NASA - "The Future of Space: A Cosmic Conversation" - Hosted by the International Women's Air & Space Museum

Blog Date
Author(s)
Stuart O. Smith, Jr.

November 1, 2024, International Women's Air & Space Museum Executive Director Sara Fisher, NASA's Johnson Space Center Director Vanessa Wyche, and Stuart O Smith Jr.
Enlarge Image

Dinner w/ a Slice of History - The Future of Space: A Cosmic Conversation with NASA's Johnson Space Center Director, Vanessa Wyche | November 1, 2024

Program information: November 1, 2024, Dinner with a Slice of History - The Future of Space: A Cosmic Conversation with NASA's Johnson Space Center Director Vanessa Wyche.
Enlarge Image To Read The Program Details

IWASM is pleased to announce its upcoming Dinner with a Slice of History program on November 1, 2024. Featuring NASA’s Johnson Space Center (JCS) Director, Vanessa Wyche, this program will explore JSC’s historic impact on human space flight, glimpse the future of space, and more. The Dinner with a Slice of History series is made possible in part thanks to Cuyahoga Arts and Culture and Signature Flight Support.

NASA’S Johnson Space Center has served as the iconic setting to some of humankind’s greatest achievements. For more than 60 years, as part of NASA’s nationwide team, Johnson has led the world in human space exploration and plays an integral role in enabling commercial industry to build, own, and operate space systems. In this Dinner with a Slice of History, Johnson’s Director Vanessa Wyche will give attendees a glimpse of the future of space, including our nation’s return to the Moon through NASA’s Artemis program, and share her perspective as the director of the hub of human exploration.

. . .

Registration for the program is required. In-person tickets include dinner before the event for $15 per person (the cost of the meal). Students are free with student ID, and promo code. Virtual tickets require a minimum donation of $10.


. . . visit www.iwasm.org or call 216-623-1111. . . . For more information, contact the museum or email info@iwasm.org.

On Friday, November 1, 2024, I was very fortunate to attend a special presentation at the International Women's Air & Space Museum about the future of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). I have known about the museum for fourteen years, and I have seen their booth at official NASA events, but I have never attended one of their hosted programs.

It was fantastic to learn directly from Johnson Space Center Director Vanessa E. Wyche about what is currently being developed at NASA!

FYI, this is the third NASA-related event that I have attended in 2024, and that I have written about in my blog. Also in October 2024 alone, I wrote about three technology-related events. There is so much to do in the Greater Cleveland area!

 

 

Thank you, Sponsors!!

I am grateful to the sponsors of this event!

The "Dinner with a Slice of History" series is made possible with the support of Cuyahoga Arts & Culture, Signature Flight Support BKL - Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport, the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics - Northern Ohio Section, HX5, and the America 250-Ohio Commission.

Thank you to these “Dinner with a Slice of History” sponsors for supporting the International Women's Air & Space Museum event featuring NASA's Johnson Space Center Director Vanessa Wyche.
Enlarge Image

 

 

Friday, November 1, 2024 - Brief Tour of the International Women's Air & Space Museum

The International Women's Air & Space Museum is located in the terminal of Burke Lakefront Airport. Since we are located in a public building, admission to the museum is free. Even if you have visited IWASM in the past, we welcome you to visit us again as exhibits change often and there are always opportunities to see something new.

Hours

The museum office, gift shop and Fay Gillis Wells Research Center are open Monday through Friday, 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

Exhibits are open for self-guided tours seven days a week, from 8:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.

We are closed on all major holidays, with the exception of Labor Day, as well as home football games of the Cleveland Browns.

The mission of the International Women's Air & Space Museum is to collect, preserve, and showcase the history and culture of women in all areas of aviation and aerospace; educate people of the world about their contributions; and inspire future generations by bringing the history to life.
. . .

In the late 1960s, a group of female pilots who belonged to the Ninety-Nines - the world’s first organization of female pilots - realized that the history they had created was in danger of being forgotten. These women, who were among the first to be licensed as pilots, had participated in the high-risk air races of the 1930s, flew with the WASP in World War II, and started the first female-run flight schools in the country, recognized the need to preserve their own stories. To that end, the Ninety-Nines formed a Museum Trust on July 16, 1970 after that year’s Ninety-Nines Convention in New Hampshire.

The Trust’s original intention was to create the International Women's Air & Space Museum - . . .

. . .

