She broke the highest ceiling there is. Sally Ride became the first American woman in space — and, the world learned after her death, the first known LGBTQ+ person to fly there. A brilliant physicist and a private person, she spent her life opening doors for others.
Ride's story is one of quiet, world-changing firsts — and of a love that history only fully recognized once she was gone.
Into Orbit
In 1983, aboard the space shuttle Challenger, Sally Ride became the first American woman in space, at age 32. A Stanford-trained physicist, she endured a barrage of sexist press questions with grace and focus, then did her job flawlessly — and flew again the following year. Her presence rewrote what a generation of girls believed they could become.
Inspiring the Next Generation
After NASA, Ride devoted herself to science education, founding Sally Ride Science to encourage young people — especially girls — to pursue careers in STEM. She wrote children's science books and championed the idea that curiosity belongs to everyone.
A Love Revealed
When Ride died in 2012, her obituary revealed that she had shared the last 27 years of her life with Tam O'Shaughnessy, her partner and the co-founder of her science organization. The quiet disclosure made Ride the first known LGBTQ+ astronaut — and, for many, a poignant reminder of how recently public figures still felt they had to keep such love private.
Why She Matters
Sally Ride proved that the sky was never the limit — for women, or for anyone told a frontier wasn't theirs. That she did it while privately sharing her life with another woman adds a quiet, powerful layer to her legacy: excellence and authenticity, reaching for the stars together.
A Lasting Legacy
- First American woman in space (1983), aboard Challenger
- Stanford physicist who flew two shuttle missions
- Founder of Sally Ride Science, championing STEM for girls
- First known LGBTQ+ astronaut; partner of Tam O'Shaughnessy for 27 years
Reach for the stars — and bring others with you.
Legacies of PrideSally Ride spent her life expanding what was possible, then handed the tools to the next generation. She reached the stars — and lit a path for everyone looking up.
More from Legacies of Pride
Sally Ride reached for the stars and brought others with her — a thread that runs through this whole series. If her story moved you, meet a few more trailblazers we're celebrating: Lee Daniels, who reshaped who gets to tell stories on screen; Ian McKellen, who came out at the height of his fame and never looked back; and Pauli Murray, the lawyer who saw justice coming before the world was ready.
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