She was a lecturer at Royal Holloway College from 1911 to 1917 and then worked briefly in the
Ministry of Food Control. Together with Miss Phoebe Walters, Director of Music at the college from 1904 to 1915, she founded
Hillcroft College for Working Women in
Surbiton, Surrey, and was the first principal there from 1929 to 1933. The college was intended to be a female equivalent to
Ruskin College in
Oxford. Between 1933 and 1947 she was the Royal Holloway College Association (the college
alumni organisation) representative on the college's governing body. She became acting principal after the resignation of Miss
Janet Bacon as she was not eligible for permanent appointment as she was already aged 66. She was succeeded by Dr
Edith Clara Batho. Street was a
suffragist and joined the
Labour Party when women were
enfranchised. For many years she was a leading figure in the
British Federation of University Women. She died unmarried. ==References==