WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.200 --> 00:00:05.005 What lady would take mathematics instead of Latin? 2 00:00:05.005 --> 00:00:11.078 Nancy Grace Roman, “The Mother of Hubble,” NASA’s First Chief of Astronomy 3 00:00:14.114 --> 00:00:18.418 The idea of Hubble was something that was among the astronomical 4 00:00:18.418 --> 00:00:23.056 community for generations. It was not something that was new. 5 00:00:23.056 --> 00:00:27.427 Astronomers badly wanted a large telescope above the atmosphere. 6 00:00:27.427 --> 00:00:31.565 Well I decided that if the aerospace companies were going 7 00:00:31.565 --> 00:00:35.202 to put a lot of money into designing a telescope, they 8 00:00:35.202 --> 00:00:39.206 might as well design one that made sense. So what I did was to 9 00:00:39.206 --> 00:00:42.743 bring together a collection of astronomers from all over the 10 00:00:42.743 --> 00:00:46.546 country trying to represent a variety of things that we might 11 00:00:46.546 --> 00:00:52.653 do with the telescope and some NASA engineers and get them to 12 00:00:52.653 --> 00:00:55.756 sit down together and come up with something that the 13 00:00:55.756 --> 00:00:59.126 engineers thought would work and that the astronomers thought 14 00:00:59.126 --> 00:01:01.061 would do their job. 15 00:01:01.061 --> 00:01:05.999 Becoming an Astronomer 16 00:01:05.999 --> 00:01:07.401 Well I think I've 17 00:01:07.401 --> 00:01:12.139 always been curious. I just wanted to satisfy my curiosity, 18 00:01:12.139 --> 00:01:16.243 and astronomy in particular was a subject I wanted to learn more 19 00:01:16.243 --> 00:01:19.813 about. I blamed my mother, because she used to take me out 20 00:01:19.813 --> 00:01:22.950 to show me the constellations and show me the northern lights 21 00:01:22.950 --> 00:01:27.955 and things like that. I just was fascinated. Between 5th and 6th 22 00:01:27.955 --> 00:01:33.293 grade I organized my friends into an astronomy club to study 23 00:01:33.293 --> 00:01:38.165 the constellations, and by 7th grade I decided I wanted to be 24 00:01:38.165 --> 00:01:41.134 an astronomer, and I was going to try for it. I knew it was 25 00:01:41.134 --> 00:01:44.371 going to take me another 12 years of schooling, but I 26 00:01:44.371 --> 00:01:48.909 figured I’d try, and if I didn’t make it I could teach physics or 27 00:01:48.909 --> 00:01:52.646 math in high school. I certainly did not receive any 28 00:01:52.646 --> 00:01:57.351 encouragement. I was told from the beginning that women could 29 00:01:57.351 --> 00:02:01.922 not be scientists. In high school one of the experiences I 30 00:02:01.922 --> 00:02:04.591 remember is that I asked my guidance counselor for 31 00:02:04.591 --> 00:02:08.929 permission to take a second year of algebra instead of a fifth 32 00:02:08.929 --> 00:02:13.867 year of Latin. And she looked down her nose and sneered, “What 33 00:02:13.867 --> 00:02:18.872 lady would take mathematics instead of Latin?” The first 34 00:02:18.872 --> 00:02:24.611 encouragement I got was in my junior year at college when the 35 00:02:24.611 --> 00:02:28.415 head of the physics department came up to me in lab one day and 36 00:02:28.415 --> 00:02:32.919 said, “You know, I usually try to talk women out of going into 37 00:02:32.919 --> 00:02:39.493 physics, but I think maybe, you might make it.” My main 38 00:02:39.493 --> 00:02:44.264 astronomical research area when I started out was what they call 39 00:02:44.264 --> 00:02:47.534 spectral classification. Looking at the stars spreading the light 40 00:02:47.534 --> 00:02:52.439 out into a rainbow, so that you could see the different colors 41 00:02:52.439 --> 00:02:55.375 separately. What I started out doing was looking at these 42 00:02:55.375 --> 00:03:00.013 spectra, looking at these rainbows, and deciding the 43 00:03:00.013 --> 