March: Women's History Month
Women have played a significant role in JSC’s endeavors
since the beginning and in a variety of ways. For instance,
8 of the 36 people transferred from Langley Research Center
to the Space Task Group, the predecessor to the Manned Spacecraft
Center, were women.
In celebration of Women’s History Month, the JSC History
Office commemorates the contributions of some of the Center’s
trailblazing women and invites you to read their transcripts
and to learn more about other women who contributed to NASA's
success.

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Anne L. Accola, Johnson Space Center, NASA Headquarters
Engineer, Training/Simulation Supervisor, Mission Integration
Manager
March 16 & 17, 2005
It was odd for a girl
I
guess I was the right age to be caught up in the Sputnik craze.
I was in seventh grade when Sputnik was launched. It was such
a shock for the country, and President Eisenhower told all
of us school kids we needed to study math and science to catch
up to the Russians. Then I started following all of the U.S.
activities from a relatively small town in Colorado. Greeley
is where I grew up, and it was about 35 or 40 thousand people
then.
In 1960 I got caught up with President John F. Kennedy and—you
know, to the Moon by the end of this decade. I was just fascinated
by it and watched everything I could on TV. I put my mother
in charge of watching it when I was at school, which involved
coming home at lunch and finding out that it hadn’t
launched or it had gone up and toppled into the ocean or blown
up or something back in those days. Then when they started
the actual manned flights, I just really got excited and thought
that that’s where I wanted to work.
It was odd for a girl. In fact, the State Teachers College
was in Greeley, and I got tremendous pressure to go there
and become a teacher, because all women could be was teachers
or nurses. But I didn’t. I went to Colorado State University
where my father had graduated. It was thirty miles away.
I
wanted to be around the action
They didn’t
have an aeronautical engineering curriculum there, and I’m
not sure I would have understood enough to even get into that,
anyway, so I majored in mathematics. The department, though,
was sort of the repository of a collection of things at the
time. The head of the department had an interest in astronomy,
so the astronomy classes at the university were taught in
the math department. It also housed statistics and computer
science, so it was broader than what you might think of as
math.
I kept my interest up in space the whole time. I took all
the astronomy classes that were offered and I sent in an application
for federal employment to the Johnson Space Center. That was
where I wanted to work, and I wanted to be around the action.
I got an offer from the Dispersion Analysis Section. Marlowe
Cassetti was the branch chief. I talked to him on the phone.
Frankly, I didn’t understand what the job was, but it
was where I wanted to work, and that was the offer I had,
so I took it.
Read
Anne Accola's Oral History transcripts
Read
about other women who contributed to NASA's success

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Mary L. Cleave, Johnson Space Center, Goddard Space Flight
Center, NASA Headquarters
Astronaut, SeaWIFs Program Manager, Earth Science Deputy Association
Administrator
March 5, 2002
I was crazy about airplanes
I
was interested in airplanes before space. I started flying
when I was fourteen. No one’s really sure why I was
so crazy about airplanes when I was a little kid, but I was
crazy about airplanes. Nobody else in my family flew except
for my mother’s brother, who was a pilot that was killed
in World War II, so I didn’t even know him. They always
had his picture up on the mantle of my grandmother’s
house.
So I don’t know how I made this connection, but anyway,
I started making model airplanes and took my first flying
lesson at fourteen. My parents said if I wanted to fly, I’d
have to make the money to do it, and so I gave baton-twirling
lessons and babysat a lot, and got the money and went ahead
and took my first lesson.
Then after that, they realized I was really serious about
it, and I was really lucky I had an old retired Army Air Corps
test pilot who was my instructor pilot, and he was nice and
told my parents that I had an ability to do this, because
I didn’t have any cross training. I had no idea how
to drive a car. He said, “This is the first person I’ve
ever had in an airplane that doesn’t have anything to
forget about driving mechanics; her whole interaction is with
an airplane.”
And so they were nice and said if I made the money, they’d
match me. So I went through and soloed when I was 16, got
my solo license and then got my private license when I was
17. Since I lived in New York City, you had to be 18 to drive
a car, so there was a period of time where I was legal to
fly people before I was legal to drive people, which is a
very bizarre thing.
