Smithsonian Sidedoor   /     Right Stuff, Wrong Sex

Summary

There was a time, before Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon, when some researchers believed women were better suited for space than men. In 1961, a group of female pilots—today known as the Mercury 13—quietly aced NASA’s toughest astronaut tests, even outperforming the Mercury men in some areas. But with the space race heating up, their mission was grounded— but not by science. But what became of America’s first female astronaut candidates? Guests:  Margaret Weitekamp, chair of the space history department at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum, and author of Right Stuff, Wrong Sex: America’s First Women in Space Program andSpace Craze: America’s Enduring Fascination with Real and Imagined Spaceflight  Emily Calandrelli, engineer, author, and TV show host of Emily’s Wonderlab and Xploration Outer Space

Subtitle
There was a time, before Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon, when some researchers believed women were better suited for space than men.
Duration
40:35
Publishing date
2025-02-19 05:00
Link
https://play.prx.org/listen?ge=prx_69_4c4dbeec-4550-45f4-a8a6-7597976448e4&uf=http%3A%2F%2Ffeeds.si.edu%2FSmithsonianSidedoor
Contributors
  Smithsonian Institution
author  
Enclosures
https://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/tracking.swap.fm/track/sblTq32fyWAjsHzze2LG/dovetail.prxu.org/_/69/4c4dbeec-4550-45f4-a8a6-7597976448e4/Lovelace_Seg1.mp3
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

There was a time, before Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon, when some researchers believed women were better suited for space than men. In 1961, a group of female pilots—today known as the Mercury 13—quietly aced NASA’s toughest astronaut tests, even outperforming the Mercury men in some areas. But with the space race heating up, their mission was grounded— but not by science. But what became of America’s first female astronaut candidates?

Guests: 

Margaret Weitekamp, chair of the space history department at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum, and author of Right Stuff, Wrong Sex: America’s First Women in Space Program andSpace Craze: America’s Enduring Fascination with Real and Imagined Spaceflight 

Emily Calandrelli, engineer, author, and TV show host of Emily’s Wonderlab and Xploration Outer Space