She was a member of the Incorporated Society of Authors of London, as well as the Woman's National Press Association, of which she served as the vice-president for its Colorado branch.
[5] On their return from the South Sea Islands, she published in the Popular Science News a noted paper on "Hawaiian Ant Life."
She contributed to the Denver Commonwealth, and Rocky Mountain News, to the American Israelite, of Cincinnati, New Orleans Picayune, Elmira Telegram, and the St. Louis Jewish Voice.
At the Woman's Congress, held in connection with the Cotton States and International Exposition, her address on "A Stranger in a Strange Land" was spoken of as "a notably eloquent effort, and one of the best heard in Assembly Hall".
[8] In May of that year, in York, Indiana, she visited her mother, D. S. Griggs, and two sisters, Sylvia Wicoff and Stella Shirtz, before they sailed for Europe the following month.