The rigorous preparation required to become one of NASA’s
astronauts is well-documented, requiring great mental and physical strength.
Thousands apply for one of the few coveted positions, and Jeannette Epps and
Joan Higginbotham earned one of them. While Higginbotham – the
third African American woman to go into space — has retired, NASA
announced in 2017 that Epps would become the first African
American woman to travel to the International Space Station where she would
conduct research with far-reaching implications.
“Granted that the research that I’ll do is not my very own
research, but I will be the hands and the eyes for the researchers here on the
ground,” Epps explained. “And so as we get closer and closer to flight, we’ll
learn more details about the different experiments that we’ll conduct on board
the space station.”
Despite NASA’s announcement five years ago, Epps has not been to the ISS. In Oct. 2021 during a webinar hosted by Links, Incorporated – an African American women’s service organization that counts both women as members – Epps spoke enthusiastically about the work she anticipates doing while living on board the ISS.
Epps mentioned, “There’s been a lot of research done on
rodents. A lot of the individual things that we do with the rodents are to help
mitigate, for example, osteoporosis in human beings. That’s one of the major
research items that came out of some of the studies of the international space
station.”
Epps began to dream of a career in space after an older brother
looked at her report card and remarked that she should consider becoming an
aerospace engineer. The seed had been planted. In college she majored in
Physics and completed her master’s degree and Ph.D. in aerospace engineering.
She worked at Ford for two years as a researcher before the
CIA recruited Epps as an analyst in the weapons nonproliferation group where
she studied aircraft from other countries. Finally, she thought the time had
come to apply to NASA. She did so in 2008 and was selected from a pool of 3,500
candidates.
Joan
Higginbotham’s Russian Experience
During the virtual event, Higginbotham talked about her NASA
journey and recounted an experience training with Russian cosmonauts.
The Chicago native said, “My classmates and I were some of
the first astronauts to train with the Russian cosmonauts in Russia, and it was
quite an eye-opening experience being an African American woman in Russia where
someone like me wasn’t a common occurrence. And having women train with all the
male Russian cosmonauts wasn’t that common either.”
One incident served as a stark reminder of the cultural and
gender chasm she had traversed.
“There was an incident where we were training in Russia … and I needed to go to the restroom and there were no women’s restrooms in the training facility,” Higginbotham shared. “So, I had to use the men’s restroom while my translator guarded the door for me.”
For Black women who have excelled in one of the last bastions
of white male dominance, Epps and Higginbotham have discovered core strengths
essential to achieving.
“What I learned about me throughout this journey of becoming
an astronaut is that I am determined, and I will persevere,” she stated. “It
was pretty devastating to me when I was not selected as an astronaut on my
first attempt because I had come too close, and it would have been really easy
to let that setback prevent me from any type of forward progress. But I was
really determined to do everything that I could do in my power that would give
me the best chance of being selected to be an astronaut so, therefore, [I
decided to go] back to school and I persevered.”