She completed part of her studies at the high school for young girls in Montauban (Tarn-et-Garonne) and obtained the certificate of pedagogical aptitude1.
She married Félix Éboué on June 14, 1922, and in 1923 left to live with him in Oubangui-Chari, the current Central African Republic, where they remained until 1931.
Thanks to her musical knowledge, she helped him to decipher the drummed and whistled language of the Banda and Mandja populations.
She then follows her husband throughout his career, in Martinique (1932-1934) in Sudan (1934-1936), in Guadeloupe (1936-1938) then in Chad, where he was appointed governor in 1938 by the Colonial Minister Georges Mandel.
She nevertheless failed to be re-elected within the 1st legislature of the Fourth French Republic, during the legislative elections of November 19461: she was third on a list of which only the first.
Its first action is to approve the motion "inviting the Council of the Republic not to rule on the request for the lifting of parliamentary immunity of Malagasy elected officials before having heard the parties concerned (May 1947)".
She became a member of the Customs Commission but mainly intervenes in public sessions on issues related to overseas territories.
From February 21 to March 13, 1946, she represented France at the Conference of the West Indies which was held in Saint-Thomas (Virgin Islands of the United States).
Nearly ten countries and thirty international and regional organizations and institutions are participating in the presence of Charles W. Taussig, special advisor to the US Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs.