Jeter Publishing presents a series that celebrates men and women who
altered the course of history but may not be as well-known as their
counterparts. In this middle grade biography, learn about Susan
LaFlesche Picotte, the first Native American woman to earn a medical
degree.
Susan LaFlesche Picotte was the first Native American doctor in the
United States and served more than 1,300 patients over 450 square miles
in the late 1800s.
Susan was the daughter of mixed-race (white and Native American)
parents, and struggled much of her life with trying to balance the two
worlds. As a child, she watched an elderly Omaha Indian woman die on the
reservation because no white doctor would come help. When she grew
older, Susan attended one of just a handful of medical schools that
accepted women, graduating top of her class as the country's first
Native American physician.
Returning to her native Nebraska, Susan dedicated her life to working
with Native American populations, battling epidemics from smallpox to
tuberculosis that ravaged reservations during the final decades of the
19th century.
Blizzards and frigid temperatures were just part of the job for Susan,
who took her horse and buggy for house calls no matter what the weather
conditions. Before her death in 1915, she also established public health
initiatives and even built a hospital.