Pearl Young
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Pearl I. Young was a researcher and author about early aeronautics. She was the first female technical employee of NACA in 1922. She went on to become Chief Technical Editor at NACA's Langley Instrument Research Laboratory and an engineering professor.[1]
Publications by or about Pearl Young or Pearl I. Young or Pearl Irma Young
- Young, 1962 (Simple title: The Chanute-Mouillard correspondence)
- Young, 1962 (Simple title: The Chanute-Mouillard correspondence)
- Young, 1963, Octave Chanute (Simple title: Octave Chanute, 1832–1910: A Bibliography)
- Young, 1963, Octave Chanute (Simple title: Octave Chanute, 1832–1910: A Bibliography)
- Milera, 2022 (Simple title: Ms. Pearl Irma Young: ‘Raising Hell’ for Women in STEM Fields and Women at NASA, 1914–1968, Journal: University of North Dakota)
- Milera, 2024 (Simple title: Pearl Irma Young: The Lasting Impact of the NACA’s First Female Technical Employee, Journal: NASA News & Notes)
References
Names | Pearl Young; Pearl I. Young; Pearl Irma Young |
---|---|
Birth date | 1895 |
Death date | 1968 |
Countries | US |
Locations | Langley Lab |
Occupations | editor, physicist |
Tech areas | History |
Affiliations | NACA |
Wikidata id | Q19667577 |