They also organised campaigns on behalf of women, such as in 1907 when King's College Law School graduate Mabel French was refused entrance to the New Brunswick bar.
[2][3] This led to the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick passing "An Act to Remove the Disability of Women so far as Relates to the Study and Practice of the Law".
[5] In 1921, the club's vice-president, May Skinner, delivered an address to Marie Curie, at the Canadian Federation at a meeting in Niagara Falls.
[7] In 1929, the club began planning for a new clubhouse location;[8] they bought a mansion later that year, at 162 St. George Street.
The club hosted prominent speakers and celebrated women's academic achievement, for example when it honored paleontologist Madeleine Fritz in 1940, after she became a fellow of the Geological Society of America.