Herb Gallagher
Quick Facts
Biography
Herbert Gallagher was the Athletic Director for Northeastern University for twenty one years. Prior to that he had been the head coach of the varsity men's ice hockey team, head coach for both the freshman and varsity baseball teams and a backfield coach for the football program.
Career
Herb Gallagher arrived at Northeastern in 1929 after graduating from Newton High School and swiftly became a local sports legend. By the time he graduated in 1935 he had earned nine letters across three sports (baseball, ice hockey and soccer). Over the next year Gallagher played in both Provincial Baseball League and the English National League before accepting the coaching position with the Austrian national team for the 1936 Winter Olympics. Gallagher lead the team to the second round and a 7th-place finish in the 16-team field and had planned on staying in Europe for the remainder of the decade but was convinced to return to the states due to the possibility of war.
Gallagher returned to Northeastern as a professor of physical education and economics and took on three separate coaching roles with the hockey, baseball and football programs. He worked at the university for six years before leaving after the outbreak of World War II. Gallagher joined the Navy and rose to the rank of Lieutenant Commander. He returned to Boston after the war and resumed his coaching duties in 1946. Gallagher was named as the New England hockey coach of the year in 1948 and shortly afterwards became one of the driving forces behind the formation of the Beanpot an annual ice hockey tournament held between the four Boston-area programs. In 1955 he was named as Athletic Director for NU and over the next twenty one years worked to raise the profile of the school's programs. In that time he was also on the NCAA Ice Hockey Rules Committee and the USOC for the 1956 Winter Olympics.
Herb Gallagher has been honored several times for his career including being inducted into the Northeastern University Athletic Hall of Fame in 1975 and receiving the Hobey baker Legend of Hockey award in 1985 as well as the The John "Snooks" Kelley Founders Award in 1991. An annual award named in his honor is given out by the New England Hockey Writers Association to the best forward in the region.
College Head Coaching record
Season | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Postseason | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Northeastern Huskies (Independent) (1936–1942) | |||||||||
1936–37 | Northeastern | 6–3–1 | |||||||
1937–38 | Northeastern | 3–9–1 | |||||||
1938–39 | Northeastern | 8–6–0 | |||||||
1939–40 | Northeastern | 7–4–0 | |||||||
1940–41 | Northeastern | 6–3–0 | |||||||
1941–42 | Northeastern | 7–5–0 | |||||||
Northeastern: | 37–30–2 | ||||||||
Northeastern Huskies (Independent) (1946–1955) | |||||||||
1946–47 | Northeastern | 5–9–0 | |||||||
1947–48 | Northeastern | 10–9–0 | |||||||
1948–49 | Northeastern | 9–7–0 | |||||||
1949–50 | Northeastern | 7–10–1 | |||||||
1950–51 | Northeastern | 8–11–0 | |||||||
1951–52 | Northeastern | 11–10–0 | |||||||
1952–53 | Northeastern | 9–10–2 | |||||||
1953–54 | Northeastern | 5–12–1 | |||||||
1954–55 | Northeastern | 7–14–0 | |||||||
Northeastern: | 71–92–4 | ||||||||
Total: | 108–122–6 | ||||||||
National champion Postseason invitational champion |