Marion Lee Johnson

Marion Lee Johnson is an American mathematician who was crucial to the landing of the Apollo 11 mission. She was a mathematician on the Boeing/NASA team, where she worked in preparing data for the vehicle impact trajectories[1]. Her perfect score over 20 successful missions earned her a place on the Apollo/Saturn V Roll of Honor.[2][1]

After completion of the project, she worked for Pfizer for 26 years. She currently lives in New Jersey, where she works at the Branford Hall Career Institute as a Computer and Security Instructor.

Life and career

She was born in a working-class family in Savannah, Georgia, with three sisters and a brother[3]. She attended school at Moses Jackson, in a segregated neighborhood. Very early, she fell in love with mathematics, and credits this love to her 7th grade maths teacher, Walter B. Simmons.[4][5] She graduated class valedictorian from high school at Thompkins High School in 1963.[6][2] In 1967, she was granted a scholarship at Talladega College in Talladega, Alabama, to study mathematics,[7] and assumed that her degree would lead her to become a teacher.[4] After losing her scholarship because her grades had slipped, Johnson took out a loan to continue her degree, and prioritised her studies in order to requalify for the scholarship.[3]

After graduation, at the age of 21, she went to work as an associate engineer at Boeing Company in Huntsville, Alabama.[8][2][9] She was assigned to the Launch Systems branch of the Boeing/NASA team at the Marshall Space Flight Centre to prepare the landing of the Apollo 11 mission[1][2]. At the time, very few women worked at the Space Flight Centre[5]. Johnson worked under the supervision of Arthur Rudolph and rocket designer Wernher von Braun, on the calculations to simulate vehicle piece impact trajectories (where the booster rockets would fall).[1][2][9] According to Lee, Boeing was a diverse place. In an interview for 1010 WINS' with Larry Mullins in 2018, she said: "You had a lot of people there - a lot of people from all different cultures - and we all worked together."[8] However, in a separate speech at the Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, she said: "My contributions were shrouded under a blanket of racism."[5] According to Johnson, it was only after seeing the 2016 movie Hidden Figures that she realised how important her own contributions were to NASA.[10]

After two years working for Boeing/NASA, Johnson then went to work at the Computer Technology Inc. division at Pfizer, where she became project leader for Personnel, Payroll, Compensations, Benefits and Strategic Planning Divisions.[2] She retired from Pfizer after 26 years.[2]

A resident of Plainfield, New Jersey, she works at the Branford Hall Career Institute as a Computer Networking and Security Instructor.[6] The city of Plainfield have given Johnson the key to the city, and designated two days to honor her legacy.[8][11]

Johnson is an active member of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, and a member of Mount Zion AME Church of Plainfield, New Jersey. She is married to J. Frank Johnson, the owner of an accounting, tax, audit, and advisory services company, with whom she has three children.[2]

gollark: I had another idea, which was to not have virtual channels and just have virtual point-to-point links then use magic™ to find connected subgraphs of things, but this would also be complex.
gollark: Is it to just maintain a list of "bridging" links and do inter-virtual-channel routing on those? This would be a bit flaky and complex I think.
gollark: Is the system to just merge the virtual channels? This would be problematic to unmerge later.
gollark: But then I realized that this had a significant problem; what happens if virtual channels A and B both connect to Discord channel 124091724?
gollark: So I was thinking of an AutoBotRobot "virtual channel" publish/subscribe bridge where Discord channels could link up to a virtual channel, and IRC could also link to that via some glue code, and all would be cool and good™, and ApioTelephone could just create virtual channels temporarily.

References

  1. "Marion Lee Johnson". Cincinnati Museum Center. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  2. Golden Carmon, Rev. W. (May 15, 2017). "Marion Lee Johnson: A Hidden Figure". The Christian Recorder. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  3. Journal, Caitlin Mota | The Jersey (2017-02-26). "Jersey City teacher honored as one of N.J.'s own 'Hidden Figures'". nj. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  4. Monks, Michael. "'Hidden Figure' Marion Lee Johnson Talks NASA Career". www.wvxu.org. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  5. "NJ's own 'Hidden Figure' delivers powerful speech on the importance of mentoring | Video". NJTV News. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  6. Segedy, Andria. "Savannah's own 'Hidden Figure': Marion Lee Johnson worked on Apollo 11 program". Bluffton Today. Retrieved 2019-10-08.
  7. "Black History Month One-On-One: 'Hidden Figure' Marion Lee Johnson". 2018-02-01. Retrieved 2019-10-08.
  8. "Black History Month One-On-One: 'Hidden Figure' Marion Lee Johnson". 2018-02-01. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  9. "Here and Now on March 26, 2017: Marion Johnson". ABC7 New York. 2017-03-29. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  10. "Mathematician and Engineer Marion Johnson, of the Apollo 11 Mission, Inspires Girl Scouts to Become America's Next Tech Leaders". TAPinto. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  11. "Marion Lee Johnson Day - City of Plainfield". Central Jersey Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Incorporated. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
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