[1] In 1898 at Great Yarmouth & Caister she reached the last-16 stage, losing to Miss Stringer by one hole.
[2] The following year at County Down she lost at an early stage to Jessie Magill, who went on the reach the final.
[7] Titterton missed top-level golf in 1903 and 1904 but returned in the 1905 Womens Amateur Championship at Royal Cromer.
[12][13] Titterton won all her three matches in the 1907 Home Internationals, although England again finished runners-up after losing to Ireland.
[21] The following month, Titterton and Campbell met in the quarter-finals of the Scottish Women's Amateur Championship.
[23] She played in the 1910 Women's Home Internationals at Westward Ho!, winning all her three matches, but lost in the first round of the championship, 2&1 to Mabel Harrison.
[25] Titterton played in the 1912 Womens Amateur Championship at Turnberry, competing as Mrs Gibb.
[29] She was the first president of the South African Ladies Golf Union from 1914 to 1916 and again from 1919 to 1923, returning to Britain during World War I.
Titterton was engaged to Charles Edward Dewar, however he died in South Africa in April 1909, aged 29, before they were married.
[32][25] In early 1912 she married John Alexander Philip Gibb, an Edinburgh-born mining engineer working in South Africa.