Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Black space engineer, Ken Kelly dies at 92

- By Michael Warren

Kenneth C. Kelly, a Black electronic­s engineer whose antenna designs contribute­d to the race to the moon, made satellite TV and radio possible and helped NASA communicat­e with Mars rovers and search for extraterre­strials, has died. The 92-year-old also worked to erase race barriers in the Navy, in California housing and on the newspaper comics pages.

Kelly had Parkinson’s disease before his death on Feb. 27, his son Ron Kelly said.

Kelly was awarded more than a dozen patents for innovation­s in radar and antenna technology, work that appears in peer-reviewed journals from 1955-1999. His early work at Hughes Aircraft helped create guided missile systems and the ground satellites that tracked the Apollo space missions, he said in an oral history recorded by his family.

His two-way antenna designs at Rantec Microwave Systems enabled consumers to have DirecTV and Sirius XM connection­s, and are featured in the massive Mojave Desert radioteles­copes that search for signs of life in space, his son and JPL colleagues said.

After many years working on deep space missions through NASA subcontrac­tors, Kelly worked directly for JPL from 1999 until retiring in 2002, helping to design robotic antennas for the Mars rovers Spirit and Opportunit­y, according to Joseph Vacchione, who manages the JPL’s antenna test range.

Kelly appeared in an Associated Press article in 1962 after he moved his family into Gardena, a middle-class suburb that had excluded Black people. To overcome a racist covenant and the repeated refusals of real estate agents, he had to ask a white colleague at Hughes to make the purchase on his behalf.

“We have pretty much the same hopes, fears, ambitions, strengths and frailties that have typified all of human existence,” Kelly wrote in a letter his white neighbors, urging them to set aside “stereotype­d notions,” according to the AP story.

Kelly and his wife Loretta later moved near California State University-Northridge, to be closer to his job and have their children attend better schools. According to the 2017 oral history, the agent wouldn’t sell him the lot, so he had to repeat the demeaning experience of having white friends buy it for him before signing over the mortgage.

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