[1] It was successful in inaugurating Empire Day, on 24 May, prior to 1901 celebrated as the Queen's Birthday.
The object of the league was stated as "... to inspire personal and active interest in the Empire as a whole, and to promote educational and friendly intercommunication between its different parts (1) through the teaching of Imperial history and conditions by means of public and school lectures; (2) through the furtherance of such training as shall make members efficient citizens in whatever part of the Empire they may be called upon to live; and (3) through the supplying to the youth of the Empire a common bond of literary intercourse by means of a magazine, or by means of written correspondence, member with member, or school with school.
The Governor, (Sir George Le Hunte), was Patron.
The League was prominent at the wreath laying ceremony at the statue of Queen Victoria on Victoria Square, Adelaide each May 24 (or 23rd if the 24th was a Saturday),[4] and participated in many Empire-related activities[5] until the early 1950s, by which time newspaper reports were confined to its membership in the Council of Empire Societies, and after 1954 had disappeared altogether.
She went on to found the Imperial Union of Teachers in 1913, and died on 29 March 1931.