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On Sept. 12, 1992, NASA astronaut Mae Jemison became the first African-American woman to go to space.

In NASA's early days, women and people of color were never selected to go to space. NASA didn't send a woman to space until the seventh space shuttle mission in 1983. The first African-American man NASA launched into space flew on the following mission that same year.

Nine years later, NASA finally selected an African-American woman to fly on STS-47, the 50th space shuttle mission. Jemison was a trained engineer and licensed physician who served in the Peace Corps before applying to become an astronaut.
She worked as a mission specialist on STS-47 and logged over 190 hours in space. STS-47 was her only mission. In 1993, she retired from NASA and went on to found her own company, the Jemison Group, which is a technology consulting firm.
Transcript
00:00On this day in space. In 1992, NASA astronaut Mae Jemison became the first
00:06African-American woman to go to space. In NASA's early days, women and people of
00:11color were never selected to go to space. NASA didn't send a woman to space until
00:15the seventh space shuttle mission in 1983. The first African-American man NASA
00:19launched into space flew on the following mission that same year. Nine
00:23years later, NASA finally selected an African-American woman to fly on STS-47,
00:27the 50th space shuttle mission. Jemison was a trained engineer and a licensed
00:32physician who served in the Peace Corps before applying to become a NASA
00:34astronaut. She worked as a mission specialist on STS-47 and logged over a
00:39hundred and ninety hours in space. STS-47 was her only mission. In 1993, she
00:45retired from NASA and went on to found her own company, the Jemison Group, which is
00:48a technology consulting firm. And that's what happened on this day in space.
00:57year
01:13year
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