Spaceflight was great, but
it was gravy
When I went to undergraduate school, I thought I wanted to
be an airline stewardess, but in those days, you had to be
5’4” to be an airline stewardess, and I was 5’2”,
so in 1969 when I graduated from college, I was rejected as
an airline stewardess. In 1979 when I graduated from college
with my Ph.D., I applied [for the astronaut corps] and ended
up going down to Houston.
So that’s what happened in that decade for women. Affirmative
action made a huge difference, and I was right on the leading
edge of it. My interest was airplanes, and, in fact, when
I found out there was a possibility of flying in T-38s, I
really thought that was neat because I never thought I’d
get to fly in a high-performance jet. So, for me, spaceflight
was great, but it was gravy on top of getting to fly in great
airplanes.
Read
Mary Cleave's Oral History transcript
Read
about other women who contributed to NASA's success

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Jeanne L. Crews, Johnson Space Center
Aeronautical Engineer
August 6, 2007
We were absolutely blown away
My
father was an Air Force pilot, and I was always interested
in how things work and science, and I love all sorts of science.
When I was about eight, I looked up at the stars and was fascinated
by them. I guess I thought, well, I’d be an astronomer.
I just didn’t know. I loved all of the sciences.
My parents were wonderful. If I liked astronomy, I’d
get a telescope. If I liked looking at water to see what’s
in it, I would get a microscope, whatever I wanted. So they
really encouraged me. I think that’s one of the basic
things, and they never said, “You can’t do this.
You can’t do that.” That was wonderful.
When we finally started into the space race with the Russians,
I remember seeing Sputnik and saying, “Oh, boy.”
So then I decided, “I want to be an astronaut.”
I didn’t realize at that time that they were all going
to be test pilots.
I went ahead and got my degree. I was at the University of
Texas majoring in engineering—aeronautical, at the time.
They didn’t have the aerospace program then. It was
just being developed. They had a test at the very beginning
for all the freshmen majoring in engineering, and I was in
the top 10 people taking the test, and they asked us if we’d
like to be guinea pigs for an experimental engineering science
program, and I said yes, not knowing what I was getting into.
Well, we found out, the 10 of us. It’s funny now, but
we were absolutely blown away. They had us in, I think, in
“P. Chem.,” which is physical chemistry, which
we’d barely had freshman chemistry. They threw us in
there with all these graduate students—we were freshmen,
second-semester freshmen—and we were trying to pass
that. Well, we were all failing, of course, so they had to
get us off to the side and give us some help in it. They just
crammed us with a whole bunch of stuff; they were experimenting,
of course.
So that’s how I got into engineering science. It wasn’t
any plan. In fact, it was just developed, I think. I don’t
even know if it existed anywhere else but at the University
of Texas. So that was an interesting—and I went four
years there.
They didn’t know what
to do with me
I was anxious to get on with my career and try to be an astronaut,
so I went my last year at the University of Florida. I took
a lot of graduate courses, and I got my degree there. So that
was more in—I don’t think they call it “engineering
science” there; I think it was just aerospace engineering.
Then I hired in at NASA, September 1964. I was one of the
first women engineers there. They didn’t know what to
do with me. They really didn’t know what to do with
me. They had interviewed me out at KSC, and that was funny.
They really didn’t know what to do with me. In those
days people smoked. They had one kid following me around with
a little ash tray. [Laughs] They just didn’t know. “There’s
a woman. What are we doing?”
Read
Jeanne Crews' Oral History transcript
Read
about other women who contributed to NASA's success

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Bonnie J. Dunbar, Johnson Space Center, NASA Headquarters
Flight Controller, Astronaut, Life and Microgravity Sciences
Deputy Associate Administrator
December 22, 2004, January 20, 2005, March
23, 2005, September 14, 2005
Good grades were mandatory
My
parents homesteaded in Washington State in 1948. I was the
oldest of four kids, and it was expected that I would go to
school and study hard. They didn’t have any expectations
about what I would be, but homework was mandatory. Good grades
were mandatory. Reading was mandatory.
The first set of books my mother ever bought was this set
of encyclopedias, and they were in the living room, and when
we finally got a TV, and I was about eight, I think, if there
was any question about what we were seeing, we would look
it up in the encyclopedia. Or if I asked my parents a question,
they’d say, “Well, we don’t know, but look
it up in the encyclopedia.” Not only did you have to
look it up, you had to read it to the rest of the family,
and it was fun. So reading was mandatory to be able to participate
in this game.
