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Archive Section: Dayton
Celebration Events
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Crouch Receives Walk of
Fame Award
Tom Crouch received the Dayton Walk of
Fame Award in a ceremony hosted by Wright-Dunbar, Inc. on September 29, 200 6.
Crouch
is senior curator of aeronautics at the National Air and Space Museum of the
Smithsonian Institution and author of numerous books on the Wright brothers.
His "The Bishop Boys," is considered the best book about the Wright
brothers. Some other great books either authored or co-authored by Crouch
include, "A Dream of Wings," "Wings, A History of Aviation from
Kites to the Space Age," and "Wright Brothers and the Invention of
the Aerial Age."
The award consists of a plaque that is
embedded in the brick sidewalk along West Third Street where several dozen
other plaques honor other Daytonians for their contributions both locally and
nationally.
The immediate area includes the site of
the last bicycle shop where the 1903 flyer was built (1127 West Third St.).
Other printing and bicycle locations include a printing shop in the Hoover
Block building at 1060 West Third, first printing shop at 1210 West Third,
first bicycle shop site at 1005 West Third, and the second bicycle site at 1034
West Third.
Not far away is the Wright Cycle Co. on
South Williams St., the Wright family home on Hawthorn St., and Orville’s
Laboratory on North Broadway St.
The citation on the plaque states:
"Author,
Historian, Museum Curator. His dedication to educating the nation about
aviation history has helped to focus attention on the Wright brothers and
Dayton. He authored several award winning books and developed national exhibits
about aviation history as a senior curator at the Smithsonian
Institution."
Crouch earned a Ph.D. at Ohio State
University.
Orville Wright Soars over Dayton
Orville flew for the first time over the City of Dayton on the occasion of
the 1910 Dayton Industrial Exposition and Fall Festival.
The Exposition featured various means of transportation including bicycles,
automobiles, and balloons. Orville agreed to fly on Thursday September 22.
On the appointed day thousands of people swamped Dayton, standing along the
river banks, house tops and every other vantage point that could be found.
Here is an edited account as printed in the Dayton Daily News:
Orville Wright sailed over his home city Thursday in one of the most
spectacular flights that has ever been made in aircraft.
A dense crowd had been fringing the river banks, the bridges and the roofs
of high buildings for hours before it was rewarded with a glimpse of the bird
man. When at last screaming factory whistles heralded the approach of the
machine, the crowd along the river bank stirred and shook itself out like a
mammoth pennant waving a tribute and greeting to the aviator.
People pointed and eyes were strained until everybody saw the tiny speck in
the sky and watched it slowly grow into a semblance of shape. The aeroplane was
so high that everybody in the city could see it equally well and it is safe to
venture that not a person in the city failed to see it.
It was a glorious sight. There was a Dayton boy soaring for joy high above
the little threads silvering in the sunlight.
Beneath him the earth, like a tapestry, brimmed up in a circle of misty
purple distances.
There was something very significant and appropriate about the course of the
flight along the Mad and Miami rivers.
Not so many years ago intrepid pioneer settlers followed those same streams
and built the city’s first house on the river bank near the confluence of the
two streams. The house is still standing snuggled down among massive structures
that the sons of those pioneers have wrought.
That little cabin has had its modicum of surprises since the first tenant
passed its portals. It has seen the forests go that had once obscured the
skyline. Then its view was more permanently obscured by steep buildings and
bridges.
And now on Thursday it witnessed the announcement of another inroad of
progress, the very air above it had been conquered and it will soon have to
peep at the stars through a fitting maze of aircrafts.
This latest era was ushered in more suspiciously than any of the others.
The forests went almost stealthily and the city sprang up in the night. The
street cars began their clanging without any warning, but when this mysterious
little speck appears in the sky, it is heralded by a medley of all the factory
whistles, the street cars stop and the people use the buildings for stepping
stones and steeples for theater seats from which to witness this new scene in
the masque of the ages.
That little old log cabin has certainly seen some history made.
When
the aeroplane was over the city the faint crackling staccato of its unmuffled
motor like distant musketry, could be heard by some, and the aviator could be
seen moving in the machine.
Cheers went up from the crowd all along the course, but it is doubtful if
any sound reached Mr. Wright but the screaming factory and railway whistles.
