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Gene
was born October 4, 1950, in Greenwood, South
Carolina. His mother, Barbara Dyal Robinson,
always claimed, Joe DiMaggio, N.Y. Yankees, hit a
homerun that afternoon in the World Series Game. Named
after his father, Eugene Davy Robinson Jr.,
“Little Gene” always kept up with the Yankees team as a
child. He could recite the starting players by name and
position for years, so there had to be something
relevant that on the day he was born, Joe cracked a
homer.

Gene's Mom and Dad
Moving to Calhoun
County in 1956 and growing up in the “country” on
top of Camp Cottaquilla mountain outside of
Jacksonville, this skinny “country” boy
spent
his youth outside for the most part, riding bikes,
throwing rocks, and playing football. He loved his home,
his life, his friends and brothers. Attending
Jacksonville schools through the 7th grade,
he was an average boy who hated school and could not
wait for each summer to begin. Bored in school he read a
series of orange-colored biography books, which gave his
love of American History and the leaders and others who
shaped this history. During the short summer months he
played outside in the Alabama woods, if he was not on a
baseball field in Jacksonville.
In the eight grade he went to Anniston’s
Johnson Junior High, so he could work at his dad’s store
in Anniston. So from the eighth through the eleventh
grade he was in the Anniston School system at Johnson
and the Quintard Anniston High School. Still a shy,
skinny kid from Jacksonville, he blended in and stayed
out of trouble. but still did not care for school,
rather he began to like retail business. He had always
worked at his Dad’s business on weekends, since he was
eight years old. He remembers at eight, starting the day
sweeping the store, to the TV display area and stopping
to watch TV, especially enjoying the Three Stooges, who
reminded him of his brothers. By his senior year in high
school, he was making a whopping twenty five cents and
hour, working by assembling bikes, wagons, trikes, and
lawn mowers on his break from being a salesperson and
the secretary’s General Hospital on TV.
After graduating high school in
Jacksonville in 1968 and a stint at Jacksonville
State University, he joined the Navy during the Vietnam
war in 1972. Serving in Washington D.C. for four years,
he attended University of Maryland night school and
continued studying his only two interests in college
that being Economics and History. After an honorable
discharge from the Navy, he came back home to live in
good old Alabama, he came home to work in the family
business; what he enjoyed most in live, along with
Alabama football and Auburn football unless they played
each other. He liked selling lawn mowers, appliances,
tires and batteries, and eventually toys. All it took
was being away a few years in the military to know how
much he missed Alabama and his community Calhoun County,
not to mention the store he was to take over.
Business milestones include the move
to current location at 1000 noble street, in February,
1998 and today we are 52 years old in business in
Anniston, Alabama, which is quite a feat, considering
the fact that in the last eight years so many family
oriented long-term businesses have gone out of business
in Anniston. Hall building after 66 years, OK Tire and
Berman-Gayles and Kitchen’s Department Store and LeJax
Appliances all over 50 years old have closed their doors
forever and nothing has taken their places. These
business closings the past eight years have affected
Gene like a slap in the face. He knows it could be
Western Auto or any business in Anniston, because city
officials have not been concerned about small business
since Howell, became Mayor in 2000. The big thing like
not modernizing the business license fees, the small
things like not passing any parking ordinances has left
Noble Street and connecting streets a wild west show
parking-wise.
In 2003, he gave his wife, Mary Parker Robinson,
a graduate of Anniston High School 1972, a choice
between opening another business in Birmingham area or
he would run for Mayor of Anniston and change the
business and progression of our city. Mary wanted him to
become mayor. So everyone can thank her for his entry
into politics.
Losing the 2004 mayor’s race did not set well
with him and now four years later, Gene is more
determined than ever to run a successful campaign!
He thinks it’s past time to take back our City and we
move Anniston forward…
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Robinson for Mayor of Anniston
...It's
Time To Take Our City Back And Then...We Move Anniston
Forward!
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Contact Gene Robinson • 1000 Noble Street • 256-237-0384 |
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