Samuel Bernard Hamburger (January 21, 1852 – December 28, 1926) was an American lawyer from New York.
[1] Hamburger attended the Scientific Academy in New Haven, Connecticut[2] and graduated from Columbia Law School in 1872[3] with an LL.B.
He studied law at different points with Robert S. Hale of Elizabethtown, New York, Churchill & Woodbury, Solomon F. Higgins, and Treman & Tyler.
[5] Hamburger was acting president of the Jewish Prisoners' Aid Society, chairman of the Executive Committee of the Jewish Protectory and Aid Society, a director of the Educational Alliance, an executive committee member of the New York branch of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, principal of the Congregation Ahawath Chesed Shaar Hashomayim Religious School, a trustee of the Washington Cemetery, and general counsel of the Independent Order Free Sons of Israel.
In 1904, Mayor George B. McClellan Jr. appointed him a member of the New York City Board of Parole.