The factories had stilled their wheels and traffic had stopped to exhaust the
power in tribute to their new helpmate.
It was a pretty little touch of sentiment and an inspiring one that sent the
aviator circling over his boyhood home. There the dream was cradled and
nourished through years of varying vicissitudes until the goal was at last
achieved and it was cradled in the clouds.
The aviators are dear to all Dayton, but imagine the emotions of the little
family to which the aviator sailed and circled a majestic curtsey from the sky.
No wonder Orville Wright soared on a rising altitude upon his return trip.
He said Friday morning that he reached an altitude of 3500 feet by the time
he reached the city limits on the outward bound flight.
He visited those exalted spaces that are reverently avoided even by the
birds, where he is alone with the silence and sunlight and almost on intimate
terms with the stars.
The aeroplane was followed into the city by a stream of hundreds of
automobiles. The aviator passed most of them not far from the testing grounds
on his return to Simms Station, also known as Huffman Prairie. The average
speed of the best automobiles was 25 miles per hour, with the roads such as
they are in the vicinity of the station. The aeroplane made the entire trip of
22 miles in a trifle less than 25 minutes.
The eyes of the admiring multitude were able to follow the machine upon its
return trip almost till it was over the testing grounds. The machine had
diminished to a flyspeck in the hazy distance before a smudge of factory smoke
finally blotted it out.
The wind for the trip could hardly have been more than favorable for the
flight. Mr. Wright estimated his speed at 50 miles an hour going westwardly and
30 miles an hour on the return trip. The average speed was thus 40 miles per
hour.
The course as outlined by Mr. Wright was over the Miami River from the
confluence of the Mad and Miami Rivers to the Third Street bridge, thence over
Third Street to Williams Street, the area of their original home and bicycle
shops, and from there to the Wright Home in Oakwood, over which he circled for
the return.
At the start of the trip the altitude was 300 feet. This was increased to
2500 feet over and on the outward journey of 3500 feet was reached, after the
machine had passed over the Exposition grounds and reached the city limits.
Mr. Wright describes Dayton as being more beautiful from the clouds than it
is at a close view.
Not only interurban electrics and steam cars, but also many automobiles with
pennants of cities in other states bore evidence that thousands of people
visited Dayton on aviation day.
When they came so far and waited so patiently for the flight it is needless
to say that the spirit caught them in the magnificent result and the captive
balloon, "Hoosier," which soared immediately after the aeroplane had
disappeared, did a land office business.
Owing to the generosity and public spiritedness of Mr. Wright, aviation day
was a success. Superlatives are exhausted in telling just how successful it
really was. Though it is somewhat inappropriate to measure such an ethereal and
splendid thing as an airship flight in dollars, the general public should
realize that Mr. Wright donated Dayton an exhibition that would cost any other
city a good many thousands of dollars.
There is also an element of risk about a 22-mile flight even in a perfected
Wright machine.
The Exposition officials and the community as a whole are not unmindful of
the Wright company’s munificence.
Though the thousands of people who swarmed to the testing grounds at Simms
Station to witness the start of the flight probably did not get as thrilling an
exhibition as those in the city, they were rewarded by a number of flights by
Walter Brookins and a new pupil, while Mr. Wright was circling the city.
Mr. Wright circled the field a number of times also at an altitude of 300
feet before setting out on his straight-away course for the city. The machine
in which he sailed to Dayton was started about ten minutes till five o’clock.
Owing to the advertising which the exposition received through Mr. Wright’s
spectacular flight, management has received urgent and numerous requests to
continue the festival another week. The streets were jammed Thursday night and
hundreds were turned away from the Memorial building where the hippodrome show
is being held. The committee has decided that aviation features shall
distinguish the final day, when the exposition will wind up in a big revel, and
arrangements for a number of other interesting events.
Dayton Intensifies the Marketing of the Wright
Brothers
Dayton, Ohio is continuing the momentum generated during the buildup for the
Wright Brother’s centennial to promote Dayton as the birthplace of aviation.
Dayton’s Aviation Heritage Foundation is developing a grand plan to showcase
the Dayton region nationally and internationally.
Two major events have occurred that may add materially to the Wright
brothers heritage now represented by nine historically regional sites.
