Meyer Jacobstein
(1880 - 1963)
JACOBSTEIN, Meyer, a Representative from New York;
born in New York City, January 25, 1880; moved with his parents to Rochester,
N.Y., in 1882; attended the public schools and the University of Rochester,
Rochester, N.Y.; was graduated from Columbia University, New York City,
in 1904; pursued postgraduate courses at the same university in economics
and political science; special agent in the Bureau of Corporations,
Department of Commerce, Washington, D.C., in 1907; assistant professor
of economics, University of North Dakota at Grand Forks 1909-1913; professor
of economics in the University of Rochester 1913-1918; was a director
in emergency employment management at the University of Rochester under
the auspices of the War Industry Board 1916-1918; elected as a Democrat
to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, and Seventieth Congresses (March 4,
1923-March 3, 1929); was not a candidate for renomination in 1928; delegate
to the Democratic National Conventions in 1924 and 1932; declined the
nomination of mayor of Rochester, N.Y., in 1925; engaged in banking
in Rochester, N.Y., 1929-1936; in 1936 became chairman of the board
of the Rochester Business Institute; member of the Brookings Institution
staff 1939-1946; economic counsel in the legislative reference service
of the Library of Congress from 1947 until his retirement May 31, 1952;
resided in Rochester, N.Y., until his death there on April 18, 1963;
interment in Mount Hope Cemetery.
Sources: Biographical
Dictionary of the United States Congress |