Abram went to study and take the tripos at Girton College, Cambridge under William Cunningham and Ellen McArthur.
[1] She went on to teach at both Girton and Westfield Colleges, and she may have assisted at her father's law publishing firm in London.
[2] Her first book was published in 1909, and was entitled The Effects Produced by Economic Changes Upon Social Life in England in the Fifteenth Century.
[3] She later published her second book Social Life in England in the Fifteenth Century in 1913 which used misericords in part as a source.
[2] In 1919 she published her third and final book, English Life and Manners in the Later Middle Ages[4] summarising medieval society based on her own research of primary sources.