Betty Tiger Jumper worked as a nurse for 40 years to improve health care in the Seminole community, initially traveling a large circuit to the various small communities of the areas that became Big Cypress, Brighton and Hollywood reservations. "As the people came out of the swamps", as she said, she and another nurse inoculated many children with
vaccinations for the first time. She and her mother, who was a midwife, would work to persuade women to go to the hospital when needed, as they began to adapt to the new world. in 1973In 1956, Tiger Jumper was co-founder of a tribal newsletter, called the
Seminole News. It closed a short time after others took it over. In 1967 Betty Mae Tiger Jumper was elected as the first female chairwoman, or chief, of the Seminole tribe, a decade after it gained federal recognition. She founded the
United South and Eastern Tribes (USET), a group to run health and education programs for its members; it also became a powerful lobby with the states and Congress. Thanks to her leadership, the Seminole Tribe went from near bankruptcy in 1967 to having $500,000 when she left office in 1971. "I had three goals in my life," Mrs. Jumper said in 1999. "To finish school, to take nurse's training and come back and work among my people, and to write three books." Tiger-Jumper was awarded the first Lifetime Achievement Award by the
Native American Journalists Association. ==Books==