One was the transfer of ownership of Hawthorn Hill, the Wrights’ home in
Oakwood, to the Wright Family Foundation in 2006. The other is the bankruptcy
of the Delphi Corporation that owns the Wright Co. two airplane factory
buildings. The buildings may soon become available for inclusion in the Dayton
Aviation Heritage National Historical Park.
The Wright home is a real gem and will be a wonderful addition to the park.
The NCR Corp. purchased the home after Orville’s death in 1948 and has kept
it in prime condition. Orville and the executives of NCR including John
Patterson, founder, Edward Deeds and Charles Kettering were good friends.
The
home has never been open to the general public. The home is located in a
neighborhood of upscale beautiful homes in Oakwood. The neighborhood has never
wanted the traffic, parking problems and noise that an open house would entail.
My wife and I have been in the home several times during Oakwood High School
reunions as graduates and other occasions.
Amanda Wright Lane, great-grandniece of Orville and Wilbur, and her brother
Stephen Wright, trustees of the Wright Family Foundation are involved in
discussions that could result in the transfer of the home to federal ownership
as part of the Dayton Aviation Heritage National Historical Park.
Lane and Stephen Wright, an Oakwood resident, have also been in discussions
with the City of Oakwood and residents to develop a means to preserve the
ambiance of the neighborhood and still open the house to the public. One
procedure would be to require small groups of visitors to buy round trip
tickets at the Carillon Historic Park and take a shuttle to Hawthorne Hill and
return. This procedure will start this spring as a trial.
The
other historical jewel is the two Wright Airplane buildings located on Delphi
property a number of blocks west of the bicycle shop in West Dayton. The
buildings were built in 1909/1910 and are still in active use by Delphi Corp.
As such they have not been open to the public. I was not even permitted to take
a picture of the buildings from outside the fence line.
Delphi, an automotive parts maker, is now in bankruptcy. It lost $5.5
billion in 2006. The two Wright buildings occupy about 10% of the 67-acre
Delphi property.
It is hoped that Delphi will make the Wright buildings available for
inclusion in the Aviation Park as part of the bankruptcy settlement.
Draft legislation is being proposed for consideration by Congress to include
both the Wright home and the factory building in the Dayton Aviation Heritage
National Historical Park. The Dayton-based Aviation Heritage Foundation was
created by Congress in 2004 to promote nine regional sites as a National
Aviation Heritage Area.
These sites are independently operated and are a diverse mix including the
National Aviation Park, the National Museum of the U.S. air Force, the Neil
Armstrong Air and Space Museum in Wapakoneta, Ohio and the Wright B Flyer
Museum at The Dayton-Wright Brothers Airport in Miamisburg.
The National Park Service owns part of the Dayton Aviation Heritage Park and
cooperated with partners that own other portions.
The Dayton Aviation Heritage National Historical park is also planning to
nominate a collection of Wright brothers sites to the U.S. Department of
Interior for consideration as a Nationally significant historic site. The site
nominated include: Huffman Prairie, a Wright brother’s bike shop now in the
national park; Hawthorn Hill, and the Wright Flyer B now displayed at Carillon
Historical Park.
The timing may be just right. The President’s 2008 budget includes a big
boost in funding for national parks, $2.4 next year. On top of that President
Bush wants the federal government to match philanthropic donations each year,
up to $100 million.
Note: In an other matter, the February 2, 2007 issue of the News &
Observer reported that some folks in North Carolina want to change the
"First in Flight" design on state license plates to another
"smart and attractive design that would help remind everyone what a
special place this is."
Dayton Mayor Flies with Orville
The Year of 1910 was an active flying year for the Wright brothers. One of
those who wanted to fly with them was the mayor of Dayton, Ohio. On Tuesday
afternoon September 28, 1910 he got his wish.
The Dayton Daily News published an account of the mayor’s flight at Simm’s
(Huffman Prairie) station with Orville the next day.
Here is the article with my comments in parenthesis: For more than a year
Mayor Edward E. Burkhart has been hinting and scheming for an invitation to go
flying with the world’s foremost aviators, the Wright brothers.
Tuesday
afternoon the city’s chief executive realized his ambition. The mayor and a
little party of friends, who were "on the inside" slipped away to the
testing grounds at Simm’s station and soon His Honor, attired in conventional
cloud costume, went skimming away with Orville Wright at the wheel.
