As a young
religious sister she taught at schools in Stone. In 1860, Sister Rose Columba became vicaress in the community at the
Church of Our Lady of the Angels in
Stoke-upon-Trent. She was appointed vicaress (later prioress) at St Mary's Church in
Torquay in 1866, and served there until 1883. In the summer of 1883, Mother Rose Columba left that work to lead a group of eight overseas to Australia, where Dominican sisters were called to nurse. She kept a journal of the six-week voyage. In Adelaide, the sisters opened a school, embroidered, painted, and cared for the sick, while Mother Rose Columba worked to establish a spiritual component to the community. She designed a
Gothic Revival chapel for the convent, but did not live to see it completed. ==Death and legacy==