Black Women Who Changed Our World

Mae Jemison looks out the aft flight deck ports on Space Shuttle Endeavour’s STS-47 mission in 1998. (NASA)

Many of the modern conveniences we rely on each day come from the accomplishments of African American women.

Black women inventors helped shape the way we watch movies, conduct online meetings, and even heat and secure our homes. They succeeded in developing new technologies despite obstacles, such as resistance to developing their products and other forms of systemic racism.

New York, New York, United States of America – January 4th, 2018: Portrait of Lisa Gelobter at her home in the Upper West Side of Manhattan.
Gelobter, a former technology executive at BET and Hulu, said she experienced “a moment of clarity.” during the #MeToo movement. She wanted to take her own experiences with discrimination as a black woman in tech and co-found a startup, tEQuitable, aimed at helping companies and employees address issues of bias, discrimination, and harassment. Gelobter most recently worked as the chief digital service officer in the Obama administration’s U.S. Department of Education, helping companies improve their cultures and address complaints. (Photo by An Rong Xu for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

During Women’s History Month, ShareAmerica is highlighting some of the Black women whose contributions have changed our world.

Lisa Gelobter (1971–) A computer scientist, Gelobter contributed to internet technologies that support online streaming and gaming. Her innovations are used by billions and include the animation tools necessary for the GIFs that liven up text messages and online chats.


Katherine Johnson posing for a photograph at her office desk (NASA)
Katherine Johnson’s work at Langley Research Center in the 1960s guided NASA’s spaceflights. (NASA)

Katherine Johnson (1918–2020) A trailblazing mathematician, Johnson performed calculations that propelled NASA’s spaceflight program. She mapped the flight of Alan Shepard, who became the first American in space in 1961.

Johnson’s contributions to space exploration, and those of other African American mathematicians and engineers, were celebrated in the 2016 Hollywood blockbuster Hidden Figures. She was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2015.


Mae Jemison looking out of space shuttle windows (NASA)
Mae Jemison looks out of the aft flight deck ports on Space Shuttle Endeavour’s STS-47 mission in 1992. (NASA)

Dr. Mae Jemison (1956–): Mae Jemison went into orbit aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour in 1992, becoming the first African American woman in space. She orbited the earth 127 times.

Trained as a medical doctor and engineer, Jemison frequently speaks to students and encourages women and minorities to enter math and science.


Bessie Blount (1914–2009) While working as physical therapist, Blount invented devices to help amputees and other wounded soldiers returning from World War II so that they could eat on their own. Though her inventions would help many, she struggled to find support for her ideas and had to go on a TV show to demonstrate her inventions, according to the Lemelson-MIT Program, which awards prizes to inventors.


Alice Parker (1895–1920) Weary of cold New Jersey winters, Parker designed a natural gas furnace that was more efficient than fireplaces, reduced the risk of house fires and eliminated the need to buy or chop wood. Her designs were a major step toward modern central heating.


Marie Van Brittan Brown (1922–1999) Concerned about crime in 1960s New York City, Brown, a nurse, designed a front-door security system, complete with camera, speakers and alarm. Her invention, patented in 1969, paved the way for similar security systems used today.


Marian Croak in white dress, smiling and adjusting the straps of her purse (© Johnny Nunez/WireImage/Getty Images)
Inventor Marian Croak holds more than 200 patents. (© Johnny Nunez/WireImage/Getty Images)

Marian Croak (1955–) With more than 200 patents to her name, Croak invented improvements for online voice and data systems and paved the way for videoconferencing.

Her technologies allowed donations by text after Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and enabled text-based voting for the popular TV show American Idol.

Black women who changed our world

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