In a 1953 issue of ''Women's Day'' Hutton protests the housewife's burden; "the homemaker's complaint"; "the heroine of [her] housekeeping manual"; a creature of "grim perfection." Of the Royal Tour of 1954 she commented that "the Queen possibly heard before she came here that Australia is considered a "man's country." If she did not, I should think that when she is going home on the
Gothic, thinking back to her days in Australia, she will come to that conclusion herself." Hutton was interviewed on her ideas on ABC radio in 1956. In the 1960s she was assigned an
eponymous column in
Walkabout, which continued for a run of 13 years. A women's activist, she advocated in her column for equal pay and in 1954 wrote that:"today's woman can often support herself as well as a man, and divorce carries little stigma. She faces her husband on an equal footing, and if he is too unreasonable, she can pack up and leave" She critiqued the 'expert' advice pronouncing on women's issues of the time, suggesting that experience instead was the best teacher: "What with the cookery experts and the beauty specialists and the child psychologists and the panels sitting in judgement on television, I’m afraid we are the most thoroughly advised community that ever existed [...] There are lots of people telling you how to keep your man ... “Never let him see you in curlers”, “Take an interest in his work”, “Relax and be yourself”, “Don’t become a doormat”. It all sounds plausible, but unless you’re a mental acrobat you can’t do all of these things. Take your pick."In an obituary,
Age editor
Creighton Burns, described her as a talented and distinguished journalist. [Her] influential column in this newspaper of years […] was both perceptive and compassionate." == Professional associations ==