peoplepill id: ewing-galloway
EG
United States of America
1 views today
1 views this week
Ewing Galloway
American lawyer and journalist

Ewing Galloway

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
American lawyer and journalist
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Little Dixie, Pike County, Kentucky, U.S.A.
Place of death
Henderson, Henderson County, Kentucky, U.S.A.
Age
72 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Ewing Galloway (1881 – June 26, 1953) was an American journalist. He owned a photography agency that provided works focused around the economy and transportation. The Ewing Galloway Agency was, at the time, the largest photography agency in the United States.

Early life and career

Ewing Galloway grew up in Little Dixie, Kentucky. He first worked as a lawyer in Henderson County, Kentucky. To become a lawyer, he passed the bar examination in 1905. He was prosecutor for the City of Henderson, Kentucky. He also worked for the Henderson Gleaner. He became more interested in journalism due to his work at the Gleaner. He relocated to New York City. He took a journalism course at Columbia University. He left New York. He ended up working in the Midwestern United States and Hawaii. He moved back to Kentucky and worked for the Henderson Gleaner again as an intern. He moved back to New York. He worked for Literary Digest as an assistant editor.

Photography career

After working at Literary Digest, he started working for Collier's and subsequently became their photography editor. After Collier's, he worked for Underwood & Underwood. Galloway started his own stock photography company called the Ewing Galloway Agency which opened in 1920 in New York City and was located on 28th Street. He acquired 8,000 photographs in 1925. The photographs consisted of content focused around Asia and Africa. Galloway also had images related to Indigenous peoples of North Americas and Europe. His work was focused around transportation, commerce and the economy. He sold photographs to encyclopedias, books and magazines.

Galloway opened up satellite offices in Detroit, Los Angeles, Boston, Chicago, London, Amsterdam, and Berlin. His studios trained photographers and photographers for hire included Burton Holmes and Maclean Dameron. His business would be considered the largest photography agency in the United States at the time.

Later life and legacy

When he was older, Galloway lived mainly in Henderson, Kentucky, where he owned a farm, volunteered in the community. He also wrote a column in Kentucky newspapers. It was called "Kentucky on the March." He was a freemason. On June 18, Galloway was heading to a baseball game in a taxi when he was injured in a car accident. He died June 26 from complications sustained during the accident.

Photographs from Galloway's collection reside in the Library of Congress within the Frank G. Carpenter collection. Syracuse University Library houses the Ewing Galloway Collection of Photographs. That collection totals over 400,000 images. Ewing Galloway, Inc. continues to maintain economic branch of the collection. In 2007, the Kresge Art Museum put together a retrospective exhibition of Galloway photographs.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Ewing Galloway is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Ewing Galloway
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes