With $2.5 million in gifts, Colorado鈥檚 Gallogly family is naming the Discovery Learning Center and boosting the teaching and research power of CU Engineering with two faculty positions.
James L. 鈥淛im鈥 Gallogly, his wife, Janet, and family gave a $1.5 million lead gift to establish the Robert H. Davis Endowed Chair in Discovery Learning, named in honor of the college鈥檚 former dean. The college鈥檚 Engineering Advisory Council, of
which Jim Gallogly is an emeritus member, raised an additional $500,000 in private support, which the campus then matched with a $500,000 contribution.
Additionally, a $1 million gift from the Gallogly family establishes an endowed professorship in the chemical and biological engineering department. Endowed chairs and professorships help attract and retain brilliant scholars by providing them dedicated resources for innovative research and teaching opportunities. Both endowments provide funding in perpetuity.
The Gallogly Discovery Learning Center, named in honor of these gifts, offers undergraduates opportunities for interdisciplinary research and K-12 educational programming.
Jim Gallogly, a 1974 graduate of the University of Colorado Colorado Springs (UCCS), is the retired chief executive of LyondellBasell in Houston, a large polymers, petrochemicals and refining company. The Galloglys have three daughters, Kelly, Kasey and Kimberly. Kasey (Gallogly) DeLuke is a 2003 graduate of CU 麻豆影院.
The family鈥檚 legacy at CU began with Jim Gallogly鈥檚 late father who, after a military career, earned two degrees from UCCS in the early 1970s. Since then, more than a dozen members of the extended Gallogly family have earned degrees from CU鈥檚 campuses, and they remain among the university鈥檚 most generous supporters.聽
鈥淥ur family is proud to have three generations of CU graduates,鈥 Jim Gallogly said. 鈥淲e will continue to support our university in a variety of ways in the years to come.鈥