Drea taught art at the Art Department at Putney School and Hickory Ridge School in Vermont. She also served as the head of the Art Department at Perry-Mansfield Camp in
Steamboat Springs, Colorado.
Real Estate In 1939, Drea bought a hotel in
La Jolla, San Diego and named it "La Posada." Today the hotel is known as the Grande Colonial Hotel. She owned and operated the hotel for over 25 years. The hotel, featuring seven small rooms, earned the distinction of being the "Smallest hotel in the World with an Elevator" due to its six-person solid
mahogany wood elevator. Helena and her five children celebrated the grand opening of the hotel in 1940, with their two Shetland ponies, Peanuts and Pardner, serving as official greeters.
Equestrianism Drea had a passion for horses and began her herd through a
wild horse roundup in the Sand Wash Basin in Colorado. She brought back a wild
filly that produced
palomino offspring. At some point, she sold
Shetland ponies to Hannes Von Trapp, the youngest son of the
Trapp family singers. She also bred Shetland ponies and wild Mustangs from Douglas Mountain, Colorado. In addition to the fellowship, Drea was also a member of the Penn Women of Colorado and the Quill Club of Colorado Springs. Her poems were also published in the Colorado Springs Gazette-Telegraph. In 1945, Drea established "Adventure Trails Publications" at her
ranch in
Steamboat Springs. Helena also published books under the
pseudonym Charity Chase. Music Drea served on the board of the Colorado Springs Chorale. She played the piano, viola, banjo, drums, and cello. She also contributed three oil portraits to the 1944 annual exhibit of the Denver Art Museum. Drea hosted her own solo art shows, showcasing her portraits and
still life studies. == Personal life and death ==