Astronaut Sally Ride shattered the glass ceiling when she launched on board Space Shuttle mission STS-7.

By Ezzy Pearson

Published: Friday, 14 June 2024 at 05:41 AM


Sally Ride was an American astronaut who, on 18 June 1983 flew on board a NASA Space Shuttle to become the first US woman in space.

In 1959, William Randolph Lovelace, the physician in charge of determining who was physically suited to spaceflight, had been curious about how the female body would respond to his tests.

He’d secretly called in several women, 13 of whom passed the first stages.

He went public with the results, hoping to garner support for further tests, which would require access to military facilities.

Instead, many at NASA, including several of the male astronauts, pushed back against the idea.

Sally Ride became the first American woman in space on the STS-7 space shuttle mission.Credits: NASA

Rather than ban women outright, NASA insisted that candidates needed jet pilot experience which could only be gained in the military – and which did ban women from flying.

The tacit ban would remain in place until 1977, when NASA was selecting its first astronaut class in eight years.

Apollo was long over and the agency was looking to crew its new project, the Space Shuttle.

With a capacity of eight people, the programme would require many new astronauts.

Equal rights for women and for people of colour had become far more prominent in the West since the last astronaut intake, and so the requirements were broadened to accommodate a more diverse range of people.

To push the applicant call to as many people as possible, NASA advertised on TV, radio and in newspapers.

It was reading the latter that brought the initiative to the attention of PhD student Sally Ride.

Left to right: astronaut candidates Sally Ride, Judith Resnik, Anna Fisher, Kathryn Sullivan and Rhea Seddon during in Florida in 1978. Credit: NASA
Left to right: NASA astronaut candidates Sally Ride, Judith Resnik, Anna Fisher, Kathryn Sullivan and Rhea Seddon in Florida in 1978. Credit: NASA

Why Sally Ride became an astronaut

A highly active person, Sally Ride had found her first love in the world of tennis.

Her prowess at the sport netted her several scholarships to study physics at university and, despite training for hours every day, she excelled academically.

She eventually went to Stanford University for her PhD. It was when she was about to graduate and wondering what direction to take her life that Ride spotted the advert.

“The moment I saw that, I knew that that’s what I wanted to do… I wanted to apply to the astronaut corps and see whether NASA would take me and see whether I could have the opportunity to go on that adventure,” Ride said in a 2006 interview at the US Astronaut Hall of Fame.

Sally Ride during astronaut training at Ellington Field Joint Reserve Base in Houston Texas, 14 October 1982. Photo by Space Frontiers/Archive Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Sally Ride during astronaut training at Ellington Field Joint Reserve Base in Houston Texas, 14 October 1982. Photo by Space Frontiers/Archive Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Making the final cut

In all, 8,079 people applied and just 35 were chosen. Among them were one Asian-American man, three African-American men and six women, one of whom was Sally Ride.

After completing basic training in 1978, Ride worked within NASA on the Shuttle’s Remote Manipulator System, Canadarm, as well as acting as CapCom on two missions, being the link between ground control and the astronauts in orbit.

The first six crewed flights of the Shuttle were flown with smaller crews from earlier astronaut classes, but by the seventh flight, STS-7, it was time for the class of 1978 to take their seats, and one of them would be a woman.

The STS-7 crew. Front row, left to right: Sally Ride, Commander Bob Crippen, Pilot Frederick Hauck. Back row, left to right: John Fabian, Norm Thagard
The STS-7 crew. Front row, left to right: Sally Ride, Commander Bob Crippen, Pilot Frederick Hauck. Back row, left to right: John Fabian, Norm Thagard

The mission would require Canadarm, with which Ride was well-experienced.

But it was Ride’s ability to get along with and work alongside almost anyone that led to her being selected to be the first American woman in space.

NASA had seen the impact being ‘the first’ could have on an astronaut’s life with Neil Armstrong, so officials asked if Ride was willing to accept that fame.

She agreed, but in truth Ride had little comprehension of how intense the attention would be.

While Valentina Tereshkova, the cosmonaut who in 1963 became the first woman in space, had been somewhat protected by the Soviet Union’s policy of not publicising missions until they were under way, Ride was under the microscope from the moment her assignment was announced.

Liftoff of STS-7, the flight that made Sally Ride the first American woman in space. Credit: NASA
Liftoff of STS-7, the flight that made Sally Ride the first American woman in space. Credit: NASA

“Really the only bad moments in our training involved the press,” Ride said in an interview with feminist Gloria Steinem.

“Whereas NASA appeared to be very enlightened about flying women astronauts, the press didn’t appear to be. Without a doubt, I think the worst question that I’ve gotten was whether I cried when we got malfunctions in the simulator.”