Samuel C. Florman was born and raised in New York City where he attended the
Ethical Culture Fieldston School. He entered Dartmouth College with the Class of 1946, which because of the outbreak of war, started studies in the summer of 1942. The following year he enlisted in the
Navy V-12 program at
Dartmouth, continued his studies while on active duty, and received the BS degree, summa cum laude in November 1944. He took graduate courses at
Dartmouth's Thayer School of Engineering until February 1945 when he was sent to the
Civil Engineer Corps officers training school in
Davisville, Rhode Island. On May 5, 1945, he was commissioned as an ensign and assigned to a program of military training. For a year, starting in August 1945, he served with the 29th Construction Battalion (the
Seabees) supervising construction work in the Philippines and Truk. Returning to civilian life in the fall of 1946 he entered graduate school at
Columbia University and earned an MA degree in English Literature (June 3, 1947). He started work as a construction engineer in the summer of 1947 while taking graduate engineering courses at night at
New York University. In subsequent years he earned his license to Practice Professional Engineering in the State of New York (October 17, 1957) and was awarded the fifth-year Civil Engineer degree by the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth (April 14, 1973). ==Career==