Born in La Tigra de San Carlos, she participated in the plebiscite to determine if La Tigra and La Fortuna were still part of the San Carlos canton or would join San Ramón, going down in history as the first Costa Rican woman to vote.[3] It was when she was 27 years old,[4] that she went to the polls to open the door for thousands of Costa Rican women to vote, getting up at 3:00 am to make sure she was the first female voter. One year before, on June 20, 1949, the Constituent Assembly of Costa Rica granted women the right to vote.[5]
From this first vote, she became a faithful activist in the exercise of the vote, inviting Costa Ricans constantly to participate in each electoral fair. She declared once for the newspaper La Nación: "The worst thing that a Costa Rican is to stop voting, because thanks to our political system we have always had peace and tranquility."[6]