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A Warrior of the People

How Susan La Flesche Overcame Racial and Gender Inequality to Become America's First Indian Doctor

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"An important and riveting story of a 19th-century feminist and change agent. Starita successfully balances the many facts with vivid narrative passages that put the reader inside the very thoughts and emotions of La Flesche." —Chicago Tribune

On March 14, 1889, Susan La Flesche Picotte received her medical degree—becoming the first Native American doctor in U.S. history. She earned her degree thirty-one years before women could vote and thirty-five years before Indians could become citizens in their own country.
By age twenty-six, this fragile but indomitable Native woman became the doctor to her tribe. Overnight, she acquired 1,244 patients scattered across 1,350 square miles of rolling countryside with few roads. Her patients often were desperately poor and desperately sick—tuberculosis, small pox, measles, influenza—families scattered miles apart, whose last hope was a young woman who spoke their language and knew their customs.
This is the story of an Indian woman who effectively became the chief of an entrenched patriarchal tribe, the story of a woman who crashed through thick walls of ethnic, racial and gender prejudice, then spent the rest of her life using a unique bicultural identity to improve the lot of her people—physically, emotionally, politically, and spiritually.
Joe Starita's A Warrior of the People is the moving biography of Susan La Flesche Picotte's inspirational life and dedication to public health, and it will finally shine a light on her numerous accomplishments.

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    • Booklist

      November 1, 2016
      Pulitzer Prizewinning journalist Starita opens his thoroughly researched biography of the first Native American doctor in January 1892, as La Flesche began living her dream of caring for 1,244 members of her Omaha band living on 1,350 square miles of northeast Nebraska. Raised by a father who stressed education as the key value to adopt from the white man, La Flesche and her sister attended a private girls' school in New Jersey; then, in 1884, they enrolled in Hampton School in Virginia, where one-sixth of the school population were Native Americans from 19 different tribes. With the aid of a scholarship, La Flesche enrolled in the Medical College of Pennsylvania, and in 1889, she graduated first in her class. But as Starita points out, it would be 31 years before she could vote and 35 years before she and other Native Americans could become U.S. citizens. Besides serving as the sole doctor for her tribe, La Flesche undertook religious and educational projects. Starita's biography of this remarkable woman is both heartening and enlightening.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

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