In 1887, her husband, Nipendra Narayan was awarded
GCIE and she was awarded
CIE. Suniti Devi became the first Indian woman to be awarded CIE. She attended the Diamond Jubilee celebrations of Queen Victoria in 1898 and the
Delhi Durbar of 1911 with her husband, the Maharaja of Cooch Behar. She, along with her sister,
Sucharu Devi, were noted for their elegant dress. Her husband had set up in her name a girls' school in 1881 which was later named
Suniti Academy. Suniti Devi was the brain behind the establishment of the school. She was an educationalist and a women's rights activist at heart, gave annual grants for the institution, exempted the girl students from paying tuition fees and also rewarded the successful students. She, along with her sister Sucharu Devi (Maharani of Mayurbhanj) also financed the foundation of
Maharani Girls' High School in
Darjeeling in 1908. She was the President of the State Council and also the first President of
All Bengal Women's Union in 1932 and worked along with other women's rights activists from Bengal like
Charulata Mukherjee,
Saroj Nalini Dutt, T. R Nelly and her sister Sucharu Devi. She authored a book "The Beautiful Mogul Princesses", which was published in 1918 by W. Thacker & Co. 2, Creed Lane, Ludgate Hill, London. This book contains the intimate life stories of the Mughal princesses
Mumtaz Mahal, Reba,
Zebunissa and
Nur Jahan. She also authored a short story collection, "Bengal Dacoits and Tigers", published in 1916 by Thacker, Spink and Company, Calcutta. Her final publication was "The Life of Princess Yashodara: Wife and Disciple of the Lord Buddha," London: Elkin Matthews and Marrot Limited, 1929; this has since been reprinted by Kessinger Legacy Reprints (www.kessinger.net). She died suddenly in the year 1932 at
Ranchi. ==Titles==