NASA officially named its headquarters in the nation's capital after Mary W. Jackson, the agency's first Black woman engineer, with a ceremony honoring her legacy on Friday.
"With the official naming of the Mary W. Jackson NASA headquarters, we ensure that she is a hidden figure no longer," NASA acting Administrator Steve Jurczyk said during Friday's ceremony, which was largely virtual due to the pandemic.
"Jackson's story is one of incredible determination. She personified NASA's spirit of persevering against all odds, providing inspiration and advancing science and exploration," Jurczyk added. "There is no denying that she faced innumerable challenges in her work, work that would eventually help send the first Americans to space."
MORE: NASA's Perseverance successfully touches down on MarsBecause of engineers like Jackson, Jurczyk said, "America and the world was not only able to dream of landing among the stars but to make that dream a reality."
Jackson's work was spotlighted in the 2016 Margot Lee Shetterly book, "Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win the Space Race."
The book was turned into the Oscar-nominated movie "Hidden Figures" later that same year, with actress Janelle Monae portraying Jackson.
MORE: NASA releases new image of Perseverance rover in the midst of its descent to MarsThe virtual ceremony Friday featured a slew of speakers who honored Jackson's work, including poet Nikki Giovanni, who read an excerpt from her work, "Quilting the Black-Eyed Pea."
Two of the trailblazing engineer's grandchildren, Wanda Jackson and Bryan Jackson, also spoke at the event Friday. Mary W. Jackson died in 2005 at 83 years old.
"Grandma was a very loving, caring, and feisty woman," Wanda Jackson said. "She was that type of person who would do anything for anybody, no questions asked."
MORE: NASA releases stunning new video of Perseverance rover landing on MarsWanda Jackson reflected on visiting the NASA headquarters as a child when her grandmother was in training, and how despite the myriad of accomplishments, "she never gloated or bragged about anything she did."
While she is being honored publicly now, an emotional Wanda Jackson said, "she was always special to us."
"She was always our hero," she said. "She was always our star."
Bryan Jackson said his grandmother "paved the way for so many without us even knowing."
"She was a warrior," Bryan Jackson said. "Someone who wouldn't take no for an answer if she felt she was making a change to better something."