[1] After the Civil War, he studied law under Colonel William M. Penrose of Carlisle.
[1][2] Lloyd worked as a teacher at a private school for eight terms or six years.
[1][2][3] After the war, he was commander of the Grand Army Post of Mechanicsburg and a member of the Gettysburg Battlefield Commission.
[1] In 1873, he served as division inspector in the Pennsylvania National Guard, attaining the rank of lieutenant colonel.
[1][2] He left the bank in 1884 and practiced law in Cumberland, York and Dauphin counties.
[3] Lloyd died on September 20, 1911, at his home on West High Street in Mechanicsburg.