Johnson, Katherine Goble (1918-2020), was an American mathematician. Johnson worked for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) , where she performed many notable spaceflight calculations. She calculated the trajectory (path) for Apollo 11 , which made the first landing on the moon. As a black woman in a racially segregated United States, Johnson broke through many racial and gender barriers to excel as a mathematician.
Johnson was born Katherine Coleman on Aug. 26, 1918, in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia. She was preoccupied with numbers from a young age, and she excelled in her studies. She graduated from the high school of West Virginia State College at the age of 14. In 1937, she received a bachelor’s degree in mathematics and French from West Virginia State College, at the age of 18. She then took a job teaching mathematics at a grade school in Marion, West Virginia. In 1939, Johnson was selected to join West Virginia University’s graduate mathematics program. She enrolled, becoming the first black woman to attend the university.
In 1939, Johnson married James Francis Goble, a chemistry teacher. She spent the following years working as a teacher and raising their three daughters. In 1953, Johnson learned that the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) Langley Research Laboratory in Hampton, Virginia, was looking for women mathematicians. That summer, she was assigned to Langley’s West Area Computing unit, a group of black women mathematicians headed by Dorothy Vaughan . Johnson was soon reassigned to the Flight Research Division, where she analyzed data from flight tests.
In 1958, NACA transitioned into NASA. That year, Katherine met James A. Johnson, a colonel in the United States Army. James F. Goble had passed away two years earlier, leaving Johnson widowed. She married James A. Johnson in 1959.
At NASA, Johnson and the rest of the Flight Research Division were directly involved in the budding spaceflight program. In 1961, Johnson performed trajectory analysis for the Freedom 7 mission, investigating the route that was planned for the United States’ first human spaceflight. She also calculated the trajectory for astronaut John Glenn in his pioneering orbital flight around Earth in 1962. NASA’s new electronic computers had performed these calculations, but Glenn requested that Johnson personally check and approve them before the launch.
Johnson also calculated the exit and entry trajectories for the Apollo 11 mission, which landed the first two humans on the moon in 1969. She also authored or coauthored many research reports throughout her career. Johnson continued to make important contributions to NASA’s spaceflight program until her retirement in 1986. She received multiple honors and awards. In 2015, President Barack Obama awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom . NASA’s Katherine G. Johnson Computational Research Facility—a data center at the Langley, Virginia, campus—was named in her honor in 2016. In 2019, NASA renamed its Independent Verification and Validation (IV&V) Facility the Katherine Johnson IV&V Facility.
American author Margot Lee Shetterly’s book Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win the Space Race (2016) chronicles Johnson’s life and career, along with those of other members of the West Area Computing unit. The American actress Taraji P. Henson portrayed Johnson in the 2016 film Hidden Figures, based on Shetterly’s book. Johnson herself wrote Reaching for the Moon: The Autobiography of NASA Mathematician Katherine Johnson (2019). Her memoir, My Remarkable Journey (2021), was published after her death. Johnson died on Feb. 24, 2020.