[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 24 (Friday, February 10, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1090-S1091]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO KATHERINE JOHNSON AND REMEMBERING MARY JACKSON AND DOROTHY
VAUGHAN
Mr. WARNER. Madam President, in honor of African-American History
Month and in support of efforts to promote education and training in
21st century careers involving science, technology, engineering, and
mathematics, I want to bring the attention of this body to the stories
of three remarkable African-American women. Katherine Johnson, Dorothy
Vaughan, and Mary Jackson broke through barriers of gender and race as
trailblazers at NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, VA, more
than a half century ago. Together with my colleagues Senator Tim Kaine
and Congressman Bobby Scott, we honor these women.
Before John Glenn orbited Earth or Alan Shepherd walked on the Moon,
several hundred female mathematicians used pencil and paper, slide
rules, and adding machines to perform the complex equations which
launched America's journey into space. Among these ``human computers,''
as they were known, were Katherine Johnson, Dorothy Vaughan, and Mary
Jackson--three women who have become symbols for many other women, many
of them women of color, who worked at NASA Langley's West Area
Computing Group complex and helped America dominate space and
aeronautics research.
Virginia author Margot Lee Shetterly grew up surrounded by this
little-known history, much of it relayed by her father, who also was an
internationally recognized scientist with NASA's Langley Research
Center. And Shetterly masterfully tells the story in her book ``Hidden
Figures'', which currently is an Academy Award nominated motion picture
of the same name.
Mr. KAINE. Madam President, Katherine Johnson, Dorothy Vaughan, and
Mary Jackson shared a combined 95 years of experience in the field of
aeronautics and space exploration. Katherine Johnson worked as an
aerospace technologist from 1953 until she retired in 1986. Dorothy
Vaughan worked as a mathematician and programmer from 1943 until her
retirement in 1971. Mary Jackson also worked as a computer and an
engineer from 1951 until her retirement in 1985. Over the course of
their careers at NASA, Johnson, Vaughan, and Jackson coauthored more
than three dozen scientific papers.
In her role as a ``computer,'' Katherine Johnson calculated the
trajectory for Alan Shepard, the first American in space. Even after
NASA began calculating trajectories with electronic computers, John
Glenn personally requested that Johnson recheck those calculations
before the Friendship Seven flight in which he became the first
American to orbit the Earth. ``If she says they're good, then I'm ready
to go,'' Glenn said during the preflight check, and once he got the
word from Katherine Johnson, Friendship Seven roared off a launch pad
and into American history. Katharine Jackson later would play key roles
in the success of America's Apollo and space shuttle programs.
Dorothy Vaughan left her job as a math teacher at Prince Edward
County, Virginia's segregated Moton High School in 1943 for what she
thought would be a temporary job with the agency that would later
become NASA. Vaughan became NASA's first African-American manager in
1949 and the first African-American supervisor at the fledgling space
agency. When NASA
[[Page S1091]]
transitioned to electronic computing, Vaughan transitioned with it,
becoming an expert FORTRAN programmer and training others within her
department on the early computer programming language.
Mary Jackson was first hired at NASA by Dorothy Vaughan, and after 2
years in the segregated computing pool, she was provided an opportunity
to work with internationally recognized engineers in Langley's wind
tunnels. That exposure led to her interest in engineering, and she
successfully petitioned Hampton City Council for permission to enroll
in graduate level coursework offered only at night and only at the
then-segregated Hampton High School. Not only did she successfully
complete the coursework, Mary Jackson became NASA's first Black female
engineer in 1958. Twenty years later, she would cap her career by
working to further improve hiring and promotion opportunities for women
across the entire space agency.
Mr. WARNER. Thanks to Margot Lee Shetterly's book and the popularity
of the film, these hidden figures are hidden no longer. And the stories
of Katherine Johnson, Dorothy Vaughan, and Mary Jackson reflect
America's story: the powerful combination of individual drive and
accomplishment and the certain knowledge that America is at its very
best when we are inclusive and welcome everyone's contributions of
capability and talent.
The stories of Katherine Johnson, Dorothy Vaughan, and Mary Jackson
also provide compelling testimony to support our bipartisan efforts to
promote education and training in the STEM disciplines: science,
technology, engineering, and mathematics. Those are the disciplines
which will continue to provide the opportunities of the future, and
these are the disciplines where we must do a much better job of
recruiting and retaining young women, especially girls of Color.
It is an honor to place in the record of this body the stories of
these exceptionally talented individuals. They were among the brightest
minds of their generation, and their intellect and their collective
body of work helped change America's future.
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