- Samuel Simeon Fels
Samuel Simeon Fels, the youngest son of Lazarus and Susanna Fels, was born in
Yanceyville , N.C., onFebruary 16 ,1860 . His family moved north to settle inPhiladelphia , where in 1876 Samuel joined thesoap manufacturing business established that year by his older brother. The firm, Fels & Co., was incorporated in 1914, and Samuel became its first president, holding the office until his death in 1950. (The company was sold to Purex Corporation in 1964.) While remaining active in the affairs of Fels & Co., he also became one of Philadelphia's most prominentphilanthropist s. He took an active interest in, and gave generous support to, civic, scientific, cultural, and educational causes. In 1936 Fels established the Samuel S. Fels Fund to continue financial support in these areas. The Fund is still active (2008) and provides support through endowment to numerous non-profit organizations in the Philadelphia area.Notable Contributions
Fels helped to found the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society in 1884, the Federation of Jewish Charities in 1901, and the
Federated Allied Jewish Appeal in 1938. He also contributed to projects inPalestine , including the Jewish Agricultural Experiment Station from 1914, the Palestine Economic Corporation from its founding in 1925, and the HebrewTechnion Institute of Technology atHaifa from 1940. In 1934 he became a supporter of the Refugee Economic Corporation, and helped many Jews to emigrate from Western Europe before and duringWorld War II . Among these were physicistJames Franck , whose research onphotosynthesis at theUniversity of Chicago from 1939 Fels also supported.A letter of
17 July 1916 , signed byWoodrow Wilson , designates Fels an elector for thePennsylvania Democratic ticket. He was also named a delegate-at-large to theDemocratic National Convention in 1936. Fels gave financial support to theNAACP from 1912, a study of unemployment bySwarthmore College in 1930, theLeague of Nations in 1930, and the establishment of aUnited Nations Council in 1944.Samuel Simeon Fels founded the Fels Research Institute in 1929 as a philanthropic fund that would continue his endeavours even beyond his death. Its first project was the Fels Longitudinal Study. This study still continues today and focuses on physical development throughout the lifespan, although it was donated to the
Wright State University School of Medicine in 1977 and was only funded by the Fels Fund through 1982.In 1930 Fels donated the Fels
Planetarium to Philadelphia'sFranklin Institute .Fels' provided support for music and musicians including financial assistance to the National Opera Association and the Academy of Music, and was a director of the
Philadelphia Orchestra Association from 1915-1935. Fels also gave support to found the New School of Music in Philadelphia in 1943.Fels founded the University of Pennsylvania’s
Fels Institute of Government in the Wharton School of Finance in 1937. The new Institute’s proposed concentration on local government was revolutionary when compared to the focus of other programs of the day on state and Federal government and on international affairs. The Institute is now part of theUniversity of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences.Fels also commissioned, in 1939, a violin concerto from
Samuel Barber for his adopted son, violinist Iso Briselli.External links
* [http://www.fels.upenn.edu Fels Institute of Government, University of Pennsylvania]
* [http://sln.fi.edu/tfi/info/fels.html The Fels Planetarium at The Franklin Institute]
* [http://www.samfels.org/ The Samuel S. Fels Fund]
* [http://www.med.wright.edu/lhrc/fels.html Fels Longitudinal Study]
* [http://www.isobriselli.com Iso Briselli, the adopted son of Samuel S. Fels]ource
* [http://www2.hsp.org/collections/manuscripts/f/fels1776.htm#prefercite Background and scope, Samuel Simeon Fels Papers, 1889-1985 (Collection 1776)] , The Historical Society of Pennsylvania. The collection is open for research - no restriction on use.
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