Lady de Rothschild was influential and able to push conventions that traditionally bound Jewish women at the time. She founded the first independent Jewish women's philanthropic associations in England, the Jewish Ladies' Benevolent Loan Society and the Ladies' Visiting Society in London in 1840. In 1885, Lady de Rothschild and
Helen Lucas jointly paid for the cost of a nurse to work among the poor who were Jewish. Lucas would pay for two more in 1891 and 1892 and they were encouraged to use a traditional common sense approach to the help and sympathy they offered. Lucas believed that relief workers should give little priority to statistics or paperwork. == Death ==