In the first part of her life she was a writer known for recommending that women should not become suffragettes desperate for power but that they should devote their time to good works.
[3] She noted that men had the political power but recently women could aspire to humanitarian and religious activities during the book's introduction.
Up to this date, she had become a writer known for recommending that women should not aspire for power but that they should devote their time to good works.
She was promoted as the commandant of Voluntary Aid Detachment number 58 and she opened in February 1916 a new auxiliary military hospital at Dollis Hill House.
[5] The Dorris Hill hospital closed in April 1919 and Richardson decided to open her own clinic in Willesden.