Gallegher (character)

For the science fiction story "Gallegher Plus", see Lewis Padgett

Gallegher is the title of a story by American author Richard Harding Davis that was published in 1891.[1] The character Gallegher is a copy boy at a newspaper who goes on investigative adventures. In 1917, Thomas A. Edison, Inc.'s Conquest Pictures released a short film titled Gallegher: a newspaper story.[2] The character was also used for the 1928 film Let 'Er Go Gallegher.[3][4]

Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color also produced several series based on the story[5] from 1965 until 1968 including Gallegger (boy reporter), The Further Adventures of Gallegher, Gallegher Goes West, and The Mystery of Edward Sims.[6]

History

Davis, who worked as a journalist as well as a writer, published Gallegher and Other Stories with Scribner's in 1891. The book has a frontispiece and five illustrations by Charles Dana Gibson.[7]

Disney

The three Gallegher television episodes from Disney led to the three-part sequel The Further Adventures of Gallegher, the four-part Gallegher Goes West series, and the two episodes titled The Mystery of Edward Sims.[5]

gollark: Kantian ethics is the system Kant came up with, which I don't know that much about.
gollark: Deontological systems have rules like "do not kill people", and many deontologists would *not* divert the trolley because they feel like they're killing people one way and not the other.
gollark: Deontology in action!
gollark: And what you should do is the moral thing, yes.
gollark: Anyway! "Consequentialism" basically says "do whatever produces the best eventual outcome (by some metric)", so a consequentialist would probably say "well, 1 people dying is better than 5, so divert the trolley".

References

  1. Davis, Richard Harding (October 28, 2014). "Gallegher, and Other Stories". Read Books Ltd via Google Books.
  2. "Gallegher: a newspaper story". March 23, 1917 via Open WorldCat.
  3. "Let 'Er Go, Gallegher (1928)" via www.rottentomatoes.com.
  4. "AFI|Catalog". catalog.afi.com.
  5. "Gallegher Debuts on Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color". D23.
  6. "Gallegher | TV Guide". TVGuide.com.
  7. Davis, Richard Harding (March 23, 1891). Gallegher and Other Stories. Scribner's. p. 36 via Internet Archive. Gallegher.
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