The questions were unbounded
One
of those early shows that I used to come home from school
and watch was Flash Gordon, and Flash Gordon was exploring
the universe. There were no special effects. If you look at
these programs today, I think you can even see the wires holding
the little spaceships as they fly through space.
But then actually when I was eight, Sputnik was launched,
and I remember that my parents took me out and we looked for
Sputnik. I’m pretty sure we saw it, because eastern
Washington has clear night skies, especially in that time
of year, October. The Milky Way, when I was growing up, was
a band of white across the night sky. You knew that was the
Milky Way. And I just became completely engrossed in space
and stars and H. G. Wells and Jules Verne, and any book about
space I found in our very small rural school, I read.
So it was kind of natural for me. It was what sparked my interest.
It was exciting, and the questions were unbounded. What was
out there? What did these places look like? Even though I
finally learned in high school that people thought we were
the only solar system in the universe that had planets, I
personally didn’t believe it, and so it was no surprise
to me that we started discovering other planets in other solar
systems.
So that’s the genesis of it, and it propelled me through
engineering. It never occurred to me not to want to do it
or to be discouraged by those who thought that I shouldn’t
do it, because I came from my own family culture that said,
“This is the United States of America.”
My father used to say—he was a Marine in World War II
in the South Pacific—“I fought for my sons and
my daughters to be able to become what they want to become
if they wanted to work hard enough to do it.” So in
my mind, that was the American ideal. And in my mind, what
I wanted to do, where I felt my place in the world was, was
helping to explore space.
Read
Bonnie Dunbar's Oral History transcripts
Read
about other women who contributed to NASA's success

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Anna L. Fisher, Johnson Space Center
Astronaut
February 17, 2009
Maybe someday there’ll be a Space Station
I
was always interested in science and math, just because that
was what I was good at. I tended to be kind of shy, so I wasn’t
somebody who wanted to go into theater or anything like that.
I just always gravitated toward science and math.
My father was in the military. I’m an Army brat, so
we moved every two or three years. When I was in seventh grade,
I remember we were stationed at Fort Campbell, Kentucky. We
were out at PE class, and our teacher had a little transistor
radio. We were listening to Alan Shepard’s first flight.
That was when I first really thought, “Wow, I would
love to go do something like that.” But of course all
the astronauts at that time were male. They were all fighter
pilots. For whatever reason, it never even entered my mind
to consider trying to go to pilot training. That wasn’t
something that I had access to or that entered my imagination.
But I did think about, “Maybe someday there’ll
be a Space Station.” I started thinking a little bit
about medicine but not in a realistic way. I did not read
a lot of science fiction, because I had this thing when I
was growing up that I only liked to read books that had a
female lead character. There weren’t a lot of books
with female lead characters that were in science fiction novels.
She didn’t laugh at
me
I got interested in science and math. Then as I got older
and started focusing more realistically on medicine, I was
a volunteer at Harbor General Hospital because my best friend’s
mother was a nurse there, which is one of the county hospitals
in Los Angeles. Back then they had us developing film for
X-rays. I’m not sure if you’d be allowed to do
that anymore today, but that’s what we were doing. We
were in the darkroom. I remember telling her, “I’d
really like to be an astronaut.” She’s the only
person I ever even said the words out loud too.
She was a good friend. She didn’t laugh at me.
Read
Anna Fisher's Oral History transcript
Read
about other women who contributed to NASA's success

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Shirley H. Hinson, Langley Research Center, Johnson Space
Center
Space Task Group, Mathematician/Engineer
May 2, 2000
I majored in math because
it was easy
I went to college, started in September of 1955. I graduated
in May of ‘58, which was two years and nine months,
with a degree in math and a minor in science. I lacked one
hour in having a double major. The main reason I majored in
math was because it was easy. I mean, why do you major in
things? The other reason is I decided that if I married someone
locally and I got stuck in a little dinky town, I could always
teach math. But if not, maybe I could get out of Franklin
County [North Carolina] and go somewhere and work for real.
