Vroman is an unincorporated community in Otero County, in the U.S. state of Colorado. [1]
The settlement was founded around 1891. [2] A variant name was Weitzer, named after a local beet sugar factory manager named Frederick Weitzer. [3] [2] A post office called Weitzer was established in 1908, the name was changed to Vroman in 1918, due to anti-German sentiment during World War I, [2] and the post office closed in 1954. [4] The community has the name of John C. Vroman, a local pioneer, businessman, and Otero County commissioner. [3] [2]
In 1930, Vroman reached its highest-ever population of 605 people, with its population crashing during the Great Depression. [2] The Vroman School closed in 1971, and the site of the community is now a ghost town. [2] The school building, built in 1918 in the Mediterranean Revival style by architects Frederick Mountjoy and Frank W. Frewen, was listed on the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties [5] but was destroyed by fire in 2005. [6]