After working as a teacher for four years at academic institutions in the states of North Carolina and Delaware, she followed her passion for
Greece and
its ancient culture, pursuing further studies in Classics at the
American School of Classical Studies in
Athens, Greece. She had originally intended on pursuing studies in England but she decided to go Greece based both on the brother of the archaeologist,
Louis Dyer, and having heard
Amelia Edwards speak while a student at Smith. During her stay in Greece she also served as a volunteer nurse in
Thessaly during the
Greco-Turkish War. She asked her professors to be allowed to participate in the school's archaeological fieldwork, but instead was encouraged to become an academic librarian. Hawes was the second person to be awarded the
Agnes Hoppin Memorial Fellowship, in 1899. Frustrated by lack of support for her desire to be an active archaeological excavator, she took the remainder of her fellowship and went on her own in search of archaeological remains on the island of
Crete, in particular around Gournia on the northeastern coast of the island. She made this decision even though the area was only just emerging from the
Greco-Turkish War and therefore was far from safe. Her ability to speak fluent Greek, and her record of service with the
Red Cross during the Greco-Turkish War a short while earlier, earned her a degree of goodwill from the local people that proved critical to the success of her work. In Crete, she visited the excavation of
Knossos led by British archaeologist
Arthur Evans, who suggested she explore the region of
Kavousi. Hawes soon became well known for her expertise in the field of archaeology, and for four months in the spring of 1900 she led an excavation at Kavousi, during which she discovered settlements and cemeteries of Late Minoan IIIC,
Early Iron Age, and Early Archaic date (1200-600 BC) at the sites of
Vronda and Kastro. During that same campaign she dug a
test trench at the site of
Azoria, the most important Ancient Greek (i.e. post-Minoan) site in the region, evidently an early city (c. 700-500 BC). Azoria is now under renewed excavation as part of a major five-year project. == Later academic career ==