For forty years, until her retirement in 1952, In 1960, she was honored by the Dayton Federation of Women's Clubs as Outstanding Woman of the Year. Books by Eleanor Gertrude Brown include ''Milton's Blindness
(1934), a work of literary scholarship based on her doctoral dissertation about John Milton; Into the Light
(1946), a book of poetry; and Corridors of Light'' (1958), a memoir of her own education, with an introduction by
Harry Emerson Fosdick. "To my interpretation of Milton's life and writing after the loss of sight, I add my knowledge of blindness," she explained of her scholarship. "By similarity of experience alone, I am rendered a more able critic." ==Personal life==