She at first met a certain distrust from Anglo-Saxon Grand Lodges that demonstrated reserves regarding the public character of her work.
Révauger gained a Fulbright scholarship from the Franco-American Commission, which enabled her to conduct research in the libraries of large American lodges in Boston, Washington DC and Cedar Rapids.
By gaining a second search scholarship, she worked on the archives of Prince Hall lodges in New York and Washington DC and wrote a book on Black Freemasonry in the United States[1] published in 2012: Prince Hall au XVIIIe aux États-Unis - Noirs et Franc-Maçons.
She completed a common work started in collaboration with historian and author Charles Porset before his disappearance: Le Monde maçonnique des Lumières.
Europe-Amériques et Colonies, Dictionnaire biographique de franc-maçons du siècle des Lumières.