So the week before I graduated, my professor asked me would
I like to have a teaching fellowship. I probably didn’t
even know what a teaching fellowship was, but I said, “What
is it?” and he told me that I could teach one class
each quarter, and they would pay me to get my master’s.
So I said, “Let me go home and ask Daddy.”
So after I graduated, I asked Daddy, “If I need any
money, can you help me through school one more year?”
He said, “If that’s what you want.”
So I went back to school one more year, and I ended up getting
my master’s in 1959. There were three people that had
graduated from that math department that had gone to work
at a place called Langley Research Center. So I wrote to ask
them for an application blank. I filled out an application,
and they wrote me back and told me I was hired and that I
could come to work on June 30th. So that’s how I started
work at NASA.
My daddy was so proud of me, he couldn’t see straight.
I was the first girl—I had three sisters, no brothers,
and I was the first one that had graduated from college, and
he was very proud.
They asked if I minded moving to Greenbelt, Maryland, and
I said, “No.” They said, “Well, we will
assign you then to the Space Task Group," because we
were supposed to move to Greenbelt, Maryland. That’s
where the Space Task Group was going, before Sam Rayburn and
Lyndon Johnson came along. And I’m thankful because
I like Texas a whole lot.
Really a great job
I had no car. I did find a new roommate through the placement
area at Langley, and I was living with a girl who was working
at the Unitary Plan wind tunnel. And I found a ride to work
with people that were working on my side of the field. Space
Task Group was on one side of the field, and Langley Research
Center was on the other side of the field. I just found rides
to work and fell right into a great job, really a great job.
The first thing I did was I walked into a room with about
four other girls, or women, there. I think two of them had
majored in math in college, and two of them were math aides.
And then we had a little computer. This "little computer"
was the size of a refrigerator. It was a Bendix G15, single
instruction. That was my first experience with a computer,
and we were given a Freidan calculator. I had had a Monroe.
I had never had a Freidan before, so I didn’t know to
run that, and they were different.
I learned a lot on the job
From there, they started bringing us these trajectories about
this thick to plot, and just started working then. I think
the first program I ever did was to transfer rotational velocity
to inertial velocity and vice versa.
Some of my classes in school, I knew what I was doing, but
I was not familiar with orbital mechanics. I had to learn
that on the job. I learned a lot on the job. I did have one
professor in college who always was saying, “When you
go to work, you will need this.” So there was a lot
that I knew, but the largeness of it—I’d never
been next to an airplane before I went to Langley. I had never
seen an airplane on the ground before I went to Langley. So
it was a change for a little girl from North Carolina. But
I had a good time.
Read
Shirley Hinson's Oral History transcript
Read
about other women who contributed to NASA's success

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Dorothy B. "Dottie" Lee, Langley Research Center,
Johnson Space Center
Space Task Group, Aerospace Engineer, Aerothermodynamics Engineer
November 10, 1999
That
word didn't exist when I was a child
I was interested in astrophysics. That word didn't exist when
I was a child. But I read George Gamow and other astrophysicists,
and I knew that we were going to go to the Moon when I was
10 years old. That was in 1937. No one outside of Buck Rogers
or what have you had stories of those tales in those days.
I was recruited, while in college, to go to work for NACA
[National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics], and then it
became a reality by virtue of just being at the right place
at the right time, which is the story of my life. My entire
life has been lucky, and I've always been at the right place
at the right time.
I had playmates, but I did a lot of reading because I was
an only child. So I just read a great deal. I wasn't aware
that I was unique, but I haven't met anyone else who read
Gamow and the rest of them when they were a child.
We had the exciting opportunities
to launch vehicles
Math was very easy for me, just happened to be the easiest
subject, and that's the reason I majored in math. Then when
we were recruited—I say "we." There were several
girls—I was from Randolph-Macon Woman’s College—who
went to work for NACA at Langley, and again I was put in the
best division there. It was called PARD, Pilotless Aircraft
Research Division. We had the exciting opportunities to launch
vehicles, to test different configurations, and how those
configurations would ultimately design spacecraft by virtue
of the shape of the nose. We went from cones to blunt bodies.
You see today your different vehicles are all blunt bodies.
So I was right there and enjoyed it. It was fun.
Of course, today, NASA recruits all over the country, but
back in 1948, which is when I graduated from college, and
there were not many gals, we were hired as "computers."
