[2] Following her military service, Campbell returned to Kilberry where she operated and managed several farms on her estate.
[3] Campbell was involved in local politics, and she served as a district councillor and a member of the Scottish National Party for 20 years beginning in 1955.
[4] The survey was published in volume 95 of the journal Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland (PSAS) in 1962.
[1] Campbell's work included the first survey of Kilmartin Glen; it also created direction for many later archaeological studies of Mid Argyll.
[5] In 1951, she donated the stones to the Ministry of Works, which displayed them in a new, separate structure on Campbell's estate.
[3][9] Campbell's account of Scottish history and pride was well-received, with three separate editions appearing in print since its original publication.
[2] She compiled a decades-worth of research into the biography Alexander III, King of Scots, published shortly before she died in 1999.
[12] In 1971, she became the founding editor and a regular contributor to the Mid Argyll Society's journal The Kist.
Her children's historical novel The Wide Blue Road was published in 1957 and was her debut fictional work.