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Posted: 2018-08-27T16:47:22Z | Updated: 2018-08-27T16:47:22Z NASA's Katherine Johnson Honored With Statue, Scholarship On 100th Birthday | HuffPost

NASA's Katherine Johnson Honored With Statue, Scholarship On 100th Birthday

Taraji P. Henson portrayed Johnson in 2016's "Hidden Figures."

West Virginia State University honored NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson ’s 100th birthday with a statue and scholarship dedication over the weekend.

Hundreds of people including 75 of Johnson’s children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren attended the event honoring the woman who was portrayed by Taraji P. Henson in the 2016 film “Hidden Figures ,” according to the West Virginia Gazette . The bronze statue of Johnson was unveiled Saturday, one day before she turned 100. 

The scholarship in Johnson’s name was awarded to freshmen Jasiaha Daniels and Alexis Scudero, both of whom are studying in the science, technology, engineering and math fields. 

“What makes Katherine so extraordinary is she not only prevailed while segregation failed, Dr. Johnson has continued to persevere and thrive with the gracious poise and clarity that defies mere words of explanation, let alone definition,” said Dr. Yvonne Cagle, the keynote speaker at the ceremony and the space and life sciences directorate at the Johnson Space Center.

Johnson started attending WSVU when she was 14 because she wasn’t able to receive further education in Greenbrier County. She graduated from the university in 1937 with degrees in both mathematics and French, then went on to pursue graduate studies at the institution.

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Then-President Barack Obama presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom to NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson on Nov. 24, 2015.
Carlos Barria / Reuters

Johnson was a teacher for 15 years, then joined the National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics, which later became NASA. She and three other women calculated rocket trajectories and orbits for some of the earliest American voyages into space, including helping astronaut John Glenn orbit the Earth three times. 

Then-President Barack Obama awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the United States’ highest civilian honor, in 2015.

“What can you say after a century about someone like Dr. Katherine Coleman Goble Johnson — our very own global, global genius?” Cagle asked Saturday. “Let’s see — you say nothing. You don’t say anything. You listen.” 

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Before You Go

19th Century Black Women Activists
(01 of10)
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Maria Molly Baldwin (1856-1922) was an educator and civic leader. (credit:Elmer Chickering/ Library of Congress)
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Elizabeth Carter Brooks, an educator and activist, is seen with singer and activist Emma Azelia Smith Hackley (wearing glasses). Photos dated from 1885. (credit:Library of Congress)
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Hallie Quinn Brown (1850-1949) was an educator and activist . She is the founder of the Colored Woman's League of Washington, D.C., which later became the National Association of Colored Women in 1894. (credit:Biddle F S/ Library of Congress)
(04 of10)
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Anna J. Cooper (1858-1964) was an educator, activist and prominent scholar. She was only the fourth black woman to earn a doctoral degree and wrote the Voice from the South: By A Woman from the South in 1892, which heavily touched on race and black feminism. (credit:Falor Smedley/ Library of Congress)
(05 of10)
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Amanda V. Gray (1869-1957) was an activist, educator and pharmacist. Gray, who received her pharmaceutical graduate degree from Howard University in 1903 , operated a pharmacy in Washington D.C.'s black neighborhood. She was heavily active in the community's ongoing social, political and cultural issues. (credit:Library of Congress)
(06 of10)
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Lillian Parker Thomas (born 1857) was a journalist and correspondent editor for the Freeman, which is recognized as the first illustrated black newspaper . She has been described in history books as "the mantle of mental achievement" and her role was one held by no other woman on staff at the publication. (credit:Giers Koellein/ Library of Congress)
(07 of10)
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Clarissa M. Thompson (born 1856) was an educator, novelist, poet and teacher . She often spoke out about temperance, gender inequality and racism. (credit:Library of Congress)
(08 of10)
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Laura A. Moore Westbrook (born 1859) was an educator and fearless advocate for black people in the South . She worked in the public school system for more than two decades in both Tennessee and Texas. (credit:Library of Congress)
(09 of10)
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Fannie Barrier Williams (1855-1944) was an educator, orator and political activist who heavily advocated on behalf of black women in the South. She was involved in the creation of both the National Association of Colored Women and the National Association of the Advancement Of Colored People (NAACP). (credit:Paul Tralles/ Library of Congress)
(10 of10)
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Josephine Silone Yates (1852-1912) was educator and activist who pushed for social change . She was a key organizer of the Kansas City Womens League and served as the organization's first president in 1893 before serving four years as the president of the National Association of Colored Women. (credit:Library of Congress)