First Native hospital, built by nation’s first Native doctor, to again 
		care for Nebraskans
		
		[June 14, 2025] 
		By NATALIA ALAMDARI/Flatwater Free Press 
		
		The ask was simple. 
		 
		Will you donate $132 to honor your fellow physician, Dr. Susan La 
		Flesche Picotte? The Nebraska Medical Association put the word out to 
		its members in 2021. 
		 
		Who’s that? Nebraska doctors asked. After they learned her story, 
		$600,000 in donations poured in. 
		 
		In 1889 — 132 years before the ask — La Flesche made American history 
		when she became the first Native American to earn a medical degree. Born 
		in a tipi in 1865 on the Omaha reservation in northeast Nebraska, she 
		graduated from a Pennsylvania college, became a doctor, but turned down 
		prestigious offers to stay on the East Coast. 
		 
		Instead, she took the train home and became the reservation’s first 
		medical doctor, driving a horse-pulled buggy across the vast, 
		1,300-square-mile reservation and treating more than 1,200 Native and 
		non-Native patients. 
		 
		In 1913, she raised the money to build a hospital in Walthill. Dr. 
		Susan’s hospital was the first ever built on a Native reservation. 
		 
		More than a century later, that still-standing historic building is 
		being restored into the Dr. Susan La Flesche Picotte Center. It’s a 
		space dedicated to sharing La Flesche’s singular story. It’s also, once 
		again, a place where the tribe’s members and nonmembers alike can get 
		medical care in Nebraska’s poorest county, where 18% of residents live 
		below the poverty line. 
		
		
		  
		
		The restored hospital will be celebrated Saturday at a private 
		dedication event. The public then can visit it at an open house on June 
		22. The project’s leaders, a combination of tribe members, doctors, 
		community members and La Flesche’s descendants, hope to have medical 
		care up and running by the end of summer. 
		 
		“She paved the way for a lot of people to have the confidence within 
		themselves to accomplish the things that they thought they couldn’t do,” 
		said Liz Lovejoy Brown, executive director of the Picotte Center. “She 
		accomplished all this because she persevered.” 
		 
		Lovejoy Brown calls the famed Native doctor “the definition of Omaha” 
		because, she said, the word Omaha means “against the current.” 
		 
		As a child, La Flesche watched as a white doctor refused to treat a sick 
		Native American woman. 
		 
		The experience shaped her, starting her on the path to becoming a 
		doctor. 
		 
		The daughter of Joseph La Flesche, the last recognized chief of the 
		Omaha tribe, Susan La Flesche and her siblings were encouraged to pursue 
		an education. Her sister, Susette “Bright Eyes” La Flesche, was 
		well-known for acting as Ponca Chief Standing Bear’s interpreter during 
		his 1879 civil court case in Omaha. 
		 
		Susan La Flesche left Nebraska to attend college as an undergraduate in 
		Virginia, at what is now Hampton University — a historically Black 
		college that also accepted Native students. 
		 
		She returned home to work as a teacher. It was then that she fully 
		realized her reservation’s desperate need for medical care, Lovejoy 
		Brown said. 
		 
		In 1886, La Flesche went back east, enrolling at the Women’s Medical 
		College of Pennsylvania. 
		 
		By 1889, she graduated at the top of her class. 
		 
		“What she did all happened at the height of the Victorian era, when the 
		bar for white women was about a quarter of an inch off the ground … and 
		for Native American women, there was no bar at all, because they were 
		invisible,” said Joe Starita, a retired University of Nebraska-Lincoln 
		professor and author of an award-winning book, “A Warrior for the 
		People,” that chronicles the life of La Flesche. 
		 
		“For somebody to emerge out of that context and get into a medical 
		college and graduate as valedictorian,” Starita said, “the odds of that 
		happening were 100,000 to 1.” 
		 
		When she graduated, La Flesche’s East Coast friends begged her to stay, 
		Starita said. 
		 
		“She didn’t listen to any of it,” he said. “She got on the next train 
		back to Omaha, where her father met her in a buckboard (wagon) and drove 
		her back to the Omaha reservation, where she spent the rest of her life 
		taking care of her beloved Omaha people.” 
		 
		The U.S. had 104,000 licensed physicians by 1890, Starita said. Only 
		4.4% were women. And only one was Native — La Flesche. 
		 
		Returning home to the Omaha reservation, 24-year-old La Flesche was 
		suddenly responsible for 1,244 patients scattered across 1,300 square 
		miles. 
		 
		Day after day, she awoke by 5 a.m., hitched her two horses to a buggy 
		and followed vague directions to get to patients spread across the 
		reservation. In the winter and snow, she’d throw on a buffalo robe and 
		scarf. It was often dark by the time she got home. 
		 
		“Went to bed hungry, too tired to eat,” she’d write repeatedly in her 
		journals. 
		 
		After years of doing this, La Flesche believed there had to be a more 
		efficient way to see patients. 
		 
		She needed a hospital. 
		
		
		  
		
		La Flesche rallied her East Coast connections, the Quaker donors and 
		Presbyterian women’s groups who’d helped fund her education. She raised 
		$9,000. 
		 
		In 1913, the Presbyterian Memorial Hospital opened on the north end of 
		Walthill. La Flesche walked to work from her home three blocks away. 
		 
		“This is the first hospital that was built on any reservation,” Lovejoy 
		Brown said. “This was before women were eligible to vote, and before 
		Native Americans were considered human beings.” 
		 
