Edward J. Gallagher
Edward Joseph Gallagher, also known as E. J. Gallagher, was a prolific real estate developer in Baltimore during the late 1800s and early 1900s. Gallagher built many of Baltimore's now iconic row houses. His best known development was the neighborhood of Ednor Gardens-Lakeside.
Early life
Gallagher was born in Baltimore, the son of Irish immigrants.Career
As a youth, Gallagher apprenticed as a carpenter. He was also an amateur painter and earned a law degree from the Baltimore College Law School in the 1890s. In July, 1888, he built his first house on his own in Canton. Gallagher was building row houses at a time when large numbers of immigrants were moving to Baltimore. Several real estate developers, including Galagher, were the leaders in the real estate market this population boom created. In 1895 to 1896, he partnered with Francis Yewell to build houses for Baltimore's elite on Eutaw Street. By 1909, Gallagher had incorporated a real estate business as the E.J. Gallagher Realty Company. In the 1920s, he developed Saint Clair, a working-class rowhouse community. Gallagher's best known development, Ednor Gardens, was named after his son Edward and his son Albert Norman. By the 1930s, Edward and Norman were managing the company. His sons also helped manage the Eastern Supply Company, a building materials and coal company he had acquired.Prior to the passage of the Fair Housing Act of 1968, racially restrictive covenants were used in Baltimore to exclude African-Americans and other minority groups. Advertisements in the Baltimore Sun described Gallagher's Ednor Gardens as "restricted".