Page 66 - World Airnews Magazine November 2020
P. 66

WOMEN IN
                  AVIATION

                                            SHEILA WIDNALL: A LIFETIME


                                                EXPLORING THE UNKNOWN










         On September 30, the
          MIT community came together
          to celebrate the career of
          Institute Professor Emerita
          Sheila Widnall, who recently
          retired after spending 64 years
          at MIT.
           The virtual event featured
          remarks from MIT leaders, cur-
          rent and former secretaries of
          the US Air Force and Widnall’s
          faculty colleagues from the
          department of aeronautics and
          astronautics, who spoke of her
          impact at MIT and beyond.
           MIT was not only a
          springboard for a hungry
          young tinkerer who became
          a remarkable engineer and a
          visionary leader, both at MIT                                     Institute Professor Emerita Sheila Widnall
          and on the national stage.                                                          Photo: Nina Gallant
          Widnall would also become one
          of the curious few who make                         apply to his alma mater, MIT.
          MIT their intellectual home for their full adult lives.
           Her work in fluid dynamics would have major implications in   “Where’s that?” she asked.
          aviation and space flight. She would become the first woman to   Soon enough, Widnall would discover how the Institute launched
          lead a branch of the US military when she was secretary of the Air   the intellectually curious, helping them explore the boundary
          Force in the 1990s. And her leadership in supporting women in the   where the known meets the unknown.
          STEM fields, both at MIT and internationally, would blaze trails for
          six decades.                                        FROM TACOMA TO CAMBRIDGE
                                                              Widnall attributes the fearlessness with which she faced a career
          THE CALL TO ADVENTURE                               in engineering to her parents, Rolland and Genevieve Evans. At
          It was a small chunk of uranium, a gift from an uncle who worked   a time when women were only a third of the U.S. labour force,
          for a mining company that first brought Widnall face to face with   Widnall was unique among her friends in having a mother with a
          her future.                                         full-time job. Genevieve Evans was a probation officer whose cases
           It may seem like an odd choice of present for teenager, but in the   sometimes required her to reach back to her earlier professional
          1950s when Widnall was in high school in Tacoma, Washington,   experience as a social worker.
          America was hot for uranium. Hollywood produced two urani-  “She worked with families, kids who were accused of violent
          um-themed movies: “Uranium Boom” and “Dig That Uranium.” The   crimes,” Widnall said with pride. “It was a big deal.”
          Atomic Energy Commission was paying between (US) $3,000 and   Her father, Rolland Evans, was an insurance salesman. Later in his
          (US) $7,000 a ton for the stuff - half the cost of a new home.  life, he went back to school to obtain a master’s degree and teach
           To Widnall, however, the rock had a more practical purpose. An   college-level business. He also taught his daughter self-reliance.
          11th grader at Aquinas Academy, a Catholic girls’ school, she had   “We worked together on various projects, building things. He
          a science project due: “I used it, along with models of atoms, to   fixed things and I’d tag along and he’d show me how. I was 20 years
          explain radioactive decay,” she told a reporter in 2009.  old before I realized you could hire people to do work on your
           Her project on the degradation of uranium won first prize at   house,” Widnall said
          the Tacoma Science Fair, and from there it was on to a national   After being accepted to MIT, Widnall arrived on campus in the
          competition. She travelled with her science teacher on a two-day,   fall of 1956. Of 6,000 students at that time, just two percent were
          2,000-mile train trip to Ohio, where Widnall’s life was about to   female, including 23 first-years. The women felt isolated, Widnall
          change forever.                                     remembers, forced to live in a rowhouse a mile off campus. While
           Her project impressed a Tacoma civil engineer, Arthur Anderson   she personally experienced few instances of outright sexism, one
          SM ’35, SCD ’38. As a businessman he’d developed pre-stressed   episode stood out: “When I came to MIT and was introduced to
          concrete, which could be used to create curved beams, the kind   my freshman advisor, he said “Why are you here?’, Which I took as
          you see in monorails like the ones at Walt Disney World. Anderson   an insult. I thought, ‘This guy is a jerk.’ But every other advisor was
          thought Widnall had a future in science and told her she should   supportive.”

                                                World Airnews |November Extra 2020
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