First Computer Programmers Inspire Documentary
For more information on the documentary, visit
Invisible Computers: The Untold Story
of the ENIAC Programmers.First Women Computers - Computer Wonder Women and Digital Diva's:
Women and Their Role in the Development of the Modern Computer
Find the Mother of the Internet
'WOMEN WANTED!'
The Army wanted women with mathematics degrees to
HAND CALCULATE
the firing trajectories of artillery for the war effort.Decline in Numbers of Women in Computer Science Threatens U.S. Competitiveness, Say Experts
ABC NEWS 3 more pages.
At 83, Betty Jean Jennings Bartik -- a devoted bridge player and
grandmother of five -- had a secret past that was invisible to many who
knew her.
During World War II the Army
ran out of male mathematicians and turned to six women to program the
world's first computer - ENIAC. Historian Kathy Kleiman (left) has
recorded oral histories of these women - now in their 80s - in her
upcoming documentary film, "Invisible Computers." Shown here (from
left) are Jean Bartik, Marlyn Meltzer and the late Kathleen Mauchly
Antonelli. Seated is the late Betty Snyder Holberton.The two other
ENIAC programmers were the late Ruth Lichterman Teitelbaum and Frances
Bilas Spence.
Her grandson Alex knew her story. He stormed out of school one day when
his teacher refused to believe his gray-haired granny was a computer
pioneer who had calculated firing tables and ballistic trajectories
during World War II.
The boy's parents had to explain to the teacher that Bartik and
five other women had, indeed, legally hacked the world's first
programmable computer, converting it into a stored machine and
eventually helping to usher in the digital age.
"She was dumbfounded," said Bartik.
So, too, were the historians, who for a half century never
acknowledged the wartime contributions of the six women who programmed
the Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer (ENIAC) and made
programming easier and more accessible to those who followed.
In 1945, Bartik was one of a handful of female math majors at
what was then Northwest Missouri State Teachers College. The feisty
20-year-old farm girl knew only one thing: She didn't want to teach.
As the war came to a close, the Army had run out of male
mathematicians. Bartik answered a recruitment ad for women "computers"
in a classified project at the Aberdeen Proving Ground operations at
the University of Pennsylvania.
"I wanted to do something exciting and adventuresome," she told
ABCNEWS.com. "I wanted to get to the big city and see what life was
like."
Ignored by History
Bartik went on to help program the BINAC for Northrop Aircraft
Company in 1949 and design logic for UNIVAC I, the first commercial
computer delivered to the U.S. Census Bureau in 1951. After that, she
took time off to raise three children, but then returned in 1967 to
help businesses understand the new microcomputers.
Her
personal story -- a sort of Rosie the Riveter meets Bill Gates --
recalls the enormous talent women have brought to computer technology
and illustrates the challenges today's women face in what's still a
male-dominated field.
Many say their story is especially timely, because the already
low numbers of female computer scientists are dropping, posing a new
threat to the nation's global competitiveness.
For decades, Bartik and her colleagues were ignored by
computing history. At the 40th anniversary of the ENIAC project at the
University of Pennsylvania in 1946, the women were initially not
invited -- only one was on the list as a spouse.
But now, a documentary film -- "Invisible Computers: The Story
of the ENIAC Programmers" -- will chronicle their groundbreaking
stories.