		The hospital could fit 40 patients. La Flesche operated on patients in 
		the room with the best natural light. An east-facing screened porch 
		included hooks for hammocks, so tuberculosis patients could relax in the 
		fresh air. The third floor included three rooms where nurses lived. 
		 
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			  La Flesche spent her days delivering 
			babies and treating the elderly. In her free time, she founded the 
			first library for children on the reservation and taught Sunday 
			school. She promoted proper hygiene to help prevent the spread of 
			disease, like screens on windows to keep flies out. She traveled to 
			Washington, D.C., to testify before Congress about the harms of 
			whiskey peddlers selling alcohol on the reservation. 
			 
			“Starting this hospital was one of 50 items that you could put on 
			her greatest-hits list,” Starita said. “She was just so utterly 
			unique in so many different ways.” 
			 
			La Flesche worked for two years in the Walthill hospital she built. 
			 
			She died at the age of 50 in 1915. 
			 
			“She definitely was before her time and did things well before 
			people even were aware of the possibilities of what could be,” 
			Lovejoy Brown said. “She carried such a strong legacy just for the 
			time she was here. We want to try to carry out the legacy that she 
			had.” 
			 
			Lovejoy Brown first learned of La Flesche’s legacy from her mother. 
			 
			“Ever since I was a little girl, I was like, ‘I’m going to be just 
			like her,’” Lovejoy Brown said. 
			 
			Raised in Omaha, Lovejoy Brown learned the Omaha Nation’s culture 
			through her grandfather. Just like La Flesche, she wanted to get her 
			education and move to the reservation to help in any way she could. 
			Eight years ago, she did just that. 
			 
			After getting hired to oversee the renovated hospital, Lovejoy Brown 
			realized the building’s original dedication and her own birthday 
			were on the same day. Then she realized the dedication of the 
			renovated hospital falls close to La Flesche’s birthday. 
			 
			It felt like everything was aligning, Lovejoy Brown said. It felt 
			like she ended up exactly where she needed to be. 
			 
			After La Flesche’s death, the hospital stayed operational until 
			1944, when it became an elder care facility. It was then a private 
			residence, an upholstery shop, a bakery, a thrift store, a law firm 
			and a farm aid office. 
			 
			The nonprofit behind the hospital renovation eventually bought the 
			building. Then, eight years ago, the Nebraska Commission on Indian 
			Affairs formed a committee to look into what it would take to 
			restore it. The effort brought together La Flesche’s descendants, 
			big-city doctors and architects and Native and non-Native residents 
			of Walthill and the rural northeast Nebraska reservation. 
			 
			In total, the committee raised more than $6 million to make the 
			restoration happen, including money from the various family 
			foundations, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the National 
			Park Service. 
			 
			“It’s a Native American story, but it’s also a physician story,” 
			said Dr. Britt Thedinger, past president of the Nebraska Medical 
			Association and member of the renovation committee. “It’s a wide 
			swath of people … enthusiastic about the story. Hopefully it also 
			gives the tribe … and the community a sense of pride in their 
			history.” 
			
			
			  
			Once the center is up and running, it will include social spaces, 
			such as an artists’ space for people to work on beadwork, sewing and 
			embroidery. There will be a business incubator for new entrepreneurs 
			looking to launch a business. There will be a gift shop that sells 
			Dr. Susan merch and an office for Boys & Girls Club representatives. 
			 
			An old patient room will be arranged to look like it would have 100 
			years ago, to give visitors a view of the original hospital. 
			Exhibits will take visitors through La Flesche’s story, displaying 
			her medical bag and tools as well as family artifacts such as 
			moccasins and tribal regalia. 
			 
			Most importantly, Lovejoy Brown said, the first floor will include a 
			range of health care services. The Munroe-Meyer Institute, a 
			University of Nebraska Medical Center department that provides 
			health care for people with disabilities, will staff an office in 
			the restored hospital. The building will offer an urgent care 
			clinic, counseling services and behavioral health care. 
			 
			To get specialized care or behavioral health diagnoses currently 
			requires a drive to Omaha or Sioux City, Lovejoy Brown said. 
			 
			In Thurston County, the need for easier access is critical, Lovejoy 
			Brown said. The reservation continues to see a spate of youth 
			suicides, often happening in clusters. Too many children are going 
			undiagnosed with autism and ADHD, she said, and babies continue to 
			be born with fetal alcohol effects. 
			 
			“We have all the issues that you have in the inner city … 
			unemployment, alcoholism, housing issues … but we’re in a rural 
			setting,” said Nancy Gillis, a member of the restoration board. 
			“And, we’re in a fishbowl. People see something happening on the 
			reservation from the outside, and it’s immediately tagged as, ‘Oh, 
			those Indians.’” 
			 
			What was once La Flesche’s operating room will soon be transformed 
			into a reading space for children. This room will represent the 
			second hill of the four hills of Native life that Lovejoy Brown’s 
			grandfather used to describe to her — a hill for infants, another 
			for children, a hill for adults and, finally, one for elders. 
			 
			“When you’re at the very top of the (last) hill, and you look back 
			and you see the other three hills, you see your children and your 
			children’s children all going through life,” Lovejoy Brown said. 
			“The top of that last hill, it’s a sense of accomplishment. You left 
			some sort of legacy.” 
			 
			La Flesche’s own final hill is clear. 
			 
			“With Dr. Susan, she has left a huge legacy, not just for her 
			family, not just for our tribe, but for all minorities everywhere,” 
			Lovejoy Brown said. “So many people are following her path still, 
			even after she has made it to the spirit world.” 
			
			
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