NASA is paying tribute to Mary W. Jackson, its first African American female engineer. As Black History Month wound down on Friday, the agency formally named its Washington, D.C. headquarters in her ...
Earlier this week, NASA announced that it is renaming its headquarters building in Washington D.C. after Mary W. Jackson, the space agency’s first black female engineer. “Jackson started her NASA ...
FILE - This photo provided by NASA shows engineer Mary W. Jackson at the Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., in 1977. (Robert Nye/NASA via AP) (Robert Nye, For ...
Jackson was the first Black female engineer at NASA, beginning work there in 1951 when the agency was still segregated. She worked as a “computer,” performing complex mathematical calculations by hand ...
Over their holiday break, most high school students relax, kick back and watch TV, visit with family, maybe take a trip. But on this last winter holiday, two New Orleans seniors at St. Mary’s Academy ...
She was NASA's first Black female engineer. Mary W. Jackson was once a "hidden figure" at NASA, but now her name will grace the agency's office in the nation's capital. NASA announced on Wednesday ...
NASA recently announced that it would be renaming its headquarters in Washington, D.C. after Mary W. Jackson, the trailblazing first Black female engineer at the space agency made famous by the film ...
NASA’s headquarters building in downtown D.C. now has a new name, honoring the late Mary W. Jackson, the first African-American female engineer at the agency. “Jackson’s story is one of incredible ...
WASHINGTON, D.C., USA — The NASA administration announced the historic decision to name the association's headquarters in Washington, D.C. after their first Black female engineer. Hampton native Mary ...
Mary Jackson had a successful career from "human computer" to NASA's first African-American female engineer, and subsequent career supporting the hiring and promotion of other deserving female and ...
NASA will name its headquarters building in Washington, D.C., in honor of its first Black female engineer, NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine announced on Wednesday. Mary W. Jackson, who was featured ...