Meyer Bloomfield

In 1910, he became director of the Vocational Bureau, which was founded by his former law school professor Frank Parsons.

[3] In the winter of 1910, he went to Puerto Rico to study industrial and education conditions there on behalf of the War Department.

When America entered World War I, he went to Washington, D.C.[5] and served in the United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation as Head of the Industrial Service Department.

From October 1918 to January 1919, he was special representative in Europe for The Saturday Evening Post and investigated labor conditions there.

He then moved to New York City, where he specialized in immigration law and did consulting work in the industrial relations field.

He contributed to industrial and popular periodicals and published several books on labor, management, and vocational issues.

[2] Bloomfield died in Presbyterian Hospital from stomach cancer that metastasized in the liver on March 12, 1938.