I should hesitate to mention my career in an article lauding the achievements of Johnson. Katherine Johnson received the Presidential Medal of Freedom. But for a long time women didn’t have such visible role models working in science or space. In her final years, she received much acclaim, including the award of the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Barack Obama, as well, of course, as the publicity of Hidden Figures. As depicted in Hidden Figures, Johnson demanded to be recognised for her work. They didn’t speak at meetings or get their names acknowledged as authors of reports. But her workplace was 1950s and 60s NASA, where women’s place was lowly. Katherine had to juggle home and work, like so many women today. She was also a woman working in a man’s world, a world where most of the staff wore suit, shirt and tie and left for home each evening to find dinner cooked and waiting for them. As such, she had to use the separate restrooms and eating facilities set aside for non-white staff. NASAīut Johnson was also a “ coloured computer” at a time when laws still enforced racial segregation and there was still much opposition to integration and equal rights for non-white US citizens. Johnson calculated the trajectory for the first US manned orbital space flight. Katherine became a wife, a mother and a teacher, and her story might have ended there, if it hadn’t been for her drive to continue with her mathematics. Her ability in mathematics was such that she continued her schooling beyond high school (very unusual for African-American children at that time) and had graduated from college by the time she was 18. Katherine Coleman was born in 1918 in West Virginia and showed very early on that she was no ordinary child. In telling Johnson and her colleagues’ stories, the film shed light not only on advances in technology but also the status of black people in society and the role of women in the workplace and in science. ![]() And I have seen it at least twice since when I have led discussions about the significance of the film, drawing on my own experience of working in the space industry. I have rarely watched a film that has moved me as much as Hidden Figures did when I first saw it. Johnson’s story and significant contributions to the US space programme, along with those of Dorothy Vaughan (a computer scientist) and Mary Jackson (an engineer), were brought to widespread public attention by the 2016 book Hidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterly and film of the same name. ![]() Add a few more facts – she was a woman, she was black and working in the US in the 1950s to early 1960s – and the scale of her success becomes more apparent. But on paper neither of those facts would make her stand out from the crowd. She was a mathematician and she worked for NASA. But up until a few years ago, hardly anyone had heard of her or her achievements. Katherine Johnson, who has died at the age of 101, was an amazing woman.
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