As a young woman, Susette La Flesche became more interested in politics and soon graduated and learned how to speak English. She first worked as a teacher on the Omaha reservation. She had always wanted to become a teacher and after graduating from school at the Elizabeth Institute for Young Ladies in New Jersey. After returning home that's where she began to teach, First in the mission school, later at the government school on the Omaha reservation. She also established a Sunday school with the support of William and Julia Hamilton, who were noted to be the Presbyterian missionaries there since 1855. Since her paternal grandmother and uncle were Ponca, she and her father traveled to Oklahoma to investigate conditions after the tribe's forced
removal from Nebraska to Indian Territory. (The US government had reassigned the Ponca land in Nebraska to the
Great Sioux Reservation.) La Flesche worked with
Thomas Tibbles, an editor with the Omaha
World Herald, to publicize the poor conditions they found at the southern reservation: the Ponca had been moved too late in the year to plant crops, the government was late with supplies and promised infrastructure and improvements, and
malaria was endemic in the area. Nearly one-third of the tribe died within the first two years as a result of the journey and conditions, among them the oldest son of Chief
Standing Bear. The chief left the Indian Territory with some followers to bury his son in the traditional homeland of Nebraska. They were arrested and confined to
Fort Omaha, by order of the federal government. Tibbles' coverage of the chief's imprisonment was instrumental in gaining Standing Bear
pro bono legal services by two prominent defense attorneys, including the counsel for the
Union Pacific Railroad. Standing Bear filed a suit of
habeas corpus against the US government, challenging the grounds for his arrest. In 1879 La Flesche acted as
Standing Bear's interpreter during his lawsuit at
Fort Omaha, Nebraska. She also testified as to conditions on the reservation in Indian Territory. Standing Bear successfully challenged the lack of grounds of his arrest and imprisonment, arguing before the
United States District Court that Indians were persons under the law, and had all the rights of US citizens. Tibbles attended and reported the case, which gained national attention.
Standing Bear v. Crook (1879) was a landmark
civil rights case, with the judge deciding that Indians had certain rights as "persons" and citizens under the US constitution. She began serving as a witness and interpreter on other cases where Native Americans sued the U.S. government. After this trial, she received the Indian name "Bright Eyes" for her work advocating for her community. Following the trial, La Flesche and her half-brother Francis accompanied Standing Bear and others on a speaking tour of the eastern United States, organized by Tibbles. In addition to taking turns interpreting for Standing Bear, Susette La Flesche spoke in her own right. During the tour, La Flesche and Tibbles also testified in Washington in 1880 before a
Congressional committee about the Ponca removal. La Flesche spoke for the rights of Native Americans. They met prominent American writers, such as the poet
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and writer
Helen Hunt Jackson. In 1881 Jackson published a book about US treatment of Native Americans entitled
A Century of Dishonor, and in 1884 the novel
Ramona, based on Indian issues in
Southern California. Longfellow reportedly said of La Flesche, "This could be
Minnehaha", referring to the legendary Indian heroine in his poem
The Song of Hiawatha. In 1887, La Flesche and Tibbles, by then married, accompanied Standing Bear on a 10-month speaking tour of England and
Scotland. La Flesche continued to act as the chief's interpreter. They were heard by many who wanted to learn more about the American Indian issues in the United States. After their return to Nebraska, LaFlesche and Tibbles became interested in the growing
Ghost Dance movement and issues among the restive
Sioux bands. They went to the
Pine Ridge Agency in 1890 and wrote about its conditions, as well as the
Wounded Knee massacre. This work was likely the peak of LaFlesche's journalism career. She continued to publish articles and columns in papers in Nebraska, including her husband's
populist The Independent. ==Marriage==