A White man
may have been the first to walk on the moon but, Katherine Johnson, a Black
mathematician, got him there. A math genius, Johnson entered West Virginia State University, a Historically Black College, at age
15. While there, professors at the campus competed to have the brilliant young
woman in their classes. Dr. William W. Schiefflin Claytor, who earned his
Bachelors and Masters in Mathematics at Howard University, told the bright
young woman that she would make a great Research Mathematician, and set about
teaching her all that he knew. She took every Math class that the university
offered, and her young professor and mentor even created an Analytic Geometry
class, specifically for her, that she alone took.
It all paid off. She arrived
at National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, the predecessor to NASA, after
the organization had begun looking for women to work as "computers."
At this time, electronic computing was still in its early stages and human
minds were still called on to verify the accuracy of the computations. Given
that this was still a time of segregation, Johnson worked in the division that
was made up entirely of Black woman mathematicians whose supervisor was also a
Black woman. Unlike their White counterparts, they all had college degrees. It
was common for the women to do the computations while the men worked on the
engineering side, learned about the space program and went to special
briefings.
Johnson wanted to know what was happening with the burgeoning space
program and asked to attend one of the briefings. She was told that women did
not go, but inquired whether this was based on a law. It was not, and so she
was given permission to go. She stood out in briefings, because of her
insightful questioning and accurate work, and while doing research for the
program, they came to rely upon her mathematical authority. When it was time
for the first flight into space to happen, it was her computations that made it
possible. She did all this while being a young wife and a mother, but she
balanced it all. She simply was doing the work that intrigued and motivated
her. She remains an inspiration to many at the age of 96
(The movie "Hidden Figures" provides a great deal of historical color into this topic)
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