Queen Margaret College became part of the
University of Glasgow in 1892, following the Scottish Universities Commissioners ordinance to empower Scottish Universities to provide instruction for women and enable them to graduate. At this point Galloway became an officer of the university, though she continued to decline payment for her services. She took a keen interest in the pastoral life of the university's female students; she organised social events and gatherings, encouraged the formation of societies and unions, and followed their careers after they graduated. In 1885, she was one of the founders of the Queen Margaret Guild, an organisation that arranged talks for the university extension movement. In 1894, she helped found the student residence Queen Margaret Hall. which was part of the social reform
settlement movement established in the 1880s. In 1893, Galloway was invited to the Chicago Great Exhibition as a representative of Queen Margaret College. In 1907, Galloway was awarded an Honorary
LLD by the University of Glasgow in recognition of her lifelong dedication to the higher education of women ==Politics and religion==