Brooklyn After she graduated, it was difficult for her to establish a private practice, sometimes taking some women five years until the practice was self-supporting. Avery settled in
Brooklyn, where she had a "discouraging time" being able to obtain a medical office. Once she found one, she admitted, "I must own to a little dread of the publicity [of being a woman physician] that involves. I am not quite callous to doing things that people sneer at and say hateful words about; but I shall not think of that if I have work." After two months, she found that her patients were primarily her friends that she met before she moved to Brooklyn. Her
infirmary was established in a suite of rooms in the Main Building, where she was responsible for the health of her patients and the entire college. Avery believed in hydro-therapy and ensured sanitary conditions for food, water, and milk. She was responsible for decisions regarding control of
quarantine, whether staff should be retained or dismissed for health reasons, whether to hold chapel in bad weather, and when to turn on the heat in buildings. Physiology was a required subject in the junior and senior years for the first two decades of Vassar's history. She was seen as a guiding force in Vassar's early years. Frances A. Wood, the head librarian, said: "She came in 1865 as the resident physician, was a strong member of the Faculty, high in the confidence and trust of [President] Raymond and [Lady Principal] Miss Lyman and sharing with them the responsibility of that important formative period. So close were the friendly and confidential relations among these three 'powers that be'—hardly ever one appearing without the other—that some irreverent students dubbed them 'The Trinity.'" She was also the Superintendent of Hygiene for Colorado. In 1881, she was admitted to the Denver Medical Society, as were
Edith Root and
Mary Barker Bates. They were the first women to be admitted to the organization. She retired in 1887. ==Personal life==