First African American Woman in Space: Dr. Mae C. Jemison
As I continue to post about inspirational women in STEM careers, as part of Women's History Month, this week I celebrate the great career of the first African American Woman in space. It was a joy to write about their story and journey:
Becoming an astronaut is hard enough, but one woman overcame obstacles to become the first African American woman in space. Jemison was keen to study science from an early age. Born in the 1950s, Jemison would let nothing stop her from becoming one of the most accomplished African American women in history. She was born in Decatur, Alabama, but grew up in Chicago. From a very early age, she knew she wanted to study science. As a child, she spent hours and hours in the library reading about science and astronomy. She passionately followed the Apollo missions and never missed an episode of Star Trek. Lieutenant Uhura was her chief inspiration for becoming an astronaut. She fell in love with dancing at age eleven and took lessons in many different styles. When she wasn’t obsessing over science, her thoughts were consumed by the creativity and expression of choreography. This constant shift in her attention between the arts and sciences helped her appreciate the creativity of science and the analytical side of art, a connection she believes is key to building a good future for society. She had also choreographed a music and dance production, and headed the Black Students’ Union, she was torn between going to medical school and taking a shot at being a professional dancer. Though her parents were permissive, they were also practical. As Mae likes to say, her mother helped her make that decision.
She worked hard and graduated from high school when she was
just 16. It wasn’t until years later that she realized the level of confidence
her parents must have had in her ability to survive thousands of miles away
from home. She points to her stubbornness and youthful arrogance as her weapons
against uncertainty and the sexism she encountered from some professors who
ignored her questions and belittled her observations. At that early age, she travelled
to California to attend Stanford University. Being one of the few African
Americans in her class, she experienced racial discrimination from students and
teachers, but that didn’t stop her from graduating with two degrees in four
years, one in chemical engineering and one in African American studies.
Jemison didn’t start her career in space. She first attended
Cornell Medical School, where she got her doctorate in medicine and practiced
general medicine. During graduate school she spent time in Kenya, Thailand, and
Cuba providing primary medical care to the citizens. After a hospital
internship and a brief stint as a general practitioner in California, Mae
joined the Peace Corps as a medical officer. She spent most of her time in Sierra
Leone overseeing hundreds of volunteers. When one of them came down with
malaria, Mae was convinced that it was bacterial meningitis. He would soon die
without the proper care, but they were not equipped to treat this. She ordered
an emergency medical evacuation to an Air Force base in Germany, which cost
upwards of 80,000 dollers to set in motion. The embassy gave her trouble and
questioned her authority to do it, but she stood her ground and they called it
in. Mae stayed by the patient’s side for 56 hours until he was successfully
treated for meningitis. Her talents also didn’t stop in science. Jemison is
fluent in Japanese, Russian and Swahili. She used this and her medical studies
to her advantage and joined the Peace Corps in 1983 to help people in Africa
for two years.
Jemison applied for the astronaut program at NASA in 1985.
Unfortunately, NASA stopped accepting applications after the Space Shuttle
Challenger exploded in 1986. Jemison tried her luck again in 1987 and was one
of the 15 people chosen out of 2000 applicants. In Sept. 1992, she joined six
other astronauts on the Endeavor for eight days, making her the first African
American woman in space. On her mission, she made 127 orbits around the Earth.
She flew to space
aboard Endeavour as part of STS-47, a joint mission between the US and
Japan to experiment with life science and materials processing in microgravity.
During the eight-day tour, Mae did bone cell research, performed weightlessness
and motion sickness experiments on herself and other crew members, and oversaw
a zero-G tadpole growth experiment. The most memorable moment for Mae happened
on the flight deck. The commander invited her upstairs to check out the view as
the shuttle passed over Chicago. She looked down and smiled on the memory of
that little girl who was certain she would go to space. After Mae returned to
Earth, Levar Burton discovered she was a Trekkie and asked if she wanted to be
on an episode of The Next Generation. Mae appeared as Lieutenant Palmer in the
season 6 episode “Second Chances”, the one where Riker encounters a duplicate
of himself created years earlier. Mae resigned from NASA in 1993 to explore the
impact of technology on society. Soon after, she started an international space
camp called The Earth We Share that focuses on scientific literacy and problem
solving for middle- and high school kids. She is the current Principal of the
100 Year Starship Project, a DARPA-NASA initiative aimed at advancing
interstellar travel.
Today she spends much of her time giving talks about the
importance of contributing to culture in ways that positively affect the
future. She gave a TED talk in 2002 about the importance of re-integrating
science and arts in education, because they both have a big impact on future
generations. To her, intuition and analysis are equally important tools in our
attempt to understand the universe around us.
She has also her own consulting company, became a professor
at Cornell, launched the Jemison Institute for Advancing Technology in
Developing Countries, and much more. With all her accomplishments, it’s no
surprise Jemison was inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame, the
National Medical Association Hall of Fame and the Texas Science Hall of Fame.
In 2023, after an extraordinary career with NASA, she
acknowledges the progress being made in education but says there's still a long
way to go, especially for women and minorities.
"I'm worried about education because in some ways, I
think our society does a lot of lip service to it, but we don't invest in it in
the same way."
Jemison can now not only be considered a first in her field
but an inspiration to a new generation of space travellers. With the upcoming
Artemis mission set to launch in 2024, NASA will land its first female
person of colour on the moon.
"We have the
full representation of our society, So the first woman of colour, the first
woman in space, the first person of colour, no matter how they classify it, we
need to take advantage of the full range of talent."
She is such an inspiration to all women around the world and i have always said that these incredible stories needs to be shared so that other women can rise and empower themselves.
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