In Memoriam Registry Honorees

Juanita Moody

Juanita M. Moody, 90 of Pawleys Island, SC died Tuesday, February 17, 2015. Ms. Moody had retired from the National Security Agency in 1976 after a distinguished career of more than 30 years of service.

Her husband, William Warren Moody, a sister, Nan Morris Jacobson and a brother, Robert Bennett Morris all preceded her in death.
Surviving are brothers, Joseph L. Morris (Syl) of New Bern, NC, Henry L. Morris (Linda) of Cheraw, SC; sisters, Sue Morris Gilbert of Millsboro, DE, Virginia Morris Marsh (Joe) of Cheraw, SC and Adgie Morris James of Wadesboro, NC; sister in law, Ann T. Morris (Joe) of Monroe, NC.

Learn much more about Ms. Moody in the March 2021 Smithsonian Magazine article - "The Once Classified Tale of Juanita Moody." - part of a special report - Women Who Shaped History

You can also learn more about her via her Wikipedia page.


* Ms. Juanita Moody was inducted into the NSA Cryptologic Hall of Honor in 2003. The text below is from her Hall of Honor page on the NSA website.

Recalling the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, former NSA senior Juanita Moody said that it "allowed us to take advantage of everything we had learned during World War II and post-World War II… and I felt that every day in my career in the Agency from the Cuban crisis on was affected by my experience at that time."

In early 1943, Juanita Morris, at a small college in North Carolina, wished to contribute to the war effort and volunteered at the nearest recruiting office. By April, she was at the Army cryptologic headquarters at Arlington Hall Station. While awaiting her security clearance, the Signal Security Agency (SSA) put her into unclassified training in cryptanalysis; she became fascinated with the subject.

At the end of the war, her supervisor asked her to stay on, rather than be demobilized, and she agreed. In 1948, she married Warren Moody, a noncryptologic employee.

Ms. Moody supervised NSA's day-to-day -- sometimes, minute-by-minute -- response to the Cuban Missile Crisis as head of the major element responsible for Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) on that region. In addition to directing production and reporting, she frequently gave impromptu briefings to high-level civilian and military leaders. She often worked around the clock, grabbing only a few hours sleep on a cot in her office.

In the years following the Cuban Missile Crisis, Ms. Moody was assigned to higher positions within the production organization at NSA. She revolutionized SIGINT reporting, and put NSA into the White House Situation Room.

However, in the mid-1970s, she was one of NSA's spokespersons during Congressional hearings and was incorrectly identified by the media as having been involved in intelligence community abuses.

Juanita Moody retired from NSA in 1976 after 33 years of service. The previous December she had become the first recipient of the National Intelligence Medal of Achievement, presented by then Director of Central Intelligence George Bush.

Ms. Moody passed away February 17, 2015.

Sponsored for the In Memoriam Registry by Dr. Sarah Botsai and NCMF friends and colleagues.