Today's Date: April 24, 2024
Ohmium Partners with Tata Projects to Advance Green Hydrogen Initiatives in India   •   Hilco Redevelopment Partners (HRP) Celebrates Earth Day Across the Nation with Community Volunteer Events   •   Iruka Hawaii Dolphin and Pearl Haven Celebrate Successful Marine Educational Event for Youth   •   Help at Home Acknowledges CMS Efforts to Enhance Quality, Accountability and Transparency in "Ensuring Access to Medicaid Servic   •   Willing Warriors to Open PenFed Grand Lodge Offering Respite for Wounded Warriors and Families   •   The Atrium at Cardinal Drive Assisted Living Community Named One of the Country's Best by U.S. News & World Report for Secon   •   Blue Bird to Report Fiscal 2024 Second Quarter Results on May 8, 2024   •   EY Announces Josh Matthews of Apkudo as an Entrepreneur Of The Year® 2024 Mid-Atlantic Award Finalist   •   Talking Math: WPI Researcher Neil Heffernan Leads Effort To Develop AI Math Tutor   •   Compass Group Reinforces Commitment to Reduce Food Waste on 8th Annual Stop Food Waste Day   •   ERI’s John Shegerian Calls the Recycling of Electronics “the Most Urgently Needed Environmental Solution of Our Gene   •   On the Road Lending Announces Expansion into North Carolina   •   Minister Patty Hajdu highlights budget investments in Lytton First Nation   •   The Fresh Market Elevates the Food Scene in Lakewood Ranch with Newest Store   •   Menopause Impacts More Than Half the Workforce, but Menopausal Support in the Workplace Is Critically Lacking: New Insights From   •   Transmedia Group Excited to Place in Media Spotlight Larger-Than-Life Songwriter/Producer ZOEY TESS   •   First Annual Cultural Celebration Day in Lansing, Illinois Calls For Participants   •   AVI Systems and Technology Partners Team to Contribute More Than $110,000 to the AVIXA Foundation’s Brad Sousa Impact Fund   •   New AARP Survey: 1 in 5 Americans Ages 50+ Have No Retirement Savings and Over Half Worry They Will Not Have Enough to Last in R   •   MONAT Global Announces The Growth Alliance with Eric Worre
Bookmark and Share

NASA Celebrates 'Hidden Figure' Mary W. Jackson With Building Naming Ceremony

NASA Celebrates 'Hidden Figure' Mary W. Jackson With Building Naming Ceremony

PR Newswire

WASHINGTON, Feb. 26, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- On Friday, NASA celebrated the agency's first African American female engineer, Mary W. Jackson, with a ceremony to formally name the agency's headquarters building in Washington in her honor.

Jackson began working at the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) – the forerunner of NASA – in April 1951. From her initial role as a "human computer" within the segregated West Area Computing Unit of what would become NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, to becoming an engineer, to managing Langley's Federal Women's Program and championing equal employment opportunity efforts at the center toward the end of her career, Jackson's pioneering efforts and commitment to helping others have inspired generations – both at NASA and beyond.

"With the official naming of the Mary W. Jackson NASA Headquarters today, we ensure that she is a hidden figure no longer," said acting NASA Administrator Steve Jurczyk. "Jackson's story is one of incredible determination. She personified NASA's spirit of persevering against all odds, providing inspiration and advancing science and exploration."

The work of Jackson and others in Langley's West Area Computing Unit caught widespread national attention in the 2016 Margot Lee Shetterly book "Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win the Space Race." The book was made into a popular movie that same year, with award-winning actress Janelle Monáe playing Jackson's character.

In 2019, Jackson, along with her fellow "Hidden Figures" Katherine Johnson, Dorothy Vaughan, and Christine Darden, were posthumously awarded the Congressional Gold Medal – the highest civilian award – for their work. On June 24, 2020, NASA announced its intent to name the building the Mary W. Jackson NASA Headquarters building.

In addition to unveiling a building sign with Jackson's name, Friday's event featured video tributes with reflections on Jackson's career and legacy from a variety of individuals, including family and friends, current and former NASA employees and astronauts, celebrities, elected officials, and others. The event also featured a video of poet Nikki Giovanni reading an excerpt from her poem "Quilting the Black-Eyed Pea," which is about space and civil rights.

"The recognition we celebrate today is appropriate because Mary Jackson remains an inspiration," said Langley Director Clayton Turner. "Her perseverance, her empathy, her desire to lift us all – she inspired others to excel and to break through barriers. That is the spirit of NASA. Mary Jackson chose to lead by example and at NASA today we strive to emulate her vision, passion, and commitment."

Jackson was born and raised in Hampton, Virginia. She initially worked as a math teacher in Calvert County, Maryland, and also held jobs as a bookkeeper and as a U.S. Army secretary before beginning her aerospace career. In 1942, she received a Bachelor of Science degree in mathematics and physical science from Hampton Institute (now Hampton University).

After two years in the computing pool at Langley, Jackson received an offer to work in the 4-by-4-foot Supersonic Pressure Tunnel, a 60,000-horsepower wind tunnel capable of blasting models with winds approaching twice the speed of sound. There, she received hands-on experience conducting experiments. Her supervisor eventually suggested she enter a training program that would allow Jackson to earn a promotion from mathematician to engineer. Because the classes were held at then-segregated Hampton High School, Jackson needed special permission to join her white peers in the classroom.

Jackson completed the courses, earned the promotion, and in 1958 became NASA's first African American female engineer. For nearly two decades during her engineering career, she authored or co-authored numerous research reports, most of which focused on the behavior of the boundary layer of air around airplanes. In 1979, she joined Langley's Federal Women's Program, where she worked hard to address the hiring and promotion of the next generation of female mathematicians, engineers, and scientists. She retired from Langley in 1985 and passed away in Hampton on February 11, 2005, at the age of 83. She was preceded in death by her husband, Levi Jackson Sr., and was survived by her son, Levi Jackson Jr., and her daughter, Carolyn Marie Lewis.

The legacy of Jackson and others lives on through NASA's continuing commitment to diversity and inclusion. Jackson's commitment to excellence, diversity, inclusion, and teamwork represents not only the best of NASA's current talent, but also the future of the agency. Embracing an inclusive culture is central to all NASA does and is reflected in the recent addition of inclusion as one of the agency's core values, along with safety, integrity, teamwork, and excellence.

View photos from the event at:

https://flic.kr/s/aHsmUwnzw7

Read a biography of Mary W. Jackson written by Shetterly at:

https://www.nasa.gov/content/mary-w-jackson-biography

Learn more about NASA's Hidden and Modern Figures, at:

https://www.nasa.gov/modernfigures

Cision View original content to download multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/nasa-celebrates-hidden-figure-mary-w-jackson-with-building-naming-ceremony-301236761.html

SOURCE NASA



Back to top
| Back to home page
Video

White House Live Stream
LIVE VIDEO EVERY SATURDAY
alsharpton Rev. Al Sharpton
9 to 11 am EST
jjackson Rev. Jesse Jackson
10 to noon CST


Video

LIVE BROADCASTS
Sounds Make the News ®
WAOK-Urban
Atlanta - WAOK-Urban
KPFA-Progressive
Berkley / San Francisco - KPFA-Progressive
WVON-Urban
Chicago - WVON-Urban
KJLH - Urban
Los Angeles - KJLH - Urban
WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
New York - WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
WADO-Spanish
New York - WADO-Spanish
WBAI - Progressive
New York - WBAI - Progressive
WOL-Urban
Washington - WOL-Urban

Listen to United Natiosns News