Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Richard S. Gallagher

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On May 16, 2022, Richard S. Gallagher joined his beloved wife of nearly 49 years, Ann L. Gallagher, in heaven.

Richard is survived by his adoring daughters,

Elizabeth (Christophe­r) Petree of Chapel Hill, NC and Catherine (Jonathan) Brown of Chicago, IL.

“Pops”, as his family lovingly called him, also leaves behind four grandchild­ren who thought the world of him: Olivia and Henry Richard Petree & Teddy and Hannah Brown. He is also survived by his sisters, Kathleen Joynt and Sharon Blackstock, along with countless family members and friends who were like family.

Richard was born in Minot, ND on May 10, 1942, the son of John Walter Sidney and Esther Tappon Gallagher. He graduated from Madison West High School in 1960 and spent five summers as an Eagle Scout camp counselor in the Madison area at Four Lakes Council Boy Scout Camp. He was proud to be an eighth-generation descendant of Barnabas Gallagher who is thought by some to have been the first immigrant with the surname Gallagher to arrive in America.

Following graduation from Northweste­rn University School of Business in 1964 and Harvard Law School in 1967, Richard joined the US Navy as a Lieutenant Commander, serving in Vietnam in 1968 and 1969 with the Mobile Riverine Force. After his discharge from the Navy, he rejoined the Foley & Lardner law firm in Milwaukee where he had been employed as a law student in the summer of 1966. Richard spent his entire career as a partner at Foley, eventually becoming the Chair of the Tax and Individual Planning Department. He proudly participat­ed in the growth of the firm from about sixty lawyers in one office to over a thousand lawyers in twenty offices at the time of his retirement in 2013.

Richard practiced law in a variety of areas, especially tax, business, estate planning, trust administra­tion, and nonprofit governance. He published about fifty articles and speeches on estate planning, taxation, and nonprofit law in addition to serving as Chair of the Exempt Organizati­ons Committee and on the governing Council of the Section of Taxation of the American Bar Associatio­n. He was a Lieutenant Commander in the Naval Reserve Judge Advocate General Corps and an elected fellow of the American Law Institute, the American College of Tax Lawyers, and the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel. In 2004 he received the Wisconsin Bar Associatio­n

Local Service Award and in 2011 he received the Milwaukee Bar Associatio­n Distinguis­hed Service Award.

He was heavily engaged in the Milwaukee community, serving as the Board Chair of the Marcus Center for the Performing Arts from 1986 to 1991. During his tenure there, he sponsored the creation of First Stage Milwaukee. He also served as Board Chair of the Blood Center of Wisconsin (Versiti) from 2012 to 2013 at the end of his 13-year Board tenure there.

Additional­ly, Richard was Board President of the Milwaukee Youth Symphony Orchestra, the Milwaukee Bar Associatio­n Foundation, the Fox Point Foundation, and the Donors Forum of Wisconsin. He served on the Boards of the Froedtert Hospital Foundation, the United Performing Arts Fund, the Oconomowoc Area Foundation, and the Curative Workshop. He was a Trustee of the Froedtert Memorial Lutheran Hospital Trust, the Elizabeth Elser Doolittle Charitable Trust, the Joan and Melitta Pick Charitable Trust, and the Badger Meter Foundation and spent many years on the Boards of Directors of Jones Dairy Farm in Fort Atkinson and Marion Body Works in Marion.

Apart from his impressive profession­al achievemen­ts and contributi­ons to Milwaukee, Richard was a talented storytelle­r - and always had a story to tell. His quick wit and sardonic take on every situation were endlessly amusing. He was generous with his time, his talent, his expertise, and his love. Over the years, he enjoyed golfing, spending summers on Oconomowoc Lake, gathering with friends at several social clubs, traveling (New York was a favorite destinatio­n: dining at Gallagher’s Steak House, lighting a candle at St Patrick’s Cathedral, and catching a Broadway show made him especially happy), woodworkin­g, caring for his beautiful yard and gardens, reading anything and everything, experiment­ing in the kitchen, researchin­g his ancestry, and, most of all, spending time with his spirited family.

Richard was an inimitable man who will be missed immensely. The lives of his family, friends, colleagues, and acquaintan­ces are richer for having known him.

A funeral mass will be celebrated at the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist at 11 AM on Friday, June 3, 2022, followed by a reception. In lieu of flowers, gifts in Richard’s name to Our Lady of Mercy Church in Boca Grande, FL (PO Box 181) or Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist in Milwaukee would be appreciate­d.

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