Gladys West, Unsung Figure in Development of GPS, Dies at 95
Source: NYT
As a Navy mathematician in the 1950s and beyond, she played an unheralded but foundational role in making possible the global satellite-based mapping system.
By Michael S. Rosenwald Jan. 27, 2026
Gladys West, a mathematician at the U.S. Naval Weapons Laboratory whose modeling of the Earths shape played a critical role in the development of GPS, the global satellite mapping system that pilots, firefighters and drivers use to get where theyre going, died on Jan. 17 in Fredericksburg, Va. She was 95.
Dr. West lived with her daughter, Carolyn West Oglesby, and died at her home.
Born to Black farmers in rural Virginia, Dr. West lived through remarkable societal and technological transformations from segregation to the civil rights movement, from calculators to supercomputers, and from paper maps to Google Maps.
Through it all, she worked in near obscurity. She was almost 90 before she received any recognition for her work.

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ORIGINAL link: https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/27/science/gladys-west-dead.html
littlemissmartypants
(32,298 posts)CTyankee
(67,875 posts)it is a terrible injustice. It just makes me angry and very sad.
oasis
(53,396 posts)you, Omaha Steve for posting.
Rest in peace Gladys West
area51
(12,582 posts)Dave in VA
(2,264 posts)My dad did some work on some of her GPS projects. Not the scientific side of things, but on the electronics and location testing devices, etc. Much of it was top secret and he never really discussed what all was done. He did receive some awards for LBJ and Nixon for his work on different projects, but they did not identify the actual project by name. He spoke very highly of Dr. West.