Civil service With the outbreak of war in 1914 she took up employment in the
Foreign Office. She attended the post-World War I
Paris Peace Conference, before transferring to the Intelligence Department of the
Home Office.
Political career Graves was politically a Conservative, and was a member of
Holborn Borough Council from 1928 to 1934. She became the first female chairman of the Metropolitan Area of the
National Union of Conservative and Unionist Associations in 1936. At the next
general election in 1935 she was hopeful of retaining the seat, with her campaign centering on opposition to the use of
Hackney Marshes for the building of
council houses. She was, however, badly beaten, with Morrison returning to parliament with a large majority. In 1936 she formed part of the British Government delegation to the
League of Nations. In 1937 she was adopted as prospective candidate for
Barnstaple,
Devon. The next general election was, however, delayed until 1945 by the
Second World War, and she did not contest the seat. == Retirement ==