Her first teaching job was at
Norwich High School for Girls. During World War II, she joined the
Women's Voluntary Service, and eventually ran the Sick Bays in
Warwickshire, for which she received the
British Empire Medal in 1943. She moved to
Poole,
Dorset, after the war, to care for her aging mother. An avid birdwatcher, she volunteered with the Dorset Field Ornithology Group, and through that group learned of the specific environmental issues in Dorset. She sailed her own boat to
Brownsea Island for explorations, against the ban on public access, issued and enforced by the island's reclusive owner,
Mary Bonham-Christie. In the early 1960s, after Bonham-Christie's death, Brotherton organized a group to oppose development on Brownsea Island, because the planned development would threaten a wading birds habitat. Because of her group's efforts, the
National Trust took ownership of Brownsea, and the group developed into the Dorset Wildlife Trust. Helen Brotherton was the Trust's first and longtime secretary. In 1963, she was appointed an OBE for her environmental work. Brotherton worked with the coastal protection project "Operation Neptune" as the National Trust's regional representative in Wessex. In 1984, she was appointed a
CBE for this activism. She founded the
Portland Bird Observatory, was a trustee of the Chesil and Fleet Trust. In 1992, she received the Christopher Cadbury medal from the
Royal Society of Wildlife Trusts, and in 2007 she won the Octavia Hill medal for her lifetime achievements in environmental conservation. ==Personal life and legacy==