The Markow Family Tree

SAMUEL RUBELAge: 66 years18831949

Name
SAMUEL RUBEL
Given names
SAMUEL
Surname
RUBEL
Hebrew
שמואל ב'ר צבי הירש
Birth about 1883 (5643)

MarriageDORA NOCHUMOWITZView this family
yes

Death April 29, 1949 (Nissan 30, 5709) (Age 66 years)
Burial
Family with DORA NOCHUMOWITZ - View this family
himself
SAMUEL RUBEL
שמואל ב'ר צבי הירש
Birth: about 1883 (5643)
Death: April 29, 1949 (Nissan 30, 5709)Ridgefield, Fairfield County, Connecticut, USA
wife
DORA NOCHUMOWITZ
Birth: December 6, 1894 (Kislev 8, 5655) 43 35Liepāja, Russia
Death: September 19, 1969 (Tishrei 7, 5730)Miami, Miami-Dade County, Florida, USA
Marriage:
daughter
BERNICE RUBEL
Birth: July 10, 1922 (Tamuz 14, 5682) 39 27Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, USA
Death: June 16, 1974 (Sivan 26, 5734)Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, USA
7 years
daughter
HONORA “HONEY” RUBEL
Birth: December 24, 1928 (Tevet 11, 5689) 45 34Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, USA
Death: October 31, 2003 (Heshvan 5, 5764)Los Angeles County, California, USA

SourceObituaries
Citation details: Hartford Courant
Date of entry in original source: April 30, 1949 (Iyar 1, 5709)
Text:
Samuel Rubel Dies At Home In Ridgefield Leader of New York Ice and Fuel Industry Also Brewery Head Ridgefieid, April 29. (AP.)- Samuel Rubel, a leader in the ice and fuel industry in New York City and northern New Jersey, and president of the Ebling Brewery, died at his home, Sunset Hall, here today. Rubel was stricken in New York two days ago and was brought here to recuperate from what members of his household described as a coronary thrombosis. He was a native of Russia who came here in 1921 and for several years was an ice peddler in Brooklyn. With the years he expanded his holdings to become head of the Mountain Ice and Fuel Corporation, in New Jersey, the Rubel Corporation, New York City, and other businesses. Rubel bought Sunset Hall with its 44-room house and 110 acres of grounds two years ago from Mrs. Ruth Cuten who had offered it as a sight for United Nations headquarters. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Dora Naehmovitz Rubel, of this town, and two daughters, Mrs. Bernice Ross and Mrs. Honora Shapiro, both of Roslyn, L. I. Funeral services will be held in New York Sunday.
SourceFindagrave.com
Text:
"Samuel Rubel (1881-1949) was an immigrant from Russia in 1904. 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 Ruble married Dora Nachumowitz and the two had two daughters. Dora N. Rubel re-married in 1959 (to Louis Daitch of the Daitch Supermarket chain). 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 was a big supporter of The Boy Scouts of America. Just a few months before he died, Samuel Rubel donated a large tract of land located on Lake Stillwater to the Bethlehem Area Council. The land, which is now known as Camp Minsi, is still in use today (one cove on the lake is named in his honor - "Rubel Cove".) Rubel was president of Ebling Brewery at the time of his death and his net worth was estimated at $8,000,000. [edit] Samuel Rubel's Obituary From the New York Times (April 30, 1949) " The career of Samuel Rubel verged on the fabulous... His first route was the north side of Watkins Street, in the East New York section. He covered it with a horse and wagon... Up the tenement stoops Mr. Rubel personally carried his cakes of ice and bags of coal. His next move was to a coal platform, with an office on Pitkin Avenue. 'That year I started selling to other peddlers,' he said later... In 1925 he bought the majority stock of the Ice Service Corporation and also two other firms... Two years later his firm was merged with the Commonwealth Fuel Company and the Putnam Coal and Ice Company. The new concern, the Rubel Corporation, of which he became head, then had thirty-five coal pickets, forty ice factories and fifty coal and ice stations in the greater city. The same year Mr. Rubel bought the Ebling Brewery then in trouble with prohibition authorities for the manufacture and sale of beer. He planned to convert it into an ice-cream factory.
SourceInternet
Date of entry in original source: May 19, 2017 (Iyar 23, 5777)
Text:
Article on Samuel Rubel