“Land-lottery event of Ahuzat Bayit” (also known as the “Seashell lottery”) was a formative event in the history of the city of
Tel Aviv, marking its founding day. The purchased land was divided simply into plots on either side of one central street, Herzl Street, and four smaller streets crossing it. To distribute the plots equitably among the 66 founding families, it was decided to hold a draw. The draw was organised by
Akiva Aryeh Weiss, who chaired the association. The method used was original: dark seashells and white seashells, bearing plot-numbers and family names, respectively, were placed in two boxes, and a child selected one shell from each box in turn. According to the memoirs of Kadish Yehudah-Leib Silman, the child was Moshe Fogel, the eight-year-old son of Abraham and Rivka Fogel. This day was later recognized as the official founding of Tel Aviv. A water well was later dug on the site. Philanthropist
Jacob Moser donated funds for the construction of the
Herzliya Gymnasium. A few metres opposite this point stood the home of
Meir Dizengoff, the city's first mayor. The plot of this house, like the others, was drawn by lottery, but it became an important site in young Tel Aviv. After his death the house became the Tel Aviv Museum, and 39 years later declared independence by
David Ben-Gurion was ceremonially read there. On the boulevard in front of the house, at the location of the former water-tower, a large crowd gathered on the day of the declaration of independence. A year after the establishment of the state, the monument to the founders of Tel Aviv was erected there, which still stands today.
Documentation of the Event The event was photographed by Abraham Soskin and the photograph is among the most famous in Tel Aviv's history. In the photo, all the founding families are seen clustered around the lottery on a completely desolate area of
dunes. Tel Aviv was founded on sand-hills. Kerem Jabali, the tract acquired by the founders of Ahuzat Bayit, at that time was an area of dunes, vines and sea-willow trees. A few hundred metres from the site at that period stood the houses of the Jewish neighbourhoods Shev-Zay, Neve Tzedek and Neve Shalom, yet to reach Ahuzat Bayit or Jaffa one had to cross sand-hills and the path in those days was dangerous. On the border of Ahuzat Bayit was the Jaffa–Jerusalem railway line. To the east were
orchards and farmland. The association still held significant land for sale to those able to pay in cash. Most homes were built of
local sandstone, as was common at the time. Construction progressed rapidly; by January 1910, the first residents began moving into their homes. By Shevat 5670 (1910), around sixty homes stood on the dunes. On May 21, 1910, it was decided to rename Ahuzat Bayit as
Tel Aviv, as proposed by
Menachem Sheinkin, after the Hebrew title of
Theodor Herzl’s novel
Altneuland, translated by
Nahum Sokolow. == The City of Tel Aviv ==