In 1921, Secor moved to
Cambridge, England with her husband after he began working at
University of Cambridge. For a period she lived away from her husband in a flat in Paris. In 1929, Philip was appointed to the
chair in commerce at the
University of Birmingham and the couple moved to the
Birmingham district of
Selly Park, where they bought a large house called
Highfield. Their house
Highfield became a focal point for the intellectual life of Birmingham in the 1930s – the poet
Louis MacNeice lived in the converted coachman's quarters and the writer
Walter Allen described how "Most English Left-Wing intellectuals and American intellectuals visiting Britain must have passed through Highfield between 1930 and 1950". Lella remained committed to
disarmament, birth control and
women's rights and continued to write and campaign. She died of
pneumonia following a stroke in 1966. ==References==