Today, at the age of 100,
she is regarded as one of the pioneers of space travel, but in the 1960s, this
brilliant mathematician was a “computer” working for NASA on a low wage. Hundreds
of women with science and mathematics degrees held jobs as “computers” before
the advent of electronic computers. It was actually a job title.

Women who held jobs as “computers
in skirts” in the 1940s and 1950s were considered semi-professional,
and their wages varied from $140 per year for a junior computer to $200 per
year for a senior computer, whereas men with similar qualifications would start
on a salary of around $2,600 per year. Katherine Johnson, born in 1918, was
born with a gift for numbers.
She was ready for high
school at 10 years of age and had taken to math like a duck to water,
graduating from college at 18 with degrees in Math and French. When NASA (NACA
at the time) began investigating sending people into space for the first time
in the 1950s, Katherine Johnson was hired as part of a group of black women on
cheap wages to do complex mathematics equations, and she remained at NASA for
33 years.

NASA research mathematician, Katherine Johnson at Langley Research Center. (©NASA)
Johnson calculated the
flight path for NASA’s first mission into space—the Freedom 7 mission
trajectory, flown by Alan Shepard in 1961. When astronaut John Glenn made his
historic journey of three orbits around Earth in 1962, he requested Johnson
personally do the math equations manually before takeoff, as electronic
calculators were at the time not that reliable. He said to Johnson’s supervisor, “If she says they’re
good, then I’m ready to go.”

Launching of the Mercury-Redstone 3 (MR-3) rocket, America’s first human spaceflight from Cape Canaveral on astronaut Alan B. Shepard’s Freedom 7 suborbital mission. (© NASA)
Glenn landed back on Earth
safely, and Johnson went on to work on computing the path that would get men to
land on the Moon. At the time, Johnson was relatively unknown, but that changed
when she was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2015 for her
pioneering work, the highest civilian honor in the United States.
The book “Hidden Figures” by
Margot Lee Shetterly, published in 2016, detailed Johnson’s accomplishments and
led to a blockbuster movie of the same name, which grossed $200 million and had
three Oscar nominations. This film detailed the stories of three African
American mathematicians—Katherine Johnson, Mary Jackson, and Dorothy Vaughan.

NASA Administrator Charles Bolden presents an award to Katherine Johnson. (©NASA)
Johnson was then thrust into
the limelight, and now NASA has honored the brilliant mathematician by renaming
a facility in Fairmont, West Virginia, in her honor. The NASA Independent
Verification and Validation Facility will now be known as the Katherine Johnson
Independent Verification and Validation Facility.
“I am thrilled we are honoring Katherine Johnson in this way as she is a true American icon who overcame incredible obstacles and inspired so many,” said NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine in a release. “It’s a fitting tribute to name the facility that carries on her legacy of mission-critical computations in her honor.”

Johnson, who is all set to
turn 100 this August, is surely an inspiration to all women who are in the
field of mathematics. To honor her, the West Virginia State University plans to
make a bronze statue on its campus along with providing a scholarship in her
name, as per Daily Press. Perhaps her legacy is set to continue in her
great-granddaughter Na Kia Boykin, a third-grade student who is a natural at
math.
She scored a perfect 600 on
the Standards of Learning test in 2018. “I like math
because I can look at a problem and figure it out,” she said at a school
assembly when her efforts were recognized, Daily Press reported. “You can just look at the
problem and do it. You use the numbers, and you use your brain. It’s a good
challenge.”
“She’s such a challenging girl,” said Na Kia’s mother, Nicole Terry. “She challenges me a lot. She wants to excel, and she wants to fulfill things her great-grandmother says. It’s definitely rubbed off on her.”
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