Name Samuel Oschin | Died 2003 | |
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Centered In The Universe - Walk Out Theme Music Score Griffith Observatory
Samuel Oschin (1914–July 28, 2003), born in Detroit, was a Los Angeles entrepreneur and philanthropist who was dedicated to giving back to the Los Angeles community.
Contents
- Centered In The Universe Walk Out Theme Music Score Griffith Observatory
- Samuel oschin air and space center future plans and models
- Biography
- Philanthropy
- Personal life
- References

Samuel oschin air and space center future plans and models
Biography
Oschin was born to a Jewish family on July 18, 1914 in Dayton, Ohio. He has a brother, Albert Oschin, and sister, Ruth Oschin Weiss. At the age of ten, he started working cleaning chimneys which grew into a small business employing other boys. He never completed high school, instead working with his father who was a painter; and then took a job at Briggs manufacturing, a tool and die company in Detroit. During World War II, he his his two brothers formed their own tool and die company and won a large contract supplying airplane parts to the US Army Air Force which eventually evolved to the manufacture of bombs. After the war, he converted his factory to the manufacture of furniture to support increased demand from returning soldiers. In 1946, he moved to Los Angeles and started an air conditioning business with his brother. Seeing the demand for housing, he started a real estate development and construction company and was responsible for building one of the first planned communities in Oxnard. He then purchased the Savings and Loan Association in Pacoima, California which he grew to 27 branches statewide. In 1974, he sold Savings and Loan Association to Allstate. Oschin continued to build low cost housing in conjunction with Housing and Urban Development (HUD) until his retirement.
Philanthropy
Oschin's successful business ventures in manufacturing, banking, investment, and real estate development enabled philanthropic work in many areas (astronomy, medicine, education, and the arts). In 1981, he founded the Mr and Mrs Samuel Oschin Family Foundation.
After a generous donation to Palomar Observatory, the 48-inch Schmidt telescope there was renamed for him. Other organisations named for him include the Comprehensive Cancer Institute at Cedars-Sinai Hospital and the planetarium at Griffith Observatory. A new addition to the California Science Center, to be called the Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center, will be the permanent home of the Space Shuttle Endeavour, which is on temporary display in the Samuel Oschin Pavilion, which opened on October 30, 2012. Additionally, Oschin supported the Anti-Defamation League, The Jewish Home for the Aging, and Temple B'nai Hayim in Sherman Oaks, California.
Personal life
Oschin died on July 28, 2003. He is survived by his wife Lynda, a son, Michael Oschin, and a daughter, Barbara Oschin Ellis.
Oschin was a noted adventure traveler. He retraced Robert Peary's voyage to the North Pole, paddled up the Amazon in a dugout canoe, and crossed the Alps on an elephant following the model of Hannibal.