[5] In the early days of George Dawson's ministry in Birmingham, Crompton joined his congregation, and for many years was well known in the Church of the Saviour, and much respected for her quiet and unobtrusive work in the Sunday and evening schools connected with it.
But her great interest in the promotion of education among the poor caused her name to be widely known beyond Birmingham.
Stories in Short Words, Suggestive Hints on the Study of the Gospel, as well as the lives of Martin Luther and Christopher Columbus, were among the best of her publications.
[5] Though in later years, she led a life of comparative retirement, her genial manners and her interest in literature and in passing events attracted many visitors to her parlour.
Her remains were interred in the family vault in the Old Meeting House graveyard,[1] by the Rev.