Now
working on a third career as a sculptor, Lt. Colonel Arminta J.
Harness closed a 30-year career in engineering when she resigned
in 1979 from her position as Manager of Laboratory Planning,
Hanford Engineering Development Laboratory, operated by the
Westinghouse Hanford Company, Richland, Washington. In this
position she was responsible for directing the development of
both strategic and operational long-range plans for the nuclear
development laboratory. She was previously Technical Assistant
to the President, Westinghouse Hanford Company.
Born in Oilton, Oklahoma, she graduated from high school in
Owensboro, Kentucky. After two years at Lindenwood College for
Women, St. Charles, Missouri, she enrolled at the University of
Southern California, where she received her Bachelor of
Engineering degree in Aeronautical Engineering. Her later
education included graduate work in engineering management at
the same university as well as numerous technical and system
program management courses.
Colonel Harness joined Westinghouse Hanford Company in July
1974 following retirement from military service. As the first
woman engineer to join the United States Air Force, she was in
the unique position of trail blazer during the 24 years of her
military career -- rising in rank from Second Lieutenant to
Lieutenant Colonel.
Her Air Force assignments included duty as a photographic and
weather reconnaissance project engineer, as deputy chief of
engineering and then as chief of program control for the target
vehicle portion of the Gemini manned space program, and as a
research and development director for a national intelligence
organization. Her military responsibilities varied from
designing intelligence gathering equipment for the U-2 aircraft
to providing management direction for the $2 billion Space and
Missile Systems Organization budget.
In addition to her pioneering assignments in engineering and
R&D management, Colonel Harness established a number of other
"firsts" in the Air Force. She was the first woman on orders as
a test engineer during flight testing of experimental equipment.
She was the first woman to receive the specialty rating of Staff
Development Engineer, and she was the first woman to be awarded
both the Senior and Master Missileman Badges. In February 1972,
she became the first woman to serve as Chairman for all
Engineers Week activities in Los Angeles -- coordinating the
activities of 30 engineering societies and representing over
30,000 engineers. She remains the only woman engineer to have
held this position.
Ms. Harness is a past president of the Los Angeles Club of
Zonta International, a Fellow of the Institute for the
Advancement of Engineering, is listed in Who's Who in
Engineering, and holds many other military and engineering
honors and memberships. This is what Minta has to say about
becoming an engineer and joining the Air Force. "Like many young
girls in the 1930's, Amelia Earhart was my idol. (I was nine
when she went down in the Pacific.) Her three books, Twenty
Hours and Forty Minutes, The Fun of It and Last Flight, gave me
both enjoyment and inspiration through the years. An autographed
copy of The Fun of It remains one of my prized possessions.
"I made my decision to become an aeronautical engineer in my
sophomore year in high school -- based upon the advice in
Amelia's books, plus my love of both math and flying. I fell in
love with flying at age three when I saw my first airplane and
its "barn storming" pilot at a field near Amarilo, Texas. Years
later I earned my own pilot's license -- a few years before I
could drive. Unfortunately, deteriorating eyesight many years
ago put an end to my flying days.
"The decision to join the Air Force right out of college was
a direct result of the times in which I lived. World War II
started my freshman year in high school and ended following my
graduation. As a result, almost all of my college classmates
were veterans of that war. Having heard all of their war stories
while in school, I felt almost as if I had been one of them.
Later, when job hunting in southern California, I was told time
and time again 'As long as a returning GI needs a job, we're not
about to hire a woman!' And so I decided to join the Air Force
to get some engineering experience -- never expected to make it
a career. "Because I really loved my life in the Air Force, I
had not expected to retire after only 24 years. It was the
hardest decision I have ever had to make: stay in with an almost
sure promotion to Colonel, but no more national offices in SWE;
or retire, work in industry and become President of SWE. I loved
my two years as Carolyn Phillips' Vice President and my two
years as SWE President that followed. But I have to admit --
when I see the advancements for Air Force women that took place
during that same time period, and those that have followed -- I
do have a touch of envy! "Finally, my motto in life is a quote
from a letter sent by Amelia Earhart to her husband; a letter to
be read if it proved to be her 'Last Flight': 'I want to do it
because I want to do it. Women must try to do things as men have
tried. When they fail, their failure must be but a challenge to
others.' "
• B.E. in Aeronautical Engineering, 19xx, University of
Southern California
• Fellow Life Member of SWE
Source retrieved 09-28-2009
http://societyofwomenengineers.swe.org/index.php
Complied and transcribed by Zoey Fryhover, 2009.
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