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BLOOM, Sol, a Representative from New York; born in Pekin, Tazewell County, Ill., March 9,
1870; moved with his parents to San Francisco, Calif., in 1873; attended the public schools; engaged
in the newspaper, theatrical, and music-publishing businesses; superintendent of construction of the
Midway Plaisance at the Worlds Columbian Exposition at Chicago in 1893; moved to New York City
in 1903 and engaged in the real estate and construction business; captain in the New York Naval
Reserve in 1917; elected as a Democrat to the Sixty-eighth Congress by special election, to fill the
vacancy caused by the death of United States Representative-elect Samuel Marx, and reelected to the
thirteen succeeding Congresses (January 30, 1923-March 7, 1949); chairman, Committee on Foreign
Affairs (Seventy-sixth through Seventy-ninth Congresses and Eighty-first Congress), Special
Committee on Chamber Improvements (Eighty-first Congress); director of the United States George
Washington Bicentennial Commission; director general of the United States Constitution
Sesquicentennial Commission; chairman of the Committee on Celebration of the One Hundred and
Fiftieth Anniversary of the United States Supreme Court; director and United States Commissioner,
New York Worlds Fair, in 1939; died on March 7, 1949, in Washington, D.C.; interment in Mount
Eden Cemetery, Westchester Hills, N.Y.
BibliographyBloom Sol. The Autobiography of Sol Bloom. New York: Putnams, 1948.
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