[2][3] Her recollections of her time there were included in the book Benton End Remembered.
[4] In the 1930s she toured Europe with Lucy Harwood, painting street scenes in Bruges, Paris, Dieppe and Brittany.
[2] During World War II Broadley worked as a volunteer with the Women's Land Army.
[3] After the War she spent some time as a teacher before joining an Anglican religious order, the Community of the Servants of the Cross, based at Ham Common and, other than during a spell in Australia, appears to have done little painting.
[2][3] After leaving the order Broadley settled in Suffolk and resumed painting, often with bold colours and brush strokes, and also embraced collage making.