"Don’t you want some cord?" inquired Wilbur Wright just before
the mayor mounted the machine.
"What for?" replied the mayor.
"I thought you might want to tie your knees together," said Mr.
Wright.
(There were no seat belts in airplanes in those days. The mayor did wear a
scarf that covered his head and ears. He said he was taking no chances of
suffering frostbite in the upper air currents.)
But the intrepid executive was not to be bluffed by the chafing. He knows a
bit about machinery in a smooth running engine under perfect control.
He had been sufficiently indifferent to ballooning to refuse numerous
invitations for balloon rides while nursing a hope for an aeroplane trip.
Orville Wright grasped the levers and the mayor balanced himself for the
ascension. The propeller was swung and they skimmed away.
The aeroplane veered to its course and steadied to keel under the guiding
hand like a gallant ship, while a cheer went up from the mayor’s party and
other spectators, who had happened to select Tuesday to visit the field.
The airship soared up and up as it circled and maneuvered about the field,
until an altitude of 1,100 feet had been reached.
Scared? Certainly Not.
"Feel afraid," said the mayor scornfully, when asked about the
trip. "Well, I should say not. I was so impressed with the perfect control
Mr. Wright had over his machine and so entranced with the glorious sensation of
flying that it never occurred to me to think of the danger. The danger is
probably less than that of any other sport anyway.
When we had reached a fairly comfortable height, Mr. Wright looked across at
me a couple of times in a somewhat inscrutable manner. Finally it occurred to
me that he was studying me to see how I was taking it all and so I told him to
go as far as he liked.
Than he let her out and the roar of wind in our ears mingled with the
crackling staccato of the exhaust. We had to shout to each other.
From the height Mr. Wright pointed out Osborn and Fairfield, and were so I
thought they were directly beneath us. (Osborn and Fairfield later merged and
became Fairborn.) Dayton could be seen, of course, and I could distinguish the
Steele high school building from among the others. (Katharine Wright taught at
Steele; my mother graduated from Steele.)
The mayor says he is not considering the purchase of an aeroplane so long as
they cost $7,500, but he is a confirmed enthusiast, and some day he may have a
new method of escaping the reporters.
Katharine’s Picnic
Katharine, aka Betty Darst, held a picnic on the lawn of the Wright Memorial
in Dayton on the occasion of the Centennial of Practical Flight, October 5,
2005.
According
to Betty, who often plays the role of Katharine, the Wrights loved a picnic.
While Hawthorn Hill was under construction, the family picnicked on the
Captains Walk above the roof. Later they would picnic in the woods on the
property.
The picnic on this day was from their
recipes and consists of some of their favorites:
Chicken salad sandwiches
Ham salad sandwiches
Deviled eggs
Home made potato chips
Orange slices
Shortbread
Orville’s Caramels
Home made Lemonade
Carrie Kayler, the family housekeeper would make the sandwich spread. Will
and Orv fixed homemade potato chips. Katharine would prepare the deviled eggs.
On this day the picnic was prepared by South Park United Methodist Church
Women. Bishop Milton Wright was Bishop with the United Brethren Church that is
now part of the United Methodist Church. My mother and father and I, as a
child, were members of this church.
Oranges were a favorite with Orville. When the 1913 floodwaters engulfed
their earlier home on Hawthorn Street, a bowl of oranges was in the center of
the table as the family prepared to have breakfast. It still remained as the
waters receded.
Orville had quite a sweet tooth. When someone came to visit, he might ask
him or her if they would like some caramels and then happily prepare a fresh
batch. These caramels are from Orville’s recipe.
Orville used a wooden potato masher to prepare the lemonade. It has been
said that Orville made the best, most delicious, old-fashioned lemonade ever
tasted.
At Kitty Hawk coffee was the usual drink. When too much coffee caused them
to lay awake at night, they would think over solutions to their challenges.
