In 1884, Greeley was appointed to represent New Hampshire women at the
World Cotton Centennial Exposition in New Orleans, as part of the women's department headed by
Julia Ward Howe. Howe's son-in-law
Michael Anagnos hired Greeley as the first matron of the Perkins School's kindergarten program for blind children, opened in Jamaica Plain in 1887. After she retired from the Perkins kindergarten in 1899, Greeley became treasurer of the new Boston Nursery for Blind Babies. "Why should not blind babies have a nursery and be cared for as well as the swarms of seeing babies that fill to overflowing our day nurseries in all our large cities?" she asked in a 1907 conference presentation, concluding that such
early intervention "may give a man his sight; it may prevent his becoming a public charge, and it may help him to a more useful life". In 1926 the Boston Nursery for Blind Babies incorporated, with Greeley as its first president. She also worked with Sarah J. Davidson to open a "private sanitarium for invalids". == Personal life ==