Background
She was born in Groton, Connecticut in 1942, where she grew up and was raised around four brothers.
She was born in Groton, Connecticut in 1942, where she grew up and was raised around four brothers.
She studied zoology at Smith College. When she graduated she immediately took a liking to bats, and later appeared on Nickelodeon as "Bat Lady".
Her first inspiration to run was distance runner John Jay Kelley who lived near her neighborhood. Julia was also a big part in the discovery that bats are in fact not blind, and just have very poor eyesight. She also helped produce a study about how orangutans and gorillas unconsciously stick out their tongues in matters of social aversion, just as people do.
At the age of 53 in 1996, she became the oldest person to obtain a degree in medicine at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine at Yeshiva University.
However, she had to list her hometown as being in Rhode Island because women from Connecticut were not allowed to compete. When she tried to run in the Manchester Road Race in Connecticut in 1960, which women were not allowed to run at that time, race officials told her that if she ran she would be banned from racing for life.
She lobbied to be allowed to race for a year, but without success. In 1961 she did run the race, without permission, but then racing"s governing body vowed to ban her from all competition unless she agreed to stay out of "men"s" road races.
She agreed to stay out.
Two other women, Chris McKenzie and Dianne Lechausse, also ran the race, although McKenzie veered off onto the sidewalk before the finish line so as not to get in trouble with racing officials. Julia finished in 33 minutes 40 seconds, which would have given her 128th place, ahead of 10 men, if her time was officially counted. Lechausse finished with a time of 41:12.
In 2011, at age 69, Julia returned to run the Manchester Road Race again, on the 50th anniversary of her historic run.
She received a handwritten "thank you" letter from Joan Benoit. She was named a Hero of Running by Runner"s World in 2012.