Reference: Picnic Menu
First Practical Airplane, Part 2
Centennial of Flight
A momentous event in the history of the airplane occurred 100 years ago on
October 5, 1905. It was the first flight of the first practical airplane
piloted by Orville Wright over Huffman Prairie, a cow pasture in Dayton, Ohio
On that occasion Wilbur flew thirty circles over the field, landing only
when fuel was exhausted. He had flown the 30 circles in more than 39 minutes,
exceeding the sum of all 109 flights made in 1903 and 1904. His average speed
was 38-mph over the 24 miles he flew. It was the 48th flight and
second to last flight of 1905.
I
had the pleasure to narrate the reenactment of the flight by a replica 1905
Flyer III for radio station WCRS of Akron, Ohio.
A fog covered Huffman Prairie as I arrived early in the morning. The sun was
just making its appearance. It was a beautiful sight of the pristine prairie.
It remains just as it was when Orville and Wilbur flew there.
In the picture Bob Holland and David Binkley of WCRS, are preparing for the
flight along with me on the left.
After
the fog had lifted around 9:15 a.m., Mark Dusenberry flew his replica twice in
a low straight-line flight for about 1,200-ft in 25-seconds after being
catapulted into the air and make a graceful soft landing after each flight.
He was preparing to make a third flight, the engine was running when the
weight hung up in the derrick when it dropped a short distance, aborting the
attempt.
I was told that two days earlier Dusenberry flew a circle at treetop height
and was sternly told by authorities not to do that again on the 5th.
I estimate several hundred people were in attendance. It could have been
much a much higher number but the publicity was low key. I was told that the
Air Force didn’t want a big crowd.
Dr. Tom Crouch, Senior Curator of the National Air and Space Museum and
native Daytonian, urged the crowd to enjoy the prairie in the same manner he
does.
More of his comments:
"Come when the wind is here, when the wind is blowing through the
trees."
"Contemplate what events occurred here and what flight has meant to the
world. That is the best way we can honor Orville and Wilbur Wright."
"The really wonderful thing about Huffman Prairie is that it’s not
just a little historic patch of earth. It’s surrounded by this enormous
complex that’s dedicated to the advancement of the Technology to which Wilbur
and Orville gave birth."
"The Wright brothers more famous powered flights of 1903 in North
Carolina were important, but only another step in their research. The real end
of the process of invention occurred here in Dayton in 1905."
He noted that at one time there were plans to build a monument to the
Wrights in the middle of the Prairie. We are fortunate that they changed their
minds and built the monument on a hill some distance away leaving the prairie
unspoiled.
Note: Huffman Prairie is a pristine prairie that remains exactly as it was
100 years ago, because it is part of a flood plain created by the construction
of Huffman Dam after the great flood of 1913 that inundated Dayton. Both
Katharine and Orville had visited the prairie while they were school children
on biology field trips.
Colonel Andrew K. Weaver, 88th Air Force Wing Commander a Wright
Patterson Air Force Base (WPAFB) noted that the Wright brothers accomplishments
continue to inspire.
"They had the ability to surmount the obstacles and to actually achieve
results."
"America’s leadership in Aviation began here with Orville and Wilbur
and it continues here at WPAFB."
Other speakers noted that the 105 Flyer III marked the beginning of a
century of aviation progress, much of it developed on WPAFB which now surrounds
the prairie.
Note: Orville was consulted in the selection of the location of WPAFB. The
first Army airfield was established in 1917.
Among the attendees were members of the Wright family, Amanda Wright-Lane
and Steven Wright, great-grand niece and nephew.
Two French delegations also attended. One was from Le Mans, where Wilbur’s
first public flights made the Wright brothers famous, and Pau, where Wilbur set
up the World’s first flying school.
Thierry Tissandier, son of French aviation pioneer Paul Tissandier, was with
the delegation. The elder Tissandier was taught to fly by Wilbur,
Centennial celebrations in France are planned at Le Mans and Pau in 2008 and
2009 respectively.
Betty J. Darst, Dayton Dramatist and Historian, invited the French attendees
to the celebration and organized a several day symposium around the centennial.
First
Practical Airplane, Part 1
Design of Wright Flyers II, III
A momentous event in the history of the airplane occurred 100 years ago on
October 5, 1905. It was the first flight of the first practical airplane
piloted by Orville Wright over Huffman Prairie, a cow pasture in Dayton, Ohio
On that occasion Wilbur flew thirty circles over the field, landing only
when fuel was exhausted. He had flown the 30 circles in more than 39 minutes,
exceeding the sum of all 109 flights made in 1903 and 1904. His average speed
was 38-mph over the 24 miles he flew. It was the 48th flight and
second to last flight of 1905.
