Early life Reuben David Sassoon was born in 1835 in
Baghdad. His father was
David Sassoon (1792–1864), a Jewish trader of
opium and cotton in
China who served as the Treasurer of
Baghdad from 1817 to 1829. By 1865, he also served on the board of directors of the
China Steamship and Labuan Coal Company alongside T. C. Bruce, Sir J. D. Elphinstone, Harry Borradaile, H. B. Loch, Henry Alers Hankey, William Miller, Edward Pereira, G. Lathom Brown, Alexander Sinclair, James N. Daniel and John Hickie. In 1890 he was a guest at
Tranby Croft, and was the croupier for the Prince of Wales on the successive nights of the royal Baccarat scandal. He saw nothing amiss.
Judaism Together with Abraham Jacob David and Marcus David Ezekiel, he was involved with the
Ohel Leah Synagogue near
Staunton Street in
Hong Kong by 1898. During his life, David also acquired ritual objects from Levi Salomons, a British financier, which he added to his existing collection that his family had brought with them from the Far East.
Personal life He was married to Catherine Sassoon (1838–1906). They resided at 7 Queens Gardens (now demolished) in
Brighton & Hove,
East Sussex. They had six children: • Rachel Sassoon (1860) • Luna Sassoon (1866) • David Reuben Sassoon (1867) • Mozelle Sassoon (1869) • Flora Cecilia Sassoon • Judith Louise Sassoon (1874–1964) He died in 1905. His wife died a year later, in 1906, and she was buried in the
Novo Beth Chaim Cemetery in
Mile End,
East London. Photographers
Maull & Fox took his portrait in costume as a Persian prince for the
Duchess of Devonshire's 1897 fancy-dress ball. A
photogravure of his portrait by
Walker & Boutall was printed in an album of portraits of some of the people who attended the ball; a copy of that album now rests in the
National Portrait Gallery in
London. ==References==