John F. Gallagher
1924 - 2007
John Gallagher, the feisty
environmentalist who lead the fight in the
late 1960s to stop U.S. 68 from being
extended next to
Cedar Bog,
died Tuesday, August 7, 2007, in Community
Hospital. He was 83.
By profession an insurance
agent, Gallagher was passionately Irish and
passionate about nature, founding the Clark
County Audubon Society in 1964 while taking
a bird-watching class from then Wittenberg
University Professor Louis Laux.
"About three-quarters of the
way through the course, it was John who got
up and said, 'We can't end here,' " Laux
said for a 1998 story. "Once John got this
on his mind, we had an Audubon Society."
Fearing noise and pollution
would ruin Cedar Bog's ecosystem, Gallagher
brought the same determination to fight a
plan to run U.S. 68 beside the nature
preserve. The grass-roots battle "lasted
nine years, and I spent almost full time on
it," Gallagher said in an interview with the
News-Sun. "I just couldn't give up.
"Maybe it's the damned Irish
in me," added Gallagher, a longtime officer
of the local Irish Fellowship.
Although he had no children
of his own (wife Pauline died in 1986), he
was tremendously proud of the young people
he brought into the environmental movement,
calling them his boys. Among them are Neil
Bern-stein, winner of the Distinguished
Science Teaching Award from the Iowa Academy
of Sciences; Kevin McGowan, an ecological
researcher at Cornell University's
Laboratory of Ornithology; David Westneat, a
behavioral ecology and zoology teacher at
the University of Kentucky; Bret Whitney, a
renowned nature tour guide who has
identified several species of birds; and
John Horner, once named Educator of the Year
by the Environmental Education Association
of Washington state.
Gallagher's gift of gab was
honored in 1989 when the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources named a state nature
preserve in Clark County for him. He was
moved to tears by the surprise, and the
headline reporting the dedication read: "For
once, he was speechless."
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