Bill Gallagher

New Zealand businessman
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroNew Zealand businessman
A.K.A.William Murray Gallagher Sir Bill Gallagher Sir William Gallagher William Gallagher Bill Gallagher Jr Sir William Murray Gallagher
A.K.A.William Murray Gallagher Sir Bill Gallagher Sir William Gallagher William Gallagher Bill Gallagher Jr Sir William Murray Gallagher
PlacesNew Zealand
isBusinessperson
Work fieldBusiness
Gender
Male
Birth22 January 1941
Age84 years
Star signAquarius
Family
Father:Bill Gallagher (inventor)
Awards
Member of the Order of the British Empire1987
Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit1998
Knight Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit‎2010
New Zealand 1990 Commemoration Medal 
The details

Biography

Sir William Murray Gallagher, Lord of Bothwell and Kildrummie (born 22 January 1941) is a New Zealand businessman.

Biography

Gallagher was born on 22 January 1941, the son of Bill Gallagher and Millie Gallagher (née Murray).

The younger Bill Gallagher and his brother John took increasing roles in the business and marketing side of the family firm through the 1960s, with Bill leading the company's export push into Australia and becoming the Chief Executive and Chairman in 1973. By 2010, the Gallagher Group was exporting to over 130 countries with revenue of $160 million, and had over 1000 employees, including 600 in New Zealand. Their product range had expanded to include high-powered electric fences, automatic gate openers, security access systems, and animal weighing devices.

Gallagher and his wife, Judi, have three children.

Hamilton statue controversy

In 2013, the Gallagher Group donated to Hamilton City a statue of John Fane Charles Hamilton, a British naval officer who was killed at the Battle of Gate Pā, for whom the city was named. In 2017, Gallagher gave a speech in which he called the Treaty of Waitangi a "fraud", and said that non-Māori risked being stripped of their rights and becoming unable to visit New Zealand's beaches. In 2018, the statue of Hamilton was defaced with red paint, and it was removed from public display in Civic Square by the Hamilton City Council in 2020 following a request from the local iwi, Waikato Tainui. Gallagher subsequently circulated reports to city councillors detailing an alternative history of New Zealand in which Māori were not the first inhabitants of New Zealand, a theory that has been debunked by leading historians.

Philanthropy

The Sir William and Lady Judi Gallagher Foundation provides scholarships for computing and mathematical science, engineering, management and music (specifically opera).

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 08 Nov 2024. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.