superior of the commissariat of Our Lady of Good Council, the mission of the order in the United States. He also held the office of pastor at Lawrence, Mass., where he completed , a church building. He was next elected president of Villa- nova college, and during liis incumbency rebuilt the college and entirely reorganized tlie course of studies. He was elected provincial of the Augiis- tinian order when that body was formed into the province of Villanova in 1874. Shortly afterward he was nominated bishop of Hartford by the pope. He sent his resignation to Rome, as he did not wish to be separated from his religious brethren, but he was required to obey, and was consecrated by Archbishop Williams, 19 March, 1876. His appli- cation to his new duties weakened a constitution never strong, and, feeling that his health was fail- ing, he set out to seek rest at Villanova. When near New York he was seized with a haemorrhage, which proved fatal shortly afterward.
GALBRAITH, Andrew, colonist, b. in the
north of Ireland about 1692 ; d. after 1747. His
father, James, was of Scotch descent, and accom-
panied William Penn on his second visit to Ameri-
ca. Andrew came to this country with his father,
and settled in 1718, with other Scotch-Irish colo-
nists, in Lancaster county, Pa., where he had re-
ceived from the Penns a patent for 212 acres of
land. He organized the Donegal church, was its
first ruling elder,
selected the
site for its build-
ing, which is rep-
resented in the
accompanying il-
lustration. This
church was built
about 1730 in
place of a tempo-
rary log structure,
of ten years be-
fore, and is of
rough stone, laid
in mortar. The
Donegal settle-
ment became the
nursery of Presbyterianism in a
large part of
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Pennsylvania, Virginia, and North Carolina. Mr. Galbraith was the first coroner of Lancaster county, and a justice of common pleas for six years. He was elected to the general assembly in 1732, and was a justice of the peace from 1780 till 1747, when he sold his farm and removed to a place west of the Susr[uehanna river.
GALE, Benjamin, physician, b. on Long Island,
N. Y., in 1715 ; d. in Killingworth, Conn., 21 May,
1790. He was graduated at Yale in 1733, and
studied medicine under Dr. Jared Eliot, of Killing-
worth, marrying the daughter of his instructor and
settling in that town. He ranked high in his pro-
fession, and was also skilfid in agriculture, invent-
ing a drill plough, for which he received a medal
from an English society. He also took a lively in-
terest in politics, and wrote frequently for the
press. He published " A Dissertation on Inocula-
tion " (1763), and his method of prescribing a pre-
paratory course of mercury was commended in
England, and subsequently followed in this coun-
try. The same year he contributed to the Pliila-
delphia " Transactions " a paper on the " Bite of
Rattlesnakes." He wrote essays in the " Trans-
actions" of the New Haven medical society, and
also " A Dissertation on the Prophecies."
GALE, George Washington, educator, b. in
Northeast. Dutchess co., N. V., 3 Dec, 1789 ; d. in
Galesburg, 111., 13 Sept., 1862. He was graduated
at Union in 1814. and licensed as a Presbyterian
clergyman in October, 1819, when he took "charge
of the church at Adams. Jefferson co., N. Y. His
pastorate was distinguished by a powerful revival
of religion, in which Charles G. Finney and other
eminent men were among the converts. He re-
signed his charge in 1823, and afterward estab-
lished the Oneida manual laVjor institute at Whites-
boro, N. Y., where he remained from 1827 till 1834.
His life work was the organization of Knox col-
lege at Galesliurg. 111., in 1835. Pie was a man of
strong prejudices and acute intellect. He received
the degree of D. D.
GALE, Levin, lawyer, b. in Cecil county, Md.,
in 1824; d. in Baltimore, Md., 28 April, 1875. He
was the son of Levin Gale, who represented the
Elkton district in congress from 3 Dec, 1827. till
3 March, 1829. The son studied law, was admit-
ted to the bar, and settled at Elkton, Md. Meet-
ing with great success in his profession, he secured
a large practice, and argued many cases before the
Maryland court of appeals. Mr. (Gale is the author
of " A List of English Statutes Supposed to be
Applicable to the Several States of the Union."
GALE, Samuel, Canadian jurist, b. in St. Au-
gustine, Florida, in 1783; d. in Montreal, 15 April,
1865. His father, a native of Hampshire, Eng-
land, came to America in 1770, as assistant pay-
master to the British forces. The son was edu-
cated at Quebec, and in 1802 began the study of
law in the office of Chief-Justice Sewell in Mon-
treal. He was admitted to the bar in 1808, and,
having been appointed a magistrate in the Indian
territories, accompanied Lord Selkirk to the north-
west in 1815. Later, when Lord Dalliousie was
attacked for liis administration of Canadian affairs,
Mr. Gale went to Britain as the bearer of memo-
rials from the English-speaking residents of the
eastern townships and other sections of Lower
Canada, defending the viceroy's conduct. In 1829
he became chairman of the quarter sessions, and in
1831 was appointed a judge, which office he held
until ill health forced him to retire in 1849. While
upon the bench, he maintained the right of the
crown to establish martial law in 1837. He was
deeply interested in the freedom of the slave, and
when the Anderson case was before the Upper
Canada courts, was one of the most active among
those who aroused agitation. When the Prince of
Wales visited Canada, lie prepared a congratulatory
address from the colored people of the country,
which, however, was not received, as the prince was
desired by the Duke of Newcastle not to recognize
differences of race and creed unless it were impera-
tive. He fought a duel with Sir James Stuart
and was severely wounded. He was the author of
a series of letters to the " Montreal Herald," over
the signature of " Nerva," which were strongly con-
servative in tone, and made a powerful impression.
GALE, Theophilus, b. in England in 1028; d.
in London in 1678. He was a doctor of divinity,
a classical scholar, and a learned theologian and
philosopher. When he died, he left his library to
Harvard, more than doubling its collection of
books, which had been already enriched by gifts of
Gov. Winthrop, Richard Bellingham, John Light-
foot, Sir Kenelm Digby, Richard Baxter, and otliers.
GALES, Joseph, journalist, b. in England in 1760; d. in Raleigh, N. C., 24 Aug., 1841. He was originally a printer and bookseller at Sheffield, where he established and published the "Register." His democratic principles having involved him in