Computers didn't exist, you understand. We had calculators.
They gave us civil service exams, and I was fortunate enough
to pass the exam at a couple of grades higher than I was hired
in, so I got raises.
I thought he was being funny
But the thing that I would like to tell has something to do
with Dr. Max Faget. Working as a computer, later we were classified
as mathematicians. One day my project was to solve a triple
integral for an engineer, so it didn't require using my calculator.
I could just do it at my desk. Max's secretary was going to
get married, so I was asked to be his secretary for two weeks
while she was on her honeymoon. Well, we shared the same office,
and I don't know how to type, still. I would answer the phone,
distribute the mail, and work my triple integral. I did this
for two weeks.
We all were friends. There were 100 people in this particular
division, but we would party and get together frequently,
so we knew each other well. This Friday, the end of my two
weeks, Max said, "Dottie, how would you like to work
for me all the time?"
I thought he was being funny, because I don't type, and I
knew that this was the last day and Shirley was returning
Monday. I said, "Sure," in a very flip way.
He gets up, goes downstairs to talk to the division chief,
and he returns and he says, "Dottie, you start working
for me Monday."
Well, I looked at him like, "All right," you know.
So they found me a desk, and I was put with some engineers
who were beautiful and taught me how to be an engineer. I
learned on the job.
Brilliant men have touched my life throughout my career, and
I couldn't help but win and do well because these people did
guide me and continued to guide me even when I got here in
Texas. But that was when I went to work for Max Faget. It
was just a marvelous experience.
Read
Dottie Lee's Oral History transcript
Read
about other women who contributed to NASA's success

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Dee O'Hara, Johnson Space Center, Ames Research Center
Staff Nurse (Mercury Program), Medical Operations Division
Manager, Ames Human Research Center Manager
April 23, 2002
It
was a good decision on my part
There was a Career Day at high school. I guess most high schools
have Career Days, and a nurse from Providence Hospital came,
and she looked very smart in her uniform, and I thought, well,
why not try that. I did, and it was a good decision on my
part. I became a nurse, and after I graduated, I worked as
a surgical nurse at the University of Oregon Medical School.
I had kind of a bad back, so standing at the operating table
all day was tough. So I decided, well, maybe I'd go try something
else, and then I worked for three diagnosticians in Portland,
Oregon, and learned how to do lab work and X-rays. Back then,
you did everything as a nurse.
Nice girls don't do that
My roommate came home one day and she said, "Let's join
the Air Force and see the world."
I said, "No, I don’t think so. Nice girls don't
do that." We're talking several centuries ago, you see.
Anyway, we mulled it over for a while and thought, well, why
not? It's a way to travel and to do something different.
So we went downtown Portland and walked into the recruiting
office and said, "Well, here we are. Where do we sign?"
Of course, the recruiter was a bit stunned at that point,
because females just didn’t walk in off the street and
ask to join the Air Force.
We then went to officers' training at Maxwell Air Force Base,
and my classmate, Jackie, went off to Mobile, Alabama, and
I went to Patrick Air Force Base. This was in May of 1959.
Oh, boy, what have I done?
The first seven astronauts were selected in April of ‘59,
and in November of ‘59, I was working in the labor and
delivery room at the hospital there at Patrick, working nights.
I had a message the next morning that the “old man,”
meaning the commander of the hospital, wanted to see me when
I got off duty the next morning. Well, naturally, I was terrified,
because I'd only been there six months and I knew that when
you went to see Colonel Knauf, it was for two reasons: one,
you were in trouble; or, two, it was for a promotion. Well,
I knew it was not for a promotion because I'd only been there
six months. So I kept thinking, oh, boy, what have I done?
I didn’t remember harming anybody or harming a baby.
I gave morning report the next morning and went to his office,
and here sat his exec officer, the chief nurse, and all these
people. I really was terrified because I didn't know why exactly
I was there. I literally sat on the edge of the seat.
Anyway, he started talking about Mercury, and I thought, well,
there's a planet Mercury and there's mercury in a thermometer,
and then he mentioned astronauts. That, of course, didn't
mean anything to me. I didn't know what they were. He mentioned
NASA, and I thought he was saying Nassau, because of the island
of Nassau. I had just been there, and I thought, "How
did the heck did he know I was down there?" Anyway, I
was quite confused.
