Liu was a girls' school principal in Shanxi,[7] before and after her time at Oberlin.[8][9] She spoke about her school's work at a missionary meeting in Ohio in 1922.[10] She was responsible for handling the school's merger with a boys' school to create a co-educational school. In a 1929 letter, Luella Miner refers to Liu as "one of my college daughters", while they were working together in Shanxi.[11] In 1936 and 1937, she toured in the United States and Canada,[12] lecturing and raising funds for her work.[6][13] She visited her friend Janette O. Ferris while in the United States.[14]
In the 1930s Liu was dean of women at Cheeloo University, leading the school's women during significant wartime upheaval, when much of the school fled Tsinan (Jinan) for Chengtu (Chengdu).[15] "We still retain our identity and our ideals, and are seeking to cultivate here a group who will be ready at the first opportunity to return to our real home and build up again the work which has been so sadly interrupted," she wrote in a March 1939 letter to American supporters.[16] In the 1930s and 1940s, she was a treasurer and member of the National Committee of the YWCA of China.[17][18]
Liu was in California in the mid-1940s, recovering her health,[19] living at the Ming Quong Home in Los Gatos,[1] and again giving lectures about her work.[20]
Publications
"I Kao Shang Ti: The Story of a Girl, a Will and a Way" (after 1929, pamphlet)[21]
^Avann, Mrs. J. M. (1936). "In Lands Afar". Year Book, Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church: 32 – via Internet Archive.