Summerfield returned to Gibraltar after the war, and in 1966 she co-founded the Housewives' Association alongside
Angela Smith. The women's rights organization, originally conceived of as a meeting of all the
housewives in Gibraltar, became known as the Gibraltar Women's Association in the early 1980s. After initially serving as the organization's vice chair, she went on to lead the association for two decades, from 1969 to 1989, fighting for equal rights for Gibraltarian women. After stepping down, she continued as "life honorary president" until her death. In its early years, the Housewives' Association opposed encroachment by the Franco dictatorship and played a prominent role in the community's response to his closure of the border with Spain in 1969. Summerfield helped encourage women to take the jobs previously held by Spaniards who could no longer cross the border. The organization also worked to improve quality of life for Gibraltarian families, including through running a fruit and vegetable cooperative. In the 1970s, Summerfield led the association in successfully pushing to change a number of laws affecting women in Gibraltar, including those dealing with equal pay, divorce, and women's role in the judicial system. In 2007, Summerfield published a memoir titled ''A Woman's Place: Memoirs of a Gibraltarian woman — a "Llanita."'' A member of the
Order of the British Empire, she was also awarded a
Gibraltar Medallion of Honour in 2015. == Death and legacy ==