Jeanne Lee Crews

Jeanne Lee Crews
Born1940 (age 85–86)
Alma materUniversity of Texas
University of Florida (BS)
OccupationAerospace engineer
EmployerNASA
Known forMulti-shock shield ("Space Bumper")
First female engineers at NASA
Hypervelocity research
TitleAssistant to the Division Chief, NASA (Retired)
AwardsNASA Exceptional Service Medal
NASA Exceptional Achievement Medal
Silver Snoopy award
Women in Aerospace Lifetime Achievement Award

Jeanne Lee Crews (born 1940) was an American aerospace engineer at NASA, and also one of the first female engineers to join the agency. She retired in November 2002 and is now living in Satellite Beach, Florida. In order to protect spacecraft from debris, she designed a "flexible multi-shock shield to protect spacecraft from debris," which is still in use on the International Space Station today. Jeanne Lee Crews is also one of the first women at NASA to participate on a zero-G flight. She has more recently been working on a way to gather and accumulate orbital debris, through a large balloon that will return to Earth once full. Jeanne Lee Crews has been awarded with Aerospace Lifetime Achievement Award, the NASA Exceptional Service Medal, and the NASA Exceptional Achievement Medal.