by Tanya Hanson
Tanya Hanson |
With the heroine in my current anthology release, Her
Hurry-Up Husband hailing from Omaha, I came across a fascinating real-life
woman while researching the city. Dr. Susan Le Flesche Picotte (1865-1915) of
the Omaha tribe was the first Native American Indian woman to receive a medical
degree.
She was also the first American to receive federal aid for
professional education.
Susan was born on June 17, 1865 on the Omaha reservation in
northeast Nebraska. Her parents were Chief Joseph “Iron Eyes” Le Flesche, son
of a French fur trader, and his wife Mary “One Woman,” the mixed-blood daughter
of an Army physician. Although Iron Eyes raised his four daughters Christian,
in a frame house on the reservation, he never abandoned native traditions. In
fact, his strongest wish and recommendation for Susan was that she become educated
in both the white and native cultures. A relative later described her as having
one foot in both worlds.
As a child, Susan witnessed a white doctor refusing to care
for a dying Indian woman. After attending school on the reservation and
Elizabeth Institute for Young Ladies in New Jersey, she returned to the
reservation to teach at the Quaker Mission School. Here Alice Fletcher, the
renowned ethnologist, encouraged Susan to pursue medicine. She enrolled at the
elite Hampton Institute in Virginia, the nation’s first school for non-whites.
At Hampton, the resident physician urged Susan to enroll at
Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania. Miss Fletcher helped Susan obtain
scholarship funds from the U.S Office of Indian Affairs. Susan graduated at the
top of her class in 1889, and after an internship in Philadelphia, she returned
to the reservation to provide health care.
Never in vigorous health, due to a degenerative bone
condition, Susan nevertheless managed a career that served 1,300 patients and
covered 450 square miles. Not merely a healthcare giver, she often gave
financial advice and family counseling. She instructed the Omaha peoples on the
necessities of cleanliness, good hygiene, and ventilation. In a buggy drawn by
her chestnut horse Pie, she made house calls at all hours, even in sub-zero
weather. She earned about $500 a year, one-tenth of the salaries of military
physicians. Bucked from a horse in 1893, she was too injured to fulfill the
invitation to speak at the World’s Fair in Chicago.
Despite early vows to remain single, at age 29 “Dr. Sue”
married Henry Picotte, a Sioux from Yankton, South Dakota, in 1894, and raised their
two sons Pierre and Caryl in Bancroft Nebraska. Her practice here treated both
white and non-white patients.
Henry Picotte battled alcoholism much of his life, inspiring
Susan’s ambition to outlaw alcohol on the reservation. She led a delegation to
Washington D.C. in 1906 to lobby for such prohibition. Her lifelong dream to open
a reservation hospital came true in 1913 in Waithill, Nebraska. The hospital is
now a museum dedicated to her work and the history of the Omaha-Winnebago
tribes.
When the bone disease ended Dr. Sue’s life at age 50,
September 18, 1915, three priests eulogized her as well as an Omaha tribesman
reciting in the native language. This showed her successful assimilation into
both her worlds
.
Her tombstone is inscribed “Until The Day Dawns.”
Another incredible American I never learned about in history
classes!
Excerpt from Her Hurry-up Husband...Rancher Hezekiah is
waiting at the train station for his mail order bride, needing a wife for life.
Little does he know Omaha debutante Elspeth wants a husband for only one month.
For a quick second, Hezekiah
considered jumping on the train and riding it to Utah. The iron bench he sat on
was harder than any boulder, colder than a long night in a line shack. What had
he done?
His heart thumped so
hard it hurt and all but broke a rib when the woman departing the train came
into eyeshot.
A woman wrapped in a
black cloak like a bat closing its wings. A woman with hair so white she could
have been the snow queen in a fairy tale. And so old she could have mothered
Methuselah.
Good Lord, had the
telegraph operator in Omaha meant 91, not 21?
The conductor gently
loaded her onto the platform, and Hez prayed for death.
“Great granny? Great
granny?”
A herd of Hunsakers
ran from behind their worn-out wagon, all nine of ’em grabbing the old lady
close. Life returned to Hez’s bloodstream.
But his heart stopped
again when he heard the conductor call out his name.
“Hezekiah Steller?
This lady’s looking for you.”
It was happening for
real. Hez, heart stopped, plodded forward like he was that old woman’s man. Until
the conductor pulled another female outside and unwrapped the long linen duster
passengers wore to keep away the coal dust.
Beneath the grimy coat
stepped his bride. Like an angel bursting forth from a bank of clouds. Like a
dream coming true. Her beauty astonished him; her tiny waist brought on sweet
relief. And Hez realized his life would never be the same. Realized he just
might never breath normal again.
“How do, ma’am.” He
tried to speak but no sound came forth.
http://tinyurl.com/nzqrehl
Tanya, what an amazing woman. I have a lateral relative who was the first woman osteopath in North Central Texas and later had a hospital near Houston. Her daughter followed in her footsteps. Love your stories.
ReplyDeleteHi Caroline, I was so delighted to find out about Doctor Sue, and yet so disappointed never to have learned about her before now! We have such a screwed up culture when we idolize worthless people yet amazing people like this, you never get to know. Grrr.
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by today! xo
Tanya, I think Indian doctors, male or female are so interesting, I think, because we had one in our family a few generations back. We aren't sure which tribe he was from, but I believe it must have been the Chickasaws. He was stolen as a young boy by the US Gov't. and given to a white family to raise. They sent him to medical school in MO. He became a circuit doctor--probably because he WAS Indian, and (this is speculation on my part) couldn't sustain a "regular" practice due to the prejudices of the times.
ReplyDeleteWonderful post. I really enjoyed it.
Cheryl
What a gem from history, Tanya. I can't imagine what a great spirit she had to overcome so many obstacles to find her dream. Bone disease of all things--how very painful and debilitating. I'm so glad to know she got to see her dream come true. Wonderful blog.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Cheryl. What a terrificiece of family history! your ancestor and Dr. Sue need to inspire characters in books, don't you think? Wow. I so,appreciate the post today.
ReplyDeleteHi Sarah, isn't she a terrific historical figure and role model? Her father definitely saw the light of inevitable change but never wanted her to lose her heritage. The sad thing...I only found her because I wanted an interesting "tidbit" about Omaha. What a tidbit! She should be shouted from the mountain tops. Thanks for the comment,
ReplyDeleteWhat an amazing figure. She squeezed more than a lifetime of accomplishments into 50 years.
ReplyDeleteI know, Sam. I feel like such a lazy slug LOL. Thanks for stopping by! xoxox
ReplyDelete