Julia Scott Vrooman
Julia Scott Vrooman was an American writer, philanthropist, and socialite.
Early life
Julia Scott was born in Bloomington, Illinois, the daughter of Matthew T. Scott and Julia Green Scott. Her parents were socially prominent and wealthy; they owned the Scott–Vrooman House. Her mother was national president of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Vice-president Adlai Stevenson I was her uncle, married to Julia Green Scott's sister Letitia. She attended Chestnut Hill Boarding School, a girls' school near Philadelphia.Career
Vrooman and her husband were co-authors of The Lure and Lore of Travel, and she wrote a political novel, The High Road to Honor. She also wrote about travel in Century Magazine in 1906, The Arena in 1908, La Follette's Magazine in 1911, and The Twentieth Century Magazine in 1912.Vrooman was a political hostess in Washington, D.C. During World War I, she accompanied her husband, a federal agriculture official, on a trip to Europe for coordinating food relief; she also worked with the YMCA serving American troops at the front. She formed a jazz band of musical soldiers, and often served cocoa to soldiers from Illinois in canteens. "I have no children, I am in perfect health," she explained of her efforts. "I am fortunate enough to be able to speak both French and Italian. If, instead of looking for an opportunity to get into war work, I were looking for an excuse to avoid it, I could not find one." For her contributions to troop morale, she was made an honorary member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars post in Bloomington.
Vrooman opened her home for a makeshift hospital during the 1918 influenza pandemic. She lectured on, and supported the founding of, the International Court of Justice. She organized a 1922 carnival to raise funds for Quaker war relief in Russia. She was active in the Illinois Federation of Women's Clubs. During World War II, she opened a floor of her large home for soldiers' apartments.
In addition to her literary and philanthropic pursuits, Vrooman was known for her whole wheat bread. She sold loaves at fundraising events. Poet Vachel Lindsay promised to write a sonnet to her bread, and Eleanor Roosevelt mentioned the bread in a newspaper column.