He demonstrated that the Flyer was capable of taking off, flying for an
extended period of time under the control of the pilot, and landing safely.
It was the culmination of seven years of research, disappointment, brilliant
engineering, risk of serious injury, disparagement and ultimate success.
The Wrights first great success was at Kitty Hawk in 1903 with the Flyer I.
The craft, however, was not maneuverable or controllable. The following year
they began work on a practical airplane at Huffman Prairie, a 100-acre pasture
eight miles east of Dayton.
1904 Flyer II
April 15, 1904 the Wrights completed constructing a wooden shed at Huffman
Prairie to house their new 1904 Flying machine (Flyer II). They located the
building as far away as they could from Simms Station on the traction line from
Dayton for their privacy. It was on the south side of the prairie adjacent to
Hebble Creek. The creek was named after my great-great Grandfather Henry Hebble
who had built a home nearby.
The machine looked very much in appearance like the 1903 Flyer. They reduced
the wing camber from 1/20 to 1/25 and substituted white pine for spruce for the
wing spars. Both of these changes were reversed back to the original
configuration in the 1905 Flyer.
The biggest improvement they made was that they designed a new engine for
Flyer II. It had slightly larger pistons and produced about 16-hp. The engine
had improved lubrication and a fuel metering system. The same engine was used
in the 1905 Flyer and by that time the engine was worn-in and producing 20-hp.
The 1903 propellers were reused initially but were damaged in a crash on
August 10th and were replaced with propellers having great blade
width.
For the 1904 Flyer as with the 1903 Flyer, the pilot lay in the prone
position and the wing warping and rudder controls were interconnected.
Later they added some 70-pounds of iron bars to the forward frame that
supports the canard to move the center of gravity (c.g.) forward to improve
stability. It helped slow down pitch oscillations and decreased elevator
sensitivity. It was still not a complete solution. The gross weight of the
craft was 900 lbs.
Their first flight was attempted on May 23rd using a new 100-ft
long launching rail. Several flights were attempted but rain and insufficient
wind prevented takeoff. Nor was there much success over the next five months.
Flying consisted of short hops of 100 to 200 feet ending with crashes and
broken parts. Their record fourth flight of 852-ft at Kitty Hawk in 1903 was
not exceeded until August 13.
Their next attempt was on May 26. Orville flew about 25-ft.
Their biggest problem was insufficient and unpredictable wind and less dense
air at the 815-ft elevation in Dayton as compared to sea level at Kitty Hawk.
It was frustrating. They would lay the track in one direction and then the wind
would change direction and they would have to relay the track in another
direction.
It is estimated that the less dense air caused a 13% reduction in lift. The
first 39 flight attempts were made on a launching rail as long as 236-ft. In
contrast the rail at Kitty Hawk was 60-ft long.
Wilbur wrote, "We found great difficulty in getting sufficient
initial velocity to get real starts. While the new machine lifts at a speed of
about 23-mph, it is only after the speed reaches 27 or 28-mph that the
resistance falls below the thrust."
They decided they needed a catapult launch system to consistently get off
the ground. It consisted of a 20-ft tower and a weight that when dropped
propelled the Flyer. The weight was incrementally increased over time to
1600-lbs. It was placed in operation on September 7. The ability to take-off
improved markedly after that. For the first time they could fly the length of
the field without difficulty and complete full turns.
On September 20th Wilbur successfully flew the first complete
turn. The flight was witnessed by Amos I. Root, who described it in the January
1, 1905 issue of Gleaning in Bee Culture. Root was the editor and
publisher of the magazine.
Root offered to give his article to Scientific American. They refused
the offer because they didn’t believe his story.
Their last flight in 1904 was on December 9. While they had had some
success, they were still frequently flying out of control. They had trouble
with pitch stability and their circles were ungainly and awkward. On tight
turns the machine had a tendency to keep on turning. They tried moving the c.g.
by moving the pilot position, engine, water tank and ballast but they were
still looking for a solution as the season ended.
Between May 26 and December 9, 1904 they made 105 flight attempts with an
accumulated total flying time of 49 minutes.
