Eleanor Foraker

Eleanor ("Ellie") Foraker (September 2, 1930 - December 8, 2011)[1][2] was an American seamstress who worked at the International Latex Corporation (ILC) and was involved in NASA's space program.[1] She left the Playtex division of ILC Dover in 1964 and worked on underground inflatable oil tanks and gas masks to aid the development of the A7L spacesuit for the Apollo 11 mission.[1][3] Her last contribution at NASA before retirement was with the Pathfinder Mission, where she worked on stitching together the airbag system that was used to land the Sojourner rover on Mars.[1][4]

Early career

Foraker was born September 2, 1930, in Kenton, Delaware.[1] She worked at ILC Dover for 43 years, collaborating on projects in a seamstress and managerial capacity.[1] When ILC competed for a contract to design and create a spacesuit for the Apollo missions, Foraker was invited to join the team.[5][6] In 1964, she moved from sewing cloth diaper covers to sewing Apollo-mission spacesuits.[3] From 1968 to 1974, she continued as a supervisor and manager at ILC.[6]

Apollo mission

Foraker's contributions to the development of Apollo's A7L spacesuit for the Apollo program are arguably her most notable contribution at ILC. Designed by seamstresses and engineers of ILC, it differed significantly from suit designs put for bid in competing RFPs.[3] Designs by seamstresses in the Playtex division resulted in a spacesuit with a 21-layer design, sewn and glued together. Its softness and flexibility starkly contrasted the rigid suits put forth by competing military designers and engineers.[3][5] The spacesuit had to be able to withstand immensely cold and hot temperatures, be flame resistant, and protect the wearer from harmful atmospheric conditions.[7] They needed to have a seam allowance of less than one sixty-fourth of an inch.[3]

The suits had to have an impermeable rubber bladder, a misplaced hole, or a pin left hidden in the fabric that was a serious safety issue. The suits were x-rayed to double-check that no pins had been left in the work.[3] One of Foraker's tasks in her supervisoring role was managing the use of sewing pins by the seamstresses.[6] Each seamstress was given a set of pins with different colored heads so that Foraker could track who worked on each suit. Anecdotally, If a pin was found in the suit, it would typically result in a pin poke to the behind.[3][6]

Buzz Aldrin wearing the A7L spacesuit

Work culture

There was reportedly collaboration, teamwork, and respect between the seamstresses and engineers who were working on the suits.[3] More seamstresses like Foraker had been brought over to the project from the Playtex division (all of whom were women) and were encouraged to share their expertise and knowledge by teaching the engineers how to sew and suggesting ways to improve the suits as they worked on them.[3] The respect for the work that the seamstresses were doing was integral to creating a properly functioning suit and was exhibited especially by the project head of the suit development, Leonard (Lenny) Shepherd.[3] During the final stages of the production of the suits, Shepherd would stay at the Dover plant with Foraker for many late nights and help move the bulky suits as she sewed them using one of the two modified singer sewing machines (dubbed 'Big Moe' and 'Sweet Sue').[3] At this time, Foraker was also undertaking a supervisory role, working eighty-hour workweeks, sometimes only leaving the plant for two hours before returning.[8] Foraker's dedication to the creation of the spacesuit meant that aside from these long work weeks, she had no days off or vacations for three years, and also ended up suffering two nervous breakdowns during this time.[8]

Lasting impact

The softer and more flexible A7L spacesuit became the template for future spacesuit designs. The work that Foraker and the team of seamstresses did is significant in how it remained largely unacknowledged. This can be understood by looking at how 'women's work' in general, but specifically sewing with its links to the domestic sphere, has historically been devalued, underpaid, and obfuscated as 'real work'.[9] The incredible amount of time, skills, and knowledge that these women contributed in sewing these suits helps to shed light on these realities and re-situate this work as such that is highly skilled and valuable. Among the names known and valorized for their connection to the Apollo missions, the work of the seamstresses and Foraker had remained mostly hidden until the 21st century when this started to shift. The widely acclaimed book-based movie Hidden Figures, which follows the lives of three Black women mathematicians working at NASA during the space race, exemplifies this push to acknowledge the important contributions that women have made in the past century that have remained relatively hidden. The book, Spacesuit: Fashioning Apollo, published in 2011, details the incredible amount of work that went into the making of the A7L spacesuit, and acknowledges how integral the team of seamstresses was in the suit coming together.[3] While no movie has yet been released, in 2013 Warner Bros. had plans to adapt this book into a film, hiring Richard Cordiner to write the script for it.[10] Inspired by the real events of Foraker's life, a children's book entitled The Spacesuit: How a seamstress helped put a man on the moon, was published in 2019 which loosely follows her story working on the A7L spacesuit.[5]

References

  1. "Eleanor "Ellie" Foraker Obituary (2011) Delaware State News". Legacy.com. Retrieved 2021-11-13.
  2. Brueck, Hilary. "Women made the Apollo moon landing possible — here are the crucial technologies and calculations they contributed". Business Insider. Retrieved 2021-11-14.
  3. de Monchaux, Nicholas (2011). Spacesuit : fashioning Apollo. MIT Press. pp. 209–211, 219. ISBN 978-0-262-01520-2. OCLC 776119891.
  4. "Airbag Test Page". mars.nasa.gov. Retrieved 2021-11-14.
  5. Donald, Alison. The spacesuit : how a seamstress helped put man on the moon. ISBN 978-1-6622-5560-1. OCLC 1204100314.
  6. ‌"The Space Suit." Moon Machines, Science Channel Documentary, 2008.
  7. Chow, Denise (2011-01-24). "Everyday Tech from Space: Out of NASA Tragedy, Better Fireproof Clothes". Space.com. Retrieved 2021-11-15.
  8. "Robin McKie on the fallen dream that was the moon landings". the Guardian. 2009-06-20. Retrieved 2021-11-14.
  9. Thompson, Emma (2021-08-17). Sew what: An ethnographic exploration of contemporary garment sewing practices in Kingston Ontario (thesis thesis).
  10. Fleming, Mike Jr. (2013-05-22). "Warner Bros Tells Space Story, From The Bra Designers Who Made Moon Mission Possible". Deadline. Retrieved 2021-11-21.

See also

"The seamstresses who helped put a man on the moon" https://www.cbsnews.com/news/apollo-11-the-seamstresses-who-helped-put-a-man-on-the-moon/

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