Background
She was the daughter of Chief Rabbi, Doctor H. Adler.
She was the daughter of Chief Rabbi, Doctor H. Adler.
She was educated at private school and classes.
She began social work as a school manager under the London School Board. She was Honorary Secretary of the Committee on Wage Earning Children, 1899–1946. She was a Liberal Party member and therefore in local government politics was aligned with the Progressive Party.
She was first politically active in her home area of Hackney.
Her main political interest was in education. Due to her interest in educational matters she was co-opted onto the London Education Committee by the Progressive majority in 1905, serving as a co-optee on that body until she was elected to it following the 1910 London County Council elections.
When the Liberal Government first created the London County Council there was nothing to stipulate that women could not stand as candidates for election and two Progressive women candidates duly stood and were elected. However, there was a legal challenge made by one of the defeated conservative candidates and as a result, neither of the women were able to take their seats.
When the Liberal Party returned to power in 1905 they set about changing the law so that women could be elected to the LCC and this change came into effect for the 1910 elections and Adler was one of two women who were elected.
She was elected as a Councillor to the London County Council as one of the representatives for the constituency of Hackney Central in 1910;
In March 1913 she was re-elected, although her running mate lost to the Unionist backed Municipal Reform Party;
In March 1919, following the end of the war, the boundaries for her constituency were slightly altered and she was returned unopposed due to an electoral understanding of both the Progressive and Municipal Reform parties to only adopt one candidate each;
In March 1922 the uneasy electoral arrangement between the Progressive and Municipal Reform parties continued;
From 1922 to 1923 she served as Deputy Chairman of the London County Council. She was defeated in 1925;
Following the demise of the Progressive Party she was re-elected to the LCC in 1928 standing as a Liberal Party candidate;
She was finally defeated in 1931. Despite her election defeat in 1931, she was co-opted onto the London County Council Public Health Committee for a three-year term.
She was a Member of Council of the Anglo-Jewish Association. She was a Member of the Governing Bodies of the Dalston County School, of the Hackney Downs School and the Hackney Technical Institute. She was a Member of the Departmental Committee on Charity Collections, 1925-1927.