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Katherine Johnson, NASA mathematician depicted in ‘Hidden Figures,’ dead at 101

Katherine Johnson, the former NASA mathematician depicted in the 2016 film “Hidden Figures” about black women who helped pave the way for astronauts to reach the m𒊎oon, died Monday, the space agency🦂 announced. She was 101.

“Mrs. Johnson helped our nation enlarge the frontiers of space even as she made huge strides that also opened doors for women and people of color,” NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said in a statement.

“Her dedication and skill as a mathematician helped put humans on the moon and before that made it possible for our astronauts to take the first steps in space that we now follow on a journey to Mars,” he added.

In 2015, then-President Barack Obama awarded Johnson the Presidential Medal of Freedom. The following ye🗹ar, he cited her in his State of the Union Address as an example of the country’s spirit of discovery.

During NASA’s early years, Johnson and her black colleagues were referred to as “computers” — people who performed computations – and toiled anonymously behind the scenes.

When the Oscar-nominated movie — in which she was portrayed by Taraji P. Henson — hit the screens in 2016, the women gained long-overdue attention.

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Barack Obama presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom to NASA mathematician and physicist Katherine Johnson at the White House in Washington, DC, on November 24, 2015
Barack Obama presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Katherine Johnson on November 24, 2015.AFP via Getty Images
Katherine Johnson (center), director Ezra Edelman and producer Caroline at the 89th Annual Academy Awards.
Katherine Johnson (center), director Ezra Edelman and producer Caroline at the 89th Annual Academy Awards.Getty Images
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The movie also stars 💃Octavia Spencer as mathematician Dorothy Vaughan and Janelle Monáe as engineer 🐷Mary Jackson.

During the Academy Awards ceremony in 2017, Johnson was given a standing ovation when she joined the film’s cast in presenting an award for documentaries.

During her stellar 33-year career at NASA, Johnson worked on the Mercury and Apollo missions — including Apollo 11’s first moon landing in 1969, when Neil Armstrong became the first human to walk on Earth’s satellite.

Taraji P. Henson (eft) portrays Katherine Johnson with Janelle Monáe in 'Hidden Figures.'
Taraji P. Henson (eft) portrays Katherine Johnson with Janelle Monáe in ‘Hidden Figures.’20th Century Fox Licensing/Merch

Joh🅺n Glenn, one of the famed Mercury Seven spacemen, thought so highly of Johnson that he insisted that she be consulted before his ⛄mission aboard Friendship 7 on Feb. 20, 1962.

“Get the girl to check the numbers,” said Glenn, who became the first American to orbit the globe.

“He knew I had done (the calculations) before for him and they trusted my work,” Johnson, who continued her work during the early years of the space shuttle program, told the Washington Post in 2017.

Johnson was born Aug. 26, 1918, in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, to a teacher and a farmer, both of whom stressed education and moved the ༒family 120 miles to a town that had a high school for black kids.

Thanks to her astou𝓀nding math skills, Johnson was accepted into West Virginia State College when she was just 15. She earned degrees in math and French before becoming one of the first black students in the graduate school at West Virginia University in 19☂38.

Katherine Johnson working at the NASA Langley Research Center in 1980.
Katherine Johnᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚson working at the NASA Langl꧑ey Research Center in 1980.Getty Images

After working as a sc🐻hoolteacher for seven 🅷years, Johnson went to work for the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, a NASA forerunner in 1953 along with dozens of other black women.

During the space race between the US a🐓nd the former Soviet Union that began in the late 1950s, Johnson and her colleagues used pencils, slide rules and rudimentary ca𝔍lculators to crunch numbers for unmanned rocket launches.

Katherine Johnson at the at NASA Langley Research Center in 1966.
Katherine Johnson𒁏 at the at NASA Langley Research Cent🐟er in 1966.Getty Images

They worked in facilities separate from their white counterparts, though Johnson always maintained said she was too busy to be c▨oncerned with racism, according to Reuters.

The orbital mechanics guru was part of the team that supported Alan Shepard, who ♈became the first American to reach space on the 15-minute suborbital flight aboard Mercury’s Freedom 7 on May 5, 1961.

“She didn’t close her eyes to the racism that existed,” Margot Lee Shetterly wrote in “Hidden Figures.”

“She knew just as well as any other black person the tax levied upon them because of their color. But she didn’t feel it in the same way. She wished it away, willed it out of existence inasmuch as her daily life was concerned.”

Johnson and her first husband, James Francis Goble, who died of a brain tumor in 195🔯6, had three daughters. ജIn 1959, she married US Army Lt. Col. James Johnson, a veteran of the Korean War.