She was a student at the
University of Chicago, earning a master's degree in mathematics in 1896. After working as a schoolteacher, she joined the
New York Normal College as an instructor in 1901, and by 1913, she headed the mathematics department at
Adrian College in Michigan. She was cited as one of the most "active" women mathematicians of the time. From 1891 to 1906 she gave 17 lectures at meetings of the
American Mathematical Society and published three papers. She presented her paper "On a set of generators for certain substitution and Galois field groups" at the 1904 AMS meeting. == Research ==