Background
Galbreath was born on a farm in Fairfield Township, Columbiana County, Ohio, on June 8, 1864.
Galbreath was born on a farm in Fairfield Township, Columbiana County, Ohio, on June 8, 1864.
He graduated from Lisbon High School. In 1888 he graduated from Mountain. Union College, in Alliance, Ohio.
He was elected Mayor of Rogers, Ohio and State Senator. He was also the president of the National Typewriter Company. Galbreath was an attorney in Columbiana County, Ohio.
Locally, he was elected Mayor of Rogers, Ohio, and also held the position of County Liquor License Commissioner of Columbiana County.
In 1917 he was elected State Senator and was part of the 82nd Ohio General Assembly. In 1924 and again in 1926, Galbreath ran for Lieutenant Governor of Ohio but was defeated in the primary election on both occasions.
Galbreath served as president and professor at Volant Normal Academy in Volant, Pennsylvania. At that time, a normal school existed to provide high school graduates with necessary training to become teachers.
Galbreath was called the "driving force" behind the creation of the academy.
Volant Normal Academy was completed and dedicated in May 1889. The school was given the authority to grant degrees and the first commencement was held in the spring of 1890. The college was renamed Volant College in 1892.
At its peak, the college had approximately 150 students.
Enrollment at the college declined due to the competition with schools such as Westminster College and Grove City College. Additionally, an investigation into the validity of the degree program took place in 1898.
The college was cleared as a result of the investigation. In December 1896 Professor Galbreath left Volant to manage Mountain.
Hope College. The attorney general for the State of Ohio filed a petition against Mountain.
Hope College in February 1900 alleging that the college was conferring degrees solely on the basis of fees paid by the student to the president of the college and that the college was conferring degrees without requiring the students to attend classes or pass any kind of examination. As a result of the investigation the charter of Mountain. Hope College was annulled and the college was closed.
After the closing of Mountain.
Hope College, Galbreath"s endeavors included running a correspondence school known as Carnegie College in Rogers. and the renting and sale of typewriters for the Galbreath Typewriter Company (through Carnegie College).