[1] Suffragettes who had gone on hunger strike and were forcibly fed in prison were taken there after being released to receive medical care and recuperate.
"[5] In 1912 Pine and Townend assisted Christabel Pankhurst in escaping arrest by providing her with a nurse's uniform and access to a friend's house.
[1] From 1917 Pine worked in the Pankhurst family home at Tower Cressy, Campden Hill but was not in sympathy with the Montessori teaching methods used by Jenny (Jane) Kenney for the children there.
[1][8] Pine accompanied the Pankhursts when they went to Paris in early 1919, while Emmeline worked in France for the suffrage movement.
[1] Pine returned to England in 1923 and found employment at Cottage Hospital, Herne Bay, Kent.