He turned and said to me, "Well, do you want the job?"
I kind of turned around, because I didn't think he was talking
to me. He said, "Well, you haven't heard a word I've
said, have you?"
I said, "No, sir."
And he said, "Well, do you want the job or not?"
I didn’t know what else to say, so I said, "Well,
I guess so," absolutely not knowing at all what I had
committed myself to. Of course, the chief nurse, who was there,
was furious with me afterwards, because she was losing me
out of the hospital. Also, she thought NASA was crazy because
they were to going to be putting a man on the top of a rocket.
Anyway, that's how it started. So in January of 1960, I went
out to Cape Canaveral, as it was known then, and set up the
aeromed lab. It was the beginning, and that’s how it
happened.
Read
Dee O'Hara's Oral History transcript
Read
about other women who contributed to NASA's success

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Rhea Seddon, Johnson Space Center
Astronaut
May 20 & 21, 2010, May 9 & 10, 2011
It never occurred to me
I don’t think I followed the space program really any
closer than most of the kids my age growing up. It was exciting.
It was in the news. I can remember that we stopped classes
to watch TV. I can remember just being fascinated by the whole
thing. I kind of got to see the beginning of it, because we
went out and watched Sputnik at night. I was old enough to
understand what was going on when Sputnik launched. So I think
I followed it the way other kids did.
I was not one of those people who suddenly became focused
on space. I was a little girl growing up in a small Southern
town, taking piano lessons and ballet lessons, and assuming
that I would be like my mother and be a nice wife in a nice
home someday.
It never occurred to me that that would be a potential career
or would be something that was open to me at the time, but
I thought it was incredibly exciting. As I say, it was one
of those defining moments of my generation. In that respect
I followed it reasonably closely.
It was beyond his imagining
The buildup to Apollo 11, the fact that it was a competition
with the Russians, the fact that there was so much news not
only about the rocket ships but about the people, it was just
incredibly exciting. I’m sure everybody remembers where
they were and what they were doing the night that they landed
on the Moon.
My father had taken me and some friends up to a lake to go
water-skiing. We spent several days. We all sat that night,
exhausted from being out in the sun all day, and stayed up
all night watching the Moon landing. It was incredible to
me. My father, it was beyond his imagining. I just remember
it, again, as something that would be remembered forever,
and something that so many people here on Earth were following.
The tension and hoping that it would go well, understanding
how new and different it was to do something like this. I
think people had worried about horrible things that could
happen. We were all aware of that. The fact that it went off,
to my view and that of my friends, flawlessly—I’m
sure there were little glitches along the way, and you read
back about how they were just about out of fuel—but
that wasn’t obvious to any of us. It looked like it
was just perfect and beautiful.
There were people there
It was awesome, because we could go out that evening and look
at the Moon, and have the awe and wonder that there were people
there. I have the remembrance of thinking this was the beginning
of space exploration off this planet. I think we all had big
dreams about what we would be capable of doing if we could
do that. I think that all of us expected that success to be
followed by even greater leaps, radically, because we were
obviously the foremost spacefaring nation on Earth, and we
would continue to do things like that.
After Sputnik there was of course all the concern that the
young people of our country were behind in science and engineering,
so there was a big push to improve what we taught children
of all ages. I went to a three-room eight-grade parochial
school. Believe it or not, I can’t remember ever having
any science before the seventh grade.
I think the problem was that the nuns didn’t have any
background in it. They couldn’t teach it, and they had
to bring in a lay teacher from the community. I don’t
remember how often she came, maybe a couple days a week, maybe
one day a week, and taught the seventh and eighth graders—probably
sixth, seventh and eighth, because sixth, seventh and eighth
were in one classroom—science.
That was my first exposure to science, and perhaps because
it was new and exciting, and it was a national imperative,
I got excited about it. When people ask me, “When did
you get interested in space,” I had to think back about
that.
