As well as writing on Spanish history and producing a Spanish-English and a Portuguese-English dictionary, she edited the journal of the Catholic Women’s Suffrage Society (later St Joan's International Alliance).
[1] In 1909, she collaborated with economic historian Annie Wallis Chapman on a paper for the Royal Historical Society on English traders and the Spanish Inquisition,[2] which became the book English Merchants and the Spanish Inquisition in the Canaries in 1919.
[1] In 1925 she assisted with translation for Lucien Wolf's Jews in the Canary Islands.
[4] In 1913, partly in reaction to what she perceived as the too moderate views of other Catholic suffragists like Margaret Fletcher, she published a pamphlet, Woman Suffrage and Pious Opponents, arguing that Catholic women did not need to oppose women’s suffrage on pious grounds.
[9] In the 1920s she served as honorary secretary for the Council for the Representation of Women in the League of Nations.