Part Ojibwe, All NASA: Linda Spuler’s Role in Protecting Johnson Space Center 

Linda Spuler, emergency manager at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, believes that everyone has a story. “Our stories highlight what we have in common, but they also make us each unique,” she said.  Spuler has worked at Johnson for over 32 years, spending most of her career in Center Operations. Her story has involved […]

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Nov 19, 2024 - 03:00
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Part Ojibwe, All NASA: Linda Spuler’s Role in Protecting Johnson Space Center 

Linda Spuler, emergency manager at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, believes that everyone has a story. “Our stories highlight what we have in common, but they also make us each unique,” she said. 

Spuler has worked at Johnson for over 32 years, spending most of her career in Center Operations. Her story has involved helping to coordinate emergency response teams at Johnson in preparation for natural disasters. “Since Johnson is situated on the coast, a good portion of my job revolves around planning for hurricanes,” she said.   

Spuler has dealt with natural disasters at Johnson from Tropical Storm Allison in 2001 to Hurricane Beryl in 2024, but none had a greater personal impact than Hurricane Ike, which wrought havoc in Texas in September 2008. “Participating in the response to Hurricane Ike was a proud moment for me,” she said. “We worked from sunup to sundown restoring the center. Civil servants and contractors from various organizations came together, and for those two weeks, our differences didn’t matter.”  

Group of emergency responders and personnel gathered outdoors at Johnson Space Center during a safety briefing.
NASA’s Johnson Space Center Emergency Manager Linda Spuler, front, leads an emergency exercise for first responders.
Image courtesy of Linda Spuler

Spuler believes that NASA’s mission unites everyone – team members, astronauts, and support teams alike. “Remembering why we are all here energizes us and gets us excited about working for NASA,” she said.  

Spuler’s journey at NASA began as a dream not originally her own. Her path was shaped by the aspirations of her mother, who was born on an Ojibwe (Chippewa) reservation in Ashland, Wisconsin.  

“Although my grandmother lived in Chicago, she returned to the reservation to have her children. My mom is still a voting member of the Bad River Tribe,” said Spuler. 

“My mom was studying aerospace engineering at the University of Chicago when she met my dad, a fun-loving electrical engineering major who traced his lineage back to Davy Crockett on his father’s side and Ireland on his mother’s,” said Spuler. “She chose to abandon aerospace to marry my dad, whose degree and love for space brought him to work at Johnson.” 

Linda Spuler accepts the Thirty-Year Service Award from Johnson Director Vanessa Wyche to commemorate her service at NASA.
NASA/David DeHoyos

Spuler said her mother was very proud that her father worked for NASA. “She was very happy when I chose to work here, too,” she said. “She taught me the value and reward of working hard. My mom is proud of her heritage but she is cautious of sharing her story.” 

Children participate in an outdoor Easter egg hunt on a grassy field near a chain-link fence. A young child in the foreground holds a small basket.
Linda Spuler at an Easter egg hunt at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in 1971.
Image courtesy of Linda Spuler

Spuler enjoys learning about Ojibwe culture from her mother. “Every Thanksgiving, we enjoy wild rice from the Bad River sent from the “aunties” that still live on the reservation,” Spuler shared. She also represents her culture and pride through her work, honoring the legacy of those who came before her and sharing the story of her mother, her father, and now herself.

Four individuals stand together in front of a NASA logo and an American flag. The person second from the left holds a framed certificate. The group includes two men in suits, one man in a Texas A&M shirt, and one woman in a polka-dot dress with glasses.
Linda Spuler receives the 2019 Furlough Heroes Awards alongside her son, Logan.
NASA/James Blair

“I celebrate the unique story that makes me part Ojibwe, part Polish, part Texas revolutionary, part Irish, part English, and all me,” she said.  

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