1905 Flyer III
The 1905 Flyer was radically different in design than the 1903 machine.
Initially the motor, propellers and drive system were reused from the 1904
machine. The engine’s lubrication system and fuel pumps were improved. The
horsepower increased to almost twice the engine of the 1903 Flyer.
The camber was reset at 1/20 again. The anhedral (droop) of the wings used
in the 1903/1904 Flyers was removed. The overall machine was longer and a
little taller.
A pair of semicircular vanes, called blinkers, was placed between the twin
elevator surfaces to prevent sideslips. The propellers had tabs, called little
jokers, on the trailing edge to halt deformation. The shape was known as the
"bent end" propeller.
The canard elevator was moved forward and its surface area nearly doubled.
The vertical rudder was moved to the rear and greatly enlarged.
The interconnection between the wing warping and rudder controls used in
1903/1904 Flyers was separated so that the pilot could control them separately.
The first flight of the new machine was made on June 23. They found that
they still were having trouble with pitch and circling. Only eight flights were
made during the first several weeks. Each ended in an accident and damage.
On July 14, Orville lost control of the Flyer due to extreme pitch
undulations and crashed. He was fortunate to escape injury but the machine
suffered significant damage. During the rebuilding major design changes were
made.
They enlarged the elevator surface area from 52.74 square feet to 83 square
feet and moved the elevator from 7.32 to 11.7 ft in front of the leading edge
of the wing. The length of the machine ended up 7 feet longer than the 1903
Flyer
After the modification on August 24, they found a significant improvement in
the performance of the machine. Now both Orville and Wilbur could get the
flying time to learn how to fly their machine.
On flight No. 39 for 1905, Orville brushed a thorny locust tree with a
wingtip leaving some thorns in the fabric. The tree was located in the center
of the Huffman Prairie. Orville misjudged his distance and the wingtip brushed
the upper branches. The hit forced the Flyer into a tight circle. Orville,
reacting to the turn, pushed the nose down. To his surprise, the machine
reacted by stopping the turns and leveling out.
The Wrights figured out what the problem was with the tight turns. When
entering a turn, the lift much be increased to compensate for centrifugal force
that adds to the weight carried by the wings. In turning flight the lift
instead of increasing, decreases because in turning, the lift on inside wing
decreases as it slows down. The effect is that the inside wing can stall and
cause the machine to spin into the turn. The solution is to increase speed by
placing the Flyer into a shallow dive and therefore prevent the inside wing
from stalling.
In order to stay within the confines of the field their flight paths
consisted of oval turns. They didn’t want to stray outside the barbwire fence
because of the difficulty of dragging the machine back.
The Wrights, by accident, now knew how to solve the tight circle problem
they had experienced in 1904. The solution to recover from a tight circle was
to put the Flyer into a shallow dive to increase airspeed to prevent the inside
wing from stalling.
Two other changes also led to a complete solution. One was the elimination
of the anhedral wing, which had been used since 1903. The other was to decouple
wing warping from the rudder to allow independent roll and yaw control by the
pilot.
After his No. 48 flight on October 5, Wilbur pronounced the Wright Flyer III
capable of rising in the air for an extended period under complete control of
the operator, and landing safely. It was the world’s first practical
airplane.
One more flight was made on October 16. It was the last flight for 1905. One
round of the field was made ending with a landing near their hanger.
Wilbur wrote in December 1905, "Our 1905 improvements have given
such results as to justify the assertion that flying has been transferred from
the realm of scientific problems to that of useful arts."
Rededication of the
Wright Bicycle Shop
The Wright Cycle Company building at 22
S. Williams St. in West Dayton was recently renovated. Wilbur and Orville
operated a bicycle and printing business at this location from 1895 to 1897. It
is in this building that the Wrights began to discuss the building of an
airplane.
Steve
Wright, the great-grandnephew of Wilbur and Orville, gave the rededication
speech. The following is an adapted version of the speech printed in the Dayton
Daily News in August 2004.
Infatuation is what led my uncles into
the business of selling bicycles when the bicycle was all the rage. The bicycle
was and is affordable freedom.