In May 1998, IWASM signed a lease with the City of Cleveland to become tenants of Burke Lakefront Airport. The airport, which serves as the official reliever airport for Cleveland-Hopkins International Airport, has been home to many tenants over the years, including the Cleveland National Air Show, city employee offices, flight schools, and more. After a year of exhibit design, installation, and behind-the-scenes work, IWASM held its ribbon-cutting weekend from August 27-29, 1999.

I have visited the International Women's Air & Space Museum many times, since the first ten years of Cleveland GiveCamp (2010-2019) took place at the City of Cleveland's Burke Lakefront Airport (which is the location of the museum) and on the Lean Dog Software boat that used to be docked nearby. I remembered that the International Women's Air & Space Museum was a nonprofit organization that benefited from a GiveCamp project in the past, and I found them listed on the Cleveland GiveCamp's web page listing the 2010 Nonprofit Partners. I used to be on the Cleveland GiveCamp Steering Committee, and included photos of the museum as part of my past Cleveland GiveCamp blog posts from 2012 through 2019.

I suggest you go to the museum (FREE admission) to see all the exhibits, gift shop, and research center for yourself. Also, check out their website for details on special guided tours, Speakers Bureau Programs, "Boxed Lunch & Learns," and children's programs. I often see their volunteers and staff at local NASA events, so please make a point to talk to them to learn more about this international museum that we are fortunate to have here in Cleveland.

 

Here are a few photos that I took on November 1, 2024, to give you a taste of some of the museum's exhibits:

I recommend viewing videos in full screen mode.
Please feel free to pause the video to read the interesting facts that are in the slides!!

 

 

Friday, November 1, 2024 - The Future of Space: A Cosmic Conversation with NASA's Johnson Space Center Director, Vanessa Wyche

"Dinner with a Slice of History" welcomes NASA's Johnson Space Center Director Vanessa Wyche to explore the past, present, and future!

In addition to taking photos/videos (see below), I also took notes during Vanessa Wyche's presentation. The following items are what I captured in my notes, along with what I found while writing this blog post. I recommend watching the YouTube videos in full screen mode, since these NASA videos of space travel are very beautiful!

There is much, much more exciting information available about current NASA activities. I highly recommend you go to the NASA Johnson Space Center (NASA.gov/Johnson/) website, and other NASA websites (such as Cleveland's own NASA Glenn Research Center: NASA.gov/Glenn/) to learn more. We are fortunate in Cleveland to have in our city both the International Women's Air & Space Museum and the NASA Glenn Visitor Center (which is inside the Great Lakes Science Center). Visit both of these museums to learn more about NASA.

 

Here are my photos from Vanessa Wyche's November 1, 2024, talk:

I recommend viewing videos in full screen mode.
Please feel free to pause the video to read the interesting facts and scan the QR codes that are in the slides!!

 

Here is a short video of part of Vanessa Wyche's November 1, 2024, talk:

I recommend viewing videos in full screen mode.

 

 

Photos After Presentation

After her presentation, Vanessa Wyche took time to meet with attendees, event supporters, International Women's Air & Space Museum leadership, and NASA Glenn Research Center staff. She also was able to meet with the next generation of leaders by talking to high school students that were attendance. I talked to one of the teachers, and was told that one group in attendance was mostly ninth-grade female students from Keystone High School.

I recommend viewing videos in full screen mode.

At the end of the evening, I told the Keystone students and their teacher about the NASA Space Apps Challenge - Cleveland. I showed them the photo the winners, who were a group of women that are NASA Interns at the Glenn GVIS Lab. See the photo in my blog post which includes the section: "Thursday, October 17, 2024 - Announcement: NASA Glenn Research Center Interns Won First Place!" You can now follow the GRC Graphics Visualization Interns project, "Sunburns," as they go on to the 2024 Global NASA International Space Apps Challenge competition.

 

 

Watch the International Women's Air & Space Museum's YouTube Channel!

I was told that this event will be posted in the future on the International Women's Air & Space Museum's YouTube Channel, so watch for it and check out their other videos at: https://www.youtube.com/@internationalwomensairspac1760

 

Related Blog Posts

I always like to include a list of related blog posts that may be of interest to the readers of this blog post:

The first full blog post I ever wrote was in 2012, when people came from all over the USA to Cleveland, Ohio, to honor former Ohio Senator and Astronaut John Glenn on the 50th anniversary of his orbital flight. See all 18 of my past "NASA" blog posts by clicking here.

 

Thank you to the International Women's Air & Space Museum staff and board leadership for this great event.