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・ Samuel Rossiter Betts
・ Samuel Rostill Lines
・ Samuel Roth
・ Samuel Rothschild
・ Samuel Rotondi
・ Samuel Roukin
・ Samuel Rousseau
・ Samuel Rovinski
・ Samuel Rowbotham
・ Samuel Rowland Fisher
・ Samuel Rowlands
・ Samuel Rowley
・ Samuel Roxy Rothafel
・ Samuel Roy McKelvie
・ Samuel Roy-Bois
Samuel Rubel
・ Samuel Ruben
・ Samuel Rubin
・ Samuel Rubin (philanthropist)
・ Samuel Rudder
・ Samuel Rudin
・ Samuel Ruggles-Brise
・ Samuel Ruiz
・ Samuel Rush Meyrick
・ Samuel Russell
・ Samuel Russell (disambiguation)
・ Samuel Russell (Yale co-founder)
・ Samuel Russell Feaver
・ Samuel Rutherford
・ Samuel Rutherford (Georgia politician)


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Samuel Rubel : ウィキペディア英語版
Samuel Rubel

Samuel Rubel (1881-1949) was an American millionaire immigrant from Russia. In the 1920 U. S. Census his occupation was described as "Coal Miner & Ice Retailer." Rubel emigrated to America in 1904 from Riga, Latvia, at the age of 23. Rubel started his career selling coal and ice with a horse-drawn wagon in the tenements in the East New York section of Brooklyn.
Samuel Rubel married Dora Nachumowitz; the two had two daughters.
Rubel became the head of the Pocono Mountain Ice Company based in Hoboken, New Jersey, which became the leading ice company in the Pennsylvania and New Jersey area, buying up many of the smaller ice companies. Beginning in the 1930s with the advent of refrigeration, the harvesting of the ice from lakes became less and less profitable. Eventually, the ice companies folded, and Rubel switched his focus to other fields (such as brewing).
Rubel died on April 29, 1949. He was president of Ebling Brewery at the time of his death and his net worth was estimated at $8,000,000.
Rubel was a supporter of the Boy Scouts of America. Samuel Rubel donated a large tract of land around Stillwater Lake in Pocono Summit, PA to the Bethlehem Area Council; the land was presented to the Scouts on May 27, 1949.〔(Dedication plaque ). Camp Minsi. July 30, 1950.〕〔''Scouts get 1,100 acres.'' New York Times. June 17, 1949.〕 The land, which is now known as Camp Minsi, is still in use by the Boy Scouts today.〔(Camp Minsi History )〕
==Death==

Obituary from the New York Times (April 30, 1949):〔Samuel Rubel Obituary. ''New York Times''. April 30, 1949.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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