At an early age, she married Hon. Horace E. Smith (d. 1902), dean of the
Albany Law School. After her marriage, she lived in Johnstown, New York where her home was known as a social and literary center. She cared for her two young daughters and for the large family of her husband by a former marriage. Her time was filled with literary, society and charitable work, and she was especially interested in religious and educational matters. Her literary productions were numerous and included poems, tales and sketches. She contributed to leading British and U.S. magazines, such as
The Magazine of Poetry,
Christian at Work, and others. She published a volume of poems,
Day Lilies (New York, 1889), which passed into its second edition and won her substantial reputation as a poet. She was the author of
The Mayor of Kanameta (New York, 1891), a story on sociological lines, also
Donald Moncrieff, a companion book to the former (Buffalo, 1892). Her finest work was done in verse. She was a member of the Society of American Authors, Aldine Literature Society,
New York Presbyterian Church,
Authors League of America, and the
Pen and Brush Club of New York. ==Later life and death==