The design philosophy of the new safety
bikes of those early days transferred beautifully to the study of aeronautics
and the design of a flying machine. That transfer of design and technology from
one machine to another fascinates me, and I’m so pleased to see that subject
addressed in the restored bicycle shop we dedicate today.
Without a doubt, the bicycle is one of
man’s most beautiful inventions --- simple, efficient and practical. I view
this machine as rolling, minimalist art.
The shape of the early safety bike
remains virtually unchanged from the time Uncle Wil and Uncle Orv and Aunt
Katharine pedaled through the local countryside around Dayton. That alone is
testament to the near-perfect design of this machine, especially when you
consider the pace at which inventions become obsolete in today’s world.
Wilbur and Orville Wright made only
modest improvements to their custom-built bikes. The masters of aerodynamics
left the shape alone.
That is not to say improvements have not
been made to the machine and its rider over the last century. Guess where most
of those improvements transferred from?
They came from the very same industry
that initially employed bicycle innovations to get that first airplane off the
ground. That industry began in this bicycle shop. The bicycle begat the
airplane and its myriad technologies and science disciplines. Those
technologies and disciplines, in turn, improved the bicycle and the physiology
of those who ride it.
Today’s bicycle uses aerospace
innovations such as variable geometry aluminum tubing, Kevlar, titanium, carbon
fiber, fiber, studies in ergonomics, physiology and aerodynamics, and
computer-aided design to bring it all together.
I’m just glad that the clothing we ride
in today does not usually include bowler hats, starched collars, three-piece
wool suits and wingtips.
I’ve been watching a television
documentary that follows Lance Armstrong preparing to attempt a sixth straight
Tour De France win. If he pulls it off, he will be in a class all by himself in
the realm of human athletic achievement. Needless to say, he and his team’s
training regimen is single-minded and grueling.
But what really caught my attention was a
segment that showed Armstrong on his bike in a wind tunnel covered with sensors
from head to toe while riding in place into a stream of smoke. He was being
monitored by a team of people who probably represented a dozen scientific
disciplines.
Most of those disciplines were born or at
least driven to greater achievement by a decision made by Uncle Wil and Uncle
Orv to pursue a lifelong interest in flight in this building a little more than
a century ago.
I think Uncle Wil and Uncle Orv would be
amused and proud to see Armstrong perched on his bike in that wind tunnel; a
device that they had used so brilliantly in the back of their bike shop so long
ago to build a different kind of machine. OF course, they would love to take a
spin on Armstrong’s bike, assuming they didn’t disassemble it first.
But I don’t think they’d be willing
to trade their bowler hats, starched collars, three-piece wool suits and
wingtips for his skin-tight Spandex. At least let’s hope not.
What Happened to the Last Wright Bicycle
Shop?
If you look in Dayton for the historic Wright bicycle shop where they began
their aeronautical experiments and built the first airplane, you will find a
vacant lot. You will have to journey to Greenfield Village in Dearborn,
Michigan to find the cycle shop. The building, along with the Wrights’ home
on Hawthorn St. was purchased by Henry Ford in 1936 and moved there.
In preparation for Dayton’s centennial celebration, the question arose as
to whether any Wright artifacts remained in the soil. To answer this question,
a team headed by Wright State University’s Field School in Archaeology,
conducted an excavation of the site from June 27th to August 6th
in 2003.
This is the story of how it came about that the cycle shop was moved to
Michigan and about the search for any Wright artifacts left behind in the soil.
Henry Ford started the process in 1925. He was interested in obtaining the
1903 Flyer for display in his Greenfield Village, Michigan but nothing came of
it at the time.
It is somewhat odd that Ford and Orville were now friends and that now Ford
wanted the Flyer because earlier Ford had criticized the Wrights for using
their patent to hold back progress in aviation.
The idea didn’t die. An organization called the Early Birds got involved.
This group was composed of pioneer pilots that had flown prior to 1916. They
believed that Ford’s Greenfield Village had the resources to properly
preserve the Flyer.
William E. Scripps, publisher of the Detroit News, was president of the
group. He sent James V. Piersol, one of his reporters, to Dayton to talk to
Orville on the behalf of Henry Ford and his son, Edsel. The meeting occurred in
December 1935.
Orville explained to his visitors that he would make no decision on the
Flyer, which was in London at the London Science museum, until his feud with
the Smithsonian