They held many garden fetes featuring the railway, with Lady Julius' charities often the beneficiaries.
[8] A 1936 profile in The Sun, in a series "Leaders of Women", described her as "one of the most feminine of our feminists, this latter word being used in its most flattering sense.
"[12] She was a member of the Executive of the Australian Girl Guides Association for many years[13] becoming State Commissioner of New South Wales from 1939 to 1949.
[15] She received the Silver Fish Award, Girl Guiding's highest adult honour, presented by HRH the Duchess of Gloucester in 1946.
[16] She began working at the New South Wales Girl Guide Gift Shop in 1948, becoming its patron in 1960.
[21] She was involved in a successful 'adoption' scheme, where any member of the public could ‘adopt’ a child's early education, by covering their kindergarten fees of £6 a year.