Raye Montague, Barrier-Shattering Navy Ship Designer, Dies at 83

Barrier-shattering naval engineer Raye Montague has died at the age of 83. At the age of 7, she was inspired to become an engineer after she toured a captured German submarine with her grandmother during World War II.  As an African-American girl, however, she was told that becoming an engineer was simply not an option.

Thirty years later, Raye Montague became the first person to use a computer program to rapidly develop a preliminary ship design for the U.S. Navy. The design process had previously taken the Navy two years. Montague completed the preliminary design of the Oliver Hazard Perry Class frigate in less than 19 hours. Her accomplishment revolutionized the way the Navy designs ships and submarines. 

She later worked on the designs of the Seawolf-class submarine and the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier Dwight D. Eisenhower.

Raye Montague would become the program director for the Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) Integrated Design, Manufacturing, and Maintenance Program, the division head for the Computer-Aided Design and Computer-Aided Manufacturing (CAD/CAM) Program, and deputy program manager of the Navy’s Information Systems Improvement Program. In 1972, she was awarded the Meritorious Civilian Service Award.

Despite her accomplishments, Montague was largely invisible to the public and often to her colleagues. As noted by the New York Times:

Although she was decorated by the Navy, Ms. Montague, who retired from the service in 1990, was not acknowledged publicly until 2012, when The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette wrote an in-depth profile of her.

She was not recognized nationally until the publication in 2016 of “Hidden Figures,” Margot Lee Shetterly’s best-selling account of the black female mathematicians at NASA who facilitated some of the nation’s greatest achievements in space. Their acclaim was amplified later that year when the book became an Oscar-nominated movie.

The Navy honored Ms. Montague as its own “hidden figure” in 2017. She was inducted into the Arkansas Women’s Hall of Fame this year.

Against the Odds: the Story of Raye Montague

Comments

Raye Montague, Barrier-Shattering Navy Ship Designer, Dies at 83 — 3 Comments

  1. Oliver Hazzard Perry FFG-7 Class, Early class of ships with Combustion turbine propulsion systems. A profound change,
    No more steam turbine propulsion systems, boilers, condensers, associated pumps, and appurtenances..
    The BT, Boiler Technician Rating is no more, merged into Machinist’s Mate, 1996.

  2. One day folks such as this lady will be invisible for the right reason; everybody will have a fair go at life.

    Meanwhile, Raye Montague is reminder of how much terrific talent we’re leaving on the table, for no good reasons.

    It’s great to have room for progress– when we notice and act on that. 🙂