Raye Montague
(Arkansas Academy of Computing)

Women and Adversity: Raye Montague

Designer of Navy Ships

The Navy’s “Hidden Figure”

Raye Montague was one of those women of color whose talents were overlooked and underplayed for most of her life. She faced discrimination because of her color and her sex but believed she could find ways to work around obstacles. She told an audience in 2015, “God sends you what you need. People put obstacles in your way. You find a way to achieve despite the system not because of the system.”

When she was seven, Raye looked through the periscope of a captured German submarine at a traveling exhibit and was fascinated by all the dials and mechanisms. She decided then she wanted to be an engineer. Her mother, who was in the cosmetology profession and raised Raye alone, told her she had three strikes against her:

  • she was black
  • she was a woman
  • she’d have a segregated education in the South

At the same time, her mother added, “You can be or do anything you want, provided you’re educated.”

Raye was born in Little Rock, AK on Jan. 21, 1935. After high school graduation in 1952, she went on to receive her degree in 1956 from Arkansas Agricultural, Mechanical and Normal College, now University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff. Her field of study was business because no university in Arkansas awarded engineering degrees to black women.

After graduating, she went to Washington, D.C. in search of a job that related to engineering and landed one with the Navy. She was hired as a digital computer systems operator requiring her to monitor and perform routine operations and maintenance.

She took night classes to learn computer programming and after finishing the courses asked for a promotion. Her boss said she’d have to work nights. With no public transportation at night and not knowing how to drive, Raye bought a car, had the salesman drive her home, and taught herself to drive by leaving her house at 10 p.m. and arriving for work by midnight. She became a computer systems analyst, a position that involves incorporating new technology in the company’s current system.

When President Nixon requested an admiral develop a new ship design, which usually took two years, Raye was given the assignment and told she had one month. This involved laying out step-by-step how a Naval ship could be designed using a computer. She finished the design in 18 hours and 26 minutes and revolutionized the way the Navy designed ships and submarines. She used a computer program she developed herself in the early 1970s and was the first person to design a U.S. Navy ship using a computer. It was the first draft for FFG-7 frigate (the Oliver Hazard Perry–class).

During her career with the Navy, she:

  • briefed the Joint Chiefs of Staff every month
  • taught at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, MD
  • received the Meritorious Civilian Service Award
  • in 1978 was the first woman Registered Professional Engineer to receive the Society of Manufacturing Engineers Achievement Award
  • accepted the newly created position of deputy program manager of the navy’s Information Systems Improvement Program on Jan. 22, 1984
  • in 1988 received the National Computer Graphics Association Award for the Advancement of Computer Graphics
  • worked on the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN-69)
  • worked on the Navy’s first landing craft helicopter-assault ship
  • worked on the Seawolf-class submarine (SSN-21)

She was induced in the Arkansas Women’s Hall of Fame and the Arkansas Black Women’s Hall of Fame. The Navy honored her as its “Hidden
Figure” in 2017.

Raye was married three times and had a son, David Montague, with her second husband. She died at the age of 83 of congestive heart failure on Oct. 10, 2018 in Little Rock.

More information

www.pbcommercial.com/news/local/raye-jean-montague-shares-life-story-overcoming-gender-racial-barriers?start=2

www.dcmilitary.com/south_potomac_pilot/features/raye-montague-naval-biography/article_f134a611-7d02-5586-9920-7064736778eb.html

blackamericaweb.com/2017/02/07/little-known-black-history-fact-raye-montague

 

 

Article By: Jo Ann Mathews

I published three ebooks in 2020: Women and Adversity, Honoring 23 Black Women; Women and Adversity, Recognizing 23 Notable Mothers; and Women and Adversity, Saluting 23 Faithful Suffragists to commemorate the hundredth anniversary of the passage of the 19th Amendment giving women the right to vote. These books are meant to be study guides for all students from grade school through college to help in choosing topics for assignments and to learn more about these noteworthy women. Go to amazon.com, barnesandnoble.com and goodreads.com to learn more.

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