Despite lacking formal education, Loring was an avid reader and travelled widely, unusual for women at the time. Both her brothers,
William Caleb Loring, a
justice of
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, and Augustus Peabody Loring, a
Republican politician and member of the Constitutional Convention of 1917, often consulted with her. Because of her interest in politics and foreign affairs, Loring helped
Anna Ticknor found the
Society to Encourage Studies at Home in 1873 to contribute to women's education. She became head of the history department, the largest of the society's departments, a position she held for 20 years. Her sister, Louisa Putnam Loring, also helped out at the school. Louisa had
tuberculosis and often had to be taken care of by Loring. Loring and her sister were involved in the
American Red Cross locally together. Louisa was also a good friend of
John Singer Sargent who took a watercolor of Louisa and Katharine Loring,
Study in Green, destroyed by fire in 1969. In 1871 Katharine Loring, together with
Julia Ward Howe, founded the
Saturday Morning Club, an organization for women's communal and intellectual growth in Boston. In addition to women's organizations, Loring was also a key stakeholder for the establishment of the
Beverly Public Library, of which she was also a trustee; other organizations she was involved with were: the Mayflower Club in Boston, the
Royal Red Cross during World War I, the Women's Education Association, the
Harvard Annex (a private program for the instruction of women by Harvard faculty), the Beverly Improvement Society and the Massachusetts Library Club. She was also president of the
Beverly Historical Society for 23 years, from 1918 to 1941, advocating the acquisition of the
John Balch House and the
John Hale House, both properties currently in the
National Register of Historic Places. == Influence on Alice James ==