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Katherine D. Sullivan, Johnson Space Center
Astronaut
May 10, 2007, September 11, 2007, March 12,
2008, May 28, 2009
It
was something dramatic
Sputnik happened when I was six; in fact, one day after my
sixth birthday. I was born on October 3rd, so I’m almost
a Sputnik baby. My father is an aerospace engineer. My brother,
from as early as any of us can remember, wanted to fly. So
there was a background in our family and an appetite on my
dad’s part towards all things space, and like all little
kids you follow your parents’ interests to some degree.
I remember going out on the front lawn with my dad—we
lived in New Jersey at the time—to see if we could see
this thing going overhead. My actual understanding, of course,
of what was going on was tiny, but it was something dramatic.
It was something that intrigued Dad. It was, “Come on,
let’s go see;” so, of course, you go running out
to see. That event stands out.
Airplanes are suddenly all
around
We moved to California when I was six. My dad was in aerospace,
and he could recognize that the impetus and the gravity of
all that was going to move west. Someone from his company
had gone out before to one of the small California startups
and had right away seen a place where my dad’s skills
would fit and started lobbying him to come out. We moved out
to the San Fernando Valley in 1958, and that made a big change
in how close we were to the aerospace activities in the 1960s.
Airplanes are suddenly all around. Where he works is right
near Van Nuys Airport. Before very long he’s linked
up with guys that like to go fishing and flying. One guy in
particular liked to fly to the better fishing grounds in the
little Cessnas and Pipers that the company flying club had.
So before very long my dad’s joined the flying club,
and everything aviation and aerospace is coming closer into
our world through the family channel.
Amazing adventure afoot
At the same time, NASA is founded. Life magazine
arrives every week, and National Geographic issues
are arriving every month with these breathtaking, amazing
stories about the new space frontier, the seven astronauts,
Sputnik, and what it all means. It was fabulous. I ate all
of that stuff up. Every single issue of Life and
of National Geographic in the early sixties seemed
to have a really entrancing story about who are these guys,
what they are going to do, and what is spaceflight like. Right
next door to it or a page or few later there would be some
story about aquanauts, because that was also the era of Conshelf
III (Continental Shelf projects) and a project that tried
to drill all the way down to the mantle of the Earth, the
Moho Project.
I just was fascinated by all of those things. Nothing in my
thinking at that time was oriented towards job or career.
I was just absorbing them as grand adventures that were happening
out there that were of a huge scale and amazing. I was curious
about what they were doing. I was curious about how they did
it. I was curious about, “What are each of these people
like?” Not “how do I become one of them,”
but just “who are these people? How interesting. What
are they doing?”
I think that general sense of amazing adventure afoot in the
world and getting glimpses of it was really what entranced
me, and I think that at some deep level this set a strong
sense of wanting to be part of such adventures. There are
people who get to do these amazing adventures, and that clearly
would be really cool. Just that feeling of what must it be
like to be a part of things like this was very compelling
and very moving.
It was like being in it
I followed, once the space program really got going, Alan
Shepard’s flight and later John Glenn’s and then
the whole sequence. I was mesmerized by all of those. I would
change my schedule, finish my homework, do whatever it took
to be able to be by the television and watch what was going
on. I was avidly reading everything in the newspapers and
everything in Life, Look, and the National
Geographic. It’s interesting. Our whole family
found that interesting, but I don’t recall all four
of us sitting around the television watching the lunar landing.
I’m struck by so many people who remember being in their
school class or sitting with their whole family. I remember
sitting on the floor in our den probably about two feet away
from the TV screen, watching the landing, and listening to
what was going on. Of course, they didn’t have real
great video right at that moment, so they were cutting back
and forth to mission control. I remember just sitting there
scanning the TV, listening intently, and trying to really
understand, “What’s going on here” to really
make sense of it. It wasn’t like being a spectator.
It was like being in it.
I remember when Buzz Aldrin—it must have been Buzz,
not that I knew that at the time—called out from on
the spacecraft, “Contact light.” I thought, “What
was that?” It’s 1969, so I’m 17, and I remember
realizing just in this instant that, “Oh, wow, these
guys aren’t down yet, and this guy just said, ‘Contact
light.’” That means he can tell something about
how close to the ground they are. How cool is that? These
guys have curb feelers on the spacecraft to know when they’re
near the surface. That little tiny engineering insight just
kind of snapped into focus and was a real interesting kind
of, “Ooh, that’s cool. I understand a piece of
how this all is happening.”
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