the HTC program has been instrumental in ensuring that this program will be sustained for continued redevelopment throughout the state of South Carolina and nationwide.”

Senator Scott supported efforts to incentivize investment in economically distressed areas by allowing billions of dollars in private capital to be used to encourage small businesses and to develop dilapidated properties in at-risk communities most in need of a resurgence. Senator Scott’s (R-S.C.) bipartisan legislation, Investing in Opportunity Act (IIOA), passed out of the Finance Committee as a part of the tax reform bill that will be voted on by the full Senate in the coming weeks.

Using Drayton Mills as an example, Governor Henry McMaster (R-S.C.) lauded efforts by congressional members and encouraged their support in economic growth initiatives stimulated by HTC, such as Drayton Mills. Drayton Mills is the largest historic restoration project in South Carolina to-date. The site of a former textile mill and mill warehouses that were constructed between 1902 and 1950, Drayton Mills offers 70 unique floor plans, as well as a variety of mixed-use space.

During recent remarks at Knowledge Park, a large redevelopment effort in Rock Hill, S.C., Gov. McMaster again acknowledged community revitalization efforts through historic tax credits and commended the transformation taking place at Knowledge Park, where a once-thriving textile manufacturing operation spanning city blocks had sat blighted and abandoned. Because of HTC, the more than 200,000-square-foot redevelopment will host jobs in the knowledge-based economy through a variety of business tenants, new hotels, an athletic center and 175,000-square-foot arena.

Drayton Mills and Knowledge Park are just two examples of tax credit industry leaders championed by The Sherbert Group.

Contacts
The Sherbert Group
Tara Sherbert, 704-399-4455
Managing Principal
tara@sherbertconsulting.com
www.sherbertgroup.com

Ribbon-Cutting at Drayton Mills Marketplace

Drayton Mills Marketplace celebrated a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Tuesday, April 11th as hosts of the Spartanburg Area Chamber of Commerce’s April Business After Hours event. South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster spoke at the event and toured the Drayton Mills campus. During the event, guests were able to tour the marketplace and meet the businesses opening soon at Drayton Mills including The Standard, Mozza Roasters and Burn Boot Camp.

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