Galloway Gift to Benefit Honors College, Lamar Order

Funds will help provide opportunities for students in research and experiential learning

Bob Galloway (center) is greeted at the Inn at Ole Miss by (from left) Suzette Matthews, development officer for the School of Law, Jennifer Parsons, assistant dean of the Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College, Debbie Bell, professor of law and interim dean of law, and Cham Trotter, president-elect of the Lamar Order. Photo by Bill Dabney/UM Foundation

Bob Galloway (center) is greeted at the Inn at Ole Miss by (from left) Suzette Matthews, development officer for the School of Law, Jennifer Parsons, assistant dean of the Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College, Debbie Bell, professor of law and interim dean of law, and Cham Trotter, president-elect of the Lamar Order. Photo by Bill Dabney/UM Foundation

OXFORD, Miss. – University of Mississippi alumnus Bob Galloway has designated the Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College and the Lamar Order at the UM School of Law as beneficiaries of a $1.6 million planned gift.

The Gulfport resident said he knows the importance of planned giving and wants to support two university entities that helped shape his future. The Robert C. Galloway Endowment will be shared equally by the Honors College and Lamar Order to help cover operating expenses.

A Carrier Scholar, Galloway was a member of the University Scholars Program as an undergraduate. The program eventually evolved into the Honors College.

“I’ve been very impressed with the things the Honors College has done, so I thought it would be a good recipient,” Galloway said.

Gifts such as Galloway’s enable the Honors College to significantly expand its footprint, said Douglass Sullivan-González, the college’s dean.

“Private gifts open windows of opportunity for our students to engage our world as scholar and citizen,” he said. “We must move beyond the traditional classroom and create teaching moments in a variety of places and languages as we answer together the fundamental questions of our time. Private gifts make these teaching moments come to life for our students.

“Galloway’s gift in particular will help sustain student research and experiential learning that paves the way for our Honors College to set the debate on campus for both students and faculty.”

A 1964 liberal arts graduate, Galloway completed his juris doctorate degree from the law school in 1967.

“I have so many great friends I made at the law school and I’ve earned my living at practicing law since 1969,” Galloway said. “Also, I’ve been a longtime member of the Lamar Order and I know the school needs the money.”

Debbie Bell, interim dean of the school, agreed: “The law school is deeply grateful to Bob Galloway for his generous support. We are at a time when private support is essential for the law school to maintain our existing programs and grow to meet the needs of 21st century lawyers.”

After law school, Galloway served in the U.S. Army for two years before beginning his career as an attorney on the Mississippi Gulf Coast.

Having graduated a lieutenant after participating in the Ole Miss ROTC program, Galloway attended officer basic training in Fort Gordon, Georgia, and then Army Security Agency School at Fort Devens, Massachusetts. From there, he served as a military intelligence officer with the First Infantry Division in Vietnam for a year before being stationed in Virginia.

After completing his required two-year commitment to the Army, Galloway returned home to Gulfport, where he began practicing law in his father’s firm.

“He was a senior partner in a firm called Eaton, Cottrell, Galloway & Lang, which grew and then split up and our part of the old firm became Butler Snow’s first satellite office, with the main office being in Jackson,” Galloway said. “We had about 80 lawyers then, and now there are about 335 with 17 offices in nine states, Hong Kong, London and Singapore.”

Galloway said he hopes his gift to the university will be used to maintain the quality of the institutions he loves.

“We have an outstanding law school there and I think the Honors College is becoming one of the real jewels of liberal arts education,” he said. “I would hope that it would continue to be that and be all it can be. I believe it can be as good a school as any in the South.”

Galloway’s planned gift gives him membership in the 1848 Society, named for the year the university opened the Lyceum doors to its first students. The society recognizes generous donors who thoughtfully provide for the university through planned and deferred gifts.

“I want to extend my heartfelt thanks to Bob Galloway for his powerful gift,” Sullivan-González said. “He will change lives of both students and professors for generations to come.”

For more information about including the university in a will or other estate plans, contact the UM Foundation at 800-340-9542 or visit http://www.umfoundation.com/planning.