[1][3] During 1893–1903 she was Director of Physical Training of the Brooklyn Schools and from 1904 until retirement in 1928 she was Assistant Director of Physical Education of the schools of Greater New York City.
[1] In addition to founding of the APL, she was a founder of the American Association for the Advancement of Physical Education and the only woman to serve as its secretary (1902–1903).
[1] She was the first living person to receive the Luther Halsey Gulick Award for advances in physical education (1924).
[4] She was also made a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
[1] She died at Hillcrest Hospital in Pittsfield, Massachusetts on November 13, 1952.