00:03:03.383 temperature and the brightness of the stars, and then I was 44 00:03:03.383 --> 00:03:08.321 trying to find out how far away they were and how they moved. My 45 00:03:08.321 --> 00:03:13.093 thesis professor was someone I often didn’t get the support I 46 00:03:13.093 --> 00:03:16.563 expected. There was a period of six months he went without 47 00:03:16.563 --> 00:03:20.600 speaking to me even when I said hello to him in the hall. He 48 00:03:20.600 --> 00:03:23.070 didn’t want to have anything to do with me. 49 00:03:23.070 --> 00:03:27.007 Becoming NASA's First Chief of Astronomy 50 00:03:27.007 --> 00:03:29.476 I didn’t think I could get tenure 51 00:03:29.476 --> 00:03:34.381 as a research astronomer. I didn’t think I could stay in the 52 00:03:34.381 --> 00:03:38.852 academic community, because I looked around and I think there 53 00:03:38.852 --> 00:03:43.023 was one other woman in astronomy who had tenure in this country. 54 00:03:43.023 --> 00:03:48.995 But I saw very senior women who didn’t have it. When NASA came 55 00:03:48.995 --> 00:03:53.300 along and offered me a job I decided to take it. I started at 56 00:03:53.300 --> 00:03:59.106 NASA in 1959, it was six months old. When I joined the 57 00:03:59.106 --> 00:04:03.477 government, I was hired as a fresh PhD in spite of the fact 58 00:04:03.477 --> 00:04:07.180 that I had not only six years of experience but an international 59 00:04:07.180 --> 00:04:12.919 reputation. And afterwards I understood the reason. My salary 60 00:04:12.919 --> 00:04:16.923 at the university was so low that civil service did not 61 00:04:16.923 --> 00:04:21.161 recognize it as a professional experience. Being the first 62 00:04:21.161 --> 00:04:27.100 executive woman at NASA turned out to be not terribly eventful. 63 00:04:27.100 --> 00:04:33.874 I was accepted very readily as a scientist in my job and the men 64 00:04:33.874 --> 00:04:37.444 were very cooperative. I felt that the men treated me as one 65 00:04:37.444 --> 00:04:42.682 of the team without a problem. Civil service had rewards for 66 00:04:42.682 --> 00:04:47.687 outstanding work, but they were limited to men. Someone decided 67 00:04:49.856 --> 00:04:54.127 there should be something for women. In 1962, I received the 68 00:04:54.127 --> 00:04:58.198 Federal Women’s Award. We all met with Kennedy in the course 69 00:04:58.198 --> 00:05:00.233 of receiving the award. 70 00:05:00.233 --> 00:05:04.137 Women in Astronomy 71 00:05:04.137 --> 00:05:05.572 I'm happy about the 72 00:05:05.572 --> 00:05:10.777 fact that women can get senior jobs now, and they’re not being 73 00:05:10.777 --> 00:05:16.049 quite as discouraged as I was. But I think there are two things 74 00:05:16.049 --> 00:05:20.520 that I would like to see changed: one is salaries. 75 00:05:20.520 --> 00:05:24.758 Salaries are still not equal. And the other thing is I would 76 00:05:24.758 --> 00:05:31.531 like to see more uniform women across the ranks. Women can get 77 00:05:31.531 --> 00:05:35.735 into senior positions in astronomy now, but percentage 78 00:05:35.735 --> 00:05:39.005 wise there are still few at the high levels. 79 00:05:39.005 --> 00:05:42.742 Nancy's Legacy 80 00:05:42.742 --> 00:05:47.013 It's hard to decide how history will view my accomplishments. 81 00:05:47.013 --> 00:05:51.985 People generally aren’t terribly interested in what gets things 82 00:05:51.985 --> 00:05:55.322 started. And so I’m not sure they’re going to have much of an 83 00:05:55.322 --> 00:05:57.290 idea of my role. [music ends] www.nasa.gov/hubble @NASAHubble 84 00:05:57.290 --> 00:06:08.468 [music ends] 85 00:06:08.468 --> 00:06:12.572 www.nasa.gov/hubble @NASAHubble 86 00:06:12.572 --> 00:06:16.343 [satellite swooshes by, beep beep, beep beep, beep beep] 87 00:06:16.343 --> 00:06:21.047 NASA Goddard Space Fight Center www.nasa.gov/goddard