John Beam Vreeland (December 30, 1852 – July 1, 1923) was an attorney and Republican Party politician from Morristown, New Jersey.
[4] In November 1875, Vreeland was admitted as an attorney as well as solicitor in chancery, and he proceeded to pratuce law in Morristown.
In 1895, he was nominated for the office of State senator by Republican party, and won the election with a plurality of more than 1,500.
Throughout his tenure as a State Senator, Vreeland introduced "The School Teachers' Retirement Fund Bill," which was enacted into law in 1896.
In 1898, Vreeland received an appointment from the acting governor of New Jersey, Foster M. Voorhees, to the position of judge in the courts of Morris County, for a five-year term starting on April 1 of the same year.
[4] On October 20, 1903, President Theodore Roosevelt appointed Vreeland as the United States attorney for the district of New Jersey, ad interim.