NASA Names its HQ After ‘Hidden Figure’ Mary Jackson
Steve Jurczyk, NASA Administrator, will lead a ceremony at 1 p.m. EST Friday, Feb. 26, officially naming the NASA Headquarters building in Washington in honour of Mary W. Jackson.
The event will air live on NASA Television and the agency’s website and will live stream on the agency’s Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, as well as the NASA app.
Jackson, the first African American female engineer at NASA, began her career with the agency in the segregated West Area Computing Unit of NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia. The mathematician and aerospace engineer went on to lead programs influencing the hiring and promotion of women in NASA’s science, technology, engineering, and mathematics careers. In 2019, she posthumously received the Congressional Gold Medal.
The work of Jackson and others in the 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, and award-winning actress Janelle Monáe portrayed Jackson.
Members of Jackson’s family and other guests will join Jurczyk for the ceremony, including the NASA Langley centre director Clayton Turner, the retired NASA engineer and “Hidden Figure” as a profiled in Shetterly’s book Christine Darden, the artist Tanbeete Solomon, and Wanda Jackson- granddaughter of Mary W. Jackson.
In addition to unveiling a building sign with Jackson’s name, the event will feature video tributes with reflections on Jackson’s career and legacy from a variety of individuals, including William R. Harvey, the president of Hampton University, Jackson’s alma mater, as well as family and friends, current and former NASA employees and astronauts, celebrities, elected officials and others. The event also will feature a video of poet Nikki Giovanni reading an excerpt from her poem “Quilting the Black-Eyed Pea,” which is about space and civil rights.
Because of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, on-site attendance will be limited to participants and invited guests, with no accreditation for in-person media. Members of the media are encouraged to attend the event remotely and take advantage of the resources available virtually.