She made an extended tour in the service of that region in the interests of the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and supervised the erection of the building in Unalaska.
Beiler was a prominent officer of the Woman's Home Missionary Society for many years and influential in the shaping of its policy and work.
She was very active in church work, especially in revival services and in connection with the Woman's Missionary Society in which she became district and Conference officer.
[3] At the General Conference held in Cincinnati in 1880, Dr. and Mrs. Beiler offered themselves for Alaska to open up a new Mission, and her disappointment was great when they learned that the society was not prepared to begin the work.
[3] At the close of the Brooklyn pastorate she went abroad with her husband, and ten months were spent in Ireland, England, and elsewhere in Europe, spending six weeks in each of the cities of London, Paris, Rome, and Berlin, studying in museums, art galleries, and universities.
On their return to the U.S., one year was spent in Sands Street Church, Brooklyn, during which time she became officially identified with the Woman's Home Missionary Society, and was put on the committee in charge of the work in Alaska.
[3] During her tedious and long illness, her chief anxiety was that her husband should not be embarrassed in his work and that her daughters should not he hindered in their college studies.
In the fall, she went West, speaking in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and as far Northwest as Minneapolis and Saint Paul, Minnesota.
For two years, she kept up this overtaxing work until she was suddenly stricken at Defiance, Ohio with what seemed a partial paralysis, rendering her speechless for a day or two.
[1] Her funeral was held on Easter day in Richmond Avenue Church, Buffalo, of which Dr. Beiler was pastor.
[4] Interment was made In the family lot in Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, where some years earlier, an older daughter had been buried.