Background
He was born in South Africa to parents who had migrated from present-day Belarus. Before his birth, Rosenblum"s family emigrated from what is now Belarus but was then part of the Russian Empire to South Africa, where he was born in 1907.
lawyer hammer thrower rugby union player
He was born in South Africa to parents who had migrated from present-day Belarus. Before his birth, Rosenblum"s family emigrated from what is now Belarus but was then part of the Russian Empire to South Africa, where he was born in 1907.
His family moved to Sydney, Australia in 1914, and he was educated at Fort Street High School and Sydney University.
He played four Test matches for the Australian Rugby Union team in 1928. He set up a law firm, "M. Rosenblum and Company" in the 1930s. In 1959 he employed as an articled clerk John Howard who later became an Australian prime minister.
In his later years he was an active philanthropist.
He died of a heart attack at the age of 95. The family moved to Australia in 1914, to the inner western Sydney suburb of Marrickville.
Rosenblum"s legal career has been reported as uneventful except his 1959 decision, as principal of "M Rosenblum & Company", to employ a 19-year-old called John Howard as an articled clerk at the pay of £6 a week. Howard went on to become the 25th and second-longest serving Prime Minister of Australia More than a decade before his ascent to Prime Ministership, Rosenblum – a lifelong supporter of the Australian Labor Party – said Howard "would have made a wonderful Labor leader of the Ben Chifley type – you know, a thoroughly honest man of the people." Howard described Rosenblum as "one of the great characters that I"ve met in my life.. a terrific teacher.".
Rosenblum played at breakaway in four games for the New South Wales Rugby union team against the All-Blacks in 1928. At the time, the New South Wales Rugby Union was the peak Australian representative body. These games were retrospectively granted full "test" status by the Australian Rugby Union in 1986. He set an Australian record for the hammer throw in 1935, and represented Australia in that event at the 1938 then "British Empire Games". In addition, he was an accomplished tennis player and hurdler. Rosenblum was awarded Australian Sports Medal on 29 September 2000. He was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia in the Australia Day of 26 January 2001.