Samuel S. Bloom

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Samuel S. Bloom
Samuel S. Bloom dedicating the Ohel Shem cultural hall in Tel Aviv, 1928, which he had constructed in honor of Hayim Nahman Bialik, seated third from the right.

Samuel S. Bloom (Hebrew: שמואל (סם) שמעון בלום) (December 25, 1860 - October 10, 1941) was a U.S. Jewish Zionist leader and industrialist and innovator in the field of dentures.

Biography[edit]

Bloom was born in Vilkomir, Russian Empire (nowadays Ukmergė, Lithuania), into a religious Jewish family. In 1882, he immigrated to United States of America. He established a plant manufacturing dentures in Philadelphia [1] and was a member of the American Jewish Committee and the American Jewish Congress and attended the World Zionist Congress.

In 1926, he immigrated to Palestine. Bloom built the "Ohel Shem" house in 1928 in the cultural center of Tel Aviv, for the benefit of his friend, the poet Hayim Nahman Bialik, particularly for the dissemination of knowledge of Judaism in all its branches.[2]

Bloom died on September 10, 1941, and was buried in the Trumpeldor Cemetery in Tel Aviv.

The singer Danny Maseng and the poet Amichai Chasson are his great-grandsons.

Further reading[edit]

  • Samuel S. Bloom, Samuel S. Bloom - My Memories, Published by Palestine Publishing Company, Tel-Aviv, 1938
  • David De Vries, From Porcelain to Plastic: politics and Business in a Relocated False Teeth Company, 1880s-1950s, Enterprise & Society: The International Journal of Business History, 14, 1, 2013, 144-181.

References[edit]