[1] Taylor was a member of several suffrage organizations, and of Heterodoxy, a feminist club based in Greenwich Village.
[2] She was among the group of Women's Political Union members who staged a 24-hour suffrage lecture marathon in New York City in October 1913.
"[8] As a stockbroker, Taylor worked for the Charles Edey brokerage beginning in 1914, and moved to Fenner & Beane and other firms.
[9] She was in that position during the Wall Street crash of 1929, and declared herself proud of the women in her office during that devastation: "Not one tear did I see during all the time the market was at its worst," she later recalled.
[10] In 1901 Kathleen de Vere Taylor's engagement to S. Carroll Chancellor of Leesburg, Virginia, was announced, but the marriage never took place.