Susette La Flesche
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- Omaha name:
- Inshata Theumba (“Bright Eyes”)
- Born:
- 1854, Omaha Reservation, present-day Nebraska, U.S.
- Died:
- May 26, 1903, near Bancroft, Nebraska (aged 49)
Susette La Flesche (born 1854, Omaha Reservation, present-day Nebraska, U.S.—died May 26, 1903, near Bancroft, Nebraska) was a Native American writer, lecturer, and activist in the cause of Native peoples’ rights.
La Flesche’s father was an Omaha chief who was the son of a French trader and an Omaha woman. He sent his children to a Presbyterian mission school to provide them with an English-language education. La Flesche’s sister Susan became the first Native American female physician, and her brother, Francis, studied to be an ethnologist. La Flesche went to Elizabeth, New Jersey, to continue her education, and she returned to the Omaha Reservation to teach at a government school.
La Flesche became involved in her people’s struggle for justice. She took up the cause of the Ponca, a tribe related to the Omaha who had been uprooted from their lands by the U.S. government and moved to Oklahoma, where sickness and starvation beset them. When the Ponca chief Standing Bear and several of his followers returned to Nebraska in 1879 after a long and arduous journey, they were arrested. A court case brought about at the instigation of Thomas H. Tibbles of the Omaha Daily Herald resulted in the release of Standing Bear and his followers in May 1879 and the establishment of a legal precedent in recognizing Native Americans as persons before U.S. law.
Using the name Bright Eyes, the English translation of her Omaha name Inshata Theumba, she then undertook a lecture tour of the eastern United States with Standing Bear, also acting as his interpreter. The tour aroused sympathy in influential circles, led by such individuals as Edward Everett Hale, Alice Fletcher, Wendell Phillips, and Mary L. Bonney, and was an important factor in the passage of the Dawes General Allotment Act in 1887. In 1881 La Flesche married Tibbles. She continued to work against the arbitrary removal of Native peoples from their traditional lands, lecturing throughout the United States and in Scotland.
La Flesche and her husband settled on the Omaha Reservation, where she wrote and illustrated stories about Native Americans and helped her husband with his work. She edited and wrote the introduction for Ploughed Under: The Story of an Indian Chief (1881), an anonymous work.