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Where              Where





 Hit the Road  Keeps You Moving.
                                                            Legacy
 Kindness




 The wrecker was lit up, certainly was on a mission, hauling a vehicle too precious for this earth. On that Gene’s
 Tire and Wrecker service rollback was a single, silver coffin and in that   3620 N. HighlandJackson , TN 38305
 coffin a man, who was the vehicle of kindness, love, and hope for so
 many. Perhaps, to give credence to such a kind soul was the fleet of
 competitor wreckers, lit up and following close behind to honor the ‘one   731-668-0908
 last unhook’ of a man, ascending into Heaven. For one day, October 22,
 2017, business competition ceased and all the lights were lit up to honor
 Gene Everett Allbert, Sr.   Gene’s Tire and Wrecker Service has all the

 Gene proudly served his country and in 1976, and with only an 8th   necessary tools and equipment to
 grade education, he started “Gene’s Tire and Wrecker Service”, but he
 also started a legacy of kindness and compassion for weary travelers.
 Gene’s kindness including extending credit to those who needed a tire   keep your ride moving.
 but at the time unable to pay. He trusted people, something of nostalgia
 today, but he loved to help. He enjoyed talking with people. We can often
 forget how important it is to simply talk with someone, share stories, and   In addition to excellent repair work, you will
 extend the simple courtesy
 of a listening ear.
           also find a geniune and compassionate staff,
 Gene was a family man,
 so his kindness wasn’t just   ready to keep you moving.
 for strangers, who became friends, but for his family as well. A race
 car enthusiast, he was eager to help his son get started in dirt track
 racing in the 1980’s. He often allowed his son and his friends to hang
 out in the garage, so they would have a safe place to just be kids and    Gene Allbert’s legacy remains in the
 boys. Gene carried kindness, humility, and love in his heart and the
 biggest smile on his face to reflect a life lived well and by faith.   service station he built.

 Gene loved coming to work, helping people, and worked until the
 day God called him
 home. He had always
 said that when he passed, he wanted to be towed to the cemetery
 aback of one of his wreckers. This is what his family did for him and
 took the long way around to Highland Memorial Garden to pass his
 beloved service station one more time.


 As the song goes, “Waiting on a Woman”, Gene’s wife of 53 years,
 Flossie, went to be with him and the Lord in 2019. We can only imag-
 ine the beautiful reunion that must have been.




 168  www.zoegracepublishing.com  ZGP Magazine  ZGP Magazine  www.zoegracepublishing.com                         169
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