She worked as a writer for the New York Evening World and published the Murray Hill News in 1952. She also wrote Labor Courts Outlaw Strikes, a pamphlet calling for the establishment of a labor court.[1]
A lawyer in Peekskill, New York,[2] she wrote numerous fiction and nonfiction books, including The Olympic Torch, The American Heart, and an autobiography, Lady Lawyer.[1]
Life and law career
Dorothy was born on February 12, 1896, on a farm near Saugerties, New York.[3] She was one of ten children of Reginald Frooks, a successful businessman, and Rosita Siberz, an international socialite.[4] She and her siblings were raised on a 400-acre (160 ha) farm in the Hudson Valley, and spent their winters in the Waldorf Hotel.[4]
She was recruited by her mother's London society friends to give street-corner speeches at the age of 11.[4]
Frooks graduated from Hamilton Law School in Chicago and received her master's degree from New York University. By the early 1920s she was the first full-time lawyer for the Salvation Army.[4]
She served as the National Commander of the Women World War Veterans and worked with the Veterans of World War I and the Retreads, an organization for veterans who served in both world wars.[1]