[1] In 1914, she married Richard Luckock, a tool-and-die maker, and the couple ultimately settled in Toronto on 527 Crawford Street in west end.
[2] On 4 June 1945, Luckock lost her re-election attempt in the Bracondale constituency to Royal Canadian Navy Lieutenant, Harry Hyland Hyndman of the Progressive Conservative Party.
A million names were gathered for the petition which was presented to Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King by Luckock at a large rally on Parliament Hill.
She lost the Ontario CCF's Bracondale nomination on 29 April 1948 at what she called an illegal meeting that didn't have quorum nor sufficient notice.
[2] The party had a resurgence of fortunes in that year's provincial election and regained her riding of Bracondale but with Harry Walters as the new CCF standard-bearer instead of Luckock.
The Congress was involved with the peace movement during the Cold War, and facilitated meetings between people from the Soviet Union and Canadians, by inviting them to visit Canada.
[12] Luckock attended conferences of the (World Peace Council), including one in the People's Republic of China in 1956 as well as Copenhagen (1953), and Warsaw, Poland (1950).
[2] She died in Toronto on 24 January 1972, at the chronic care Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Parkdale, and was laid to rest in her hometown of Arthur, Ontario.