Bobbi Johnson

Bobbi Johnson
Johnson, as Miss District of Columbia USA, after Miss USA 1964 semifinals
Born (1945-03-24) March 24, 1945 (age 79)
Beauty pageant titleholder
TitleMiss District of Columbia USA 1964
Miss USA 1964
Major
competition(s)
Miss District of Columbia USA 1964
(Winner)
Miss USA 1964
(Winner)
Miss Universe 1964
(Top 15)

Barbara Joan "Bobbi" Johnson[1] (born March 24, 1945) is an American former computer application engineer and beauty pageant titleholder who held the Miss USA 1964 title and has competed in the Miss Universe pageant.

After winning the Miss District of Columbia USA crown, Johnson went on to become the first representative from the District of Columbia to achieve the title of Miss USA, at age 19. She would be the only titleholder from the District until Shauntay Hinton won the crown in 2002. Johnson went on to compete in the Miss Universe 1964 pageant, where she made the semi-finals.

Johnson later worked as an applications engineer in the computer department of General Electric[2] to program GE 400-series and DATANET-30 computer systems.[3] She was interviewed about her career choice in the book Your Career in Computer Programming published in 1967.[3] In the book, she explained how after winning her Miss USA title she was asked by reporters what career ambition she had: "I guess they thought I’d say something like modeling or becoming an actress, but I said the first thing that popped into my head: that I wanted to be a computer programmer…".[3] The book also includes side-by-side photographs of her as Miss USA and at her console as an applications engineer a few years later.

Bobbi later returned to school and would graduate magna cum laude from North Central College, receiving a degree in accounting. After passing the Certified Public Accountant exam she worked in tax accounting.[4]

  1. ^ Leonard, Vince (1965-05-13). "Miss USA: Real Name's Barbara". The Pittsburgh Press.
  2. ^ "Bobbie Johnson official profile". Miss Universe Organization. Archived from the original on 2006-10-14. Retrieved 2007-01-26.
  3. ^ a b c "Your Career in Computer Programming | The Computer Boys Take Over". thecomputerboys.com. Retrieved 2016-08-06.
  4. ^ "Bobbi Johnson Kauffman". Raytown School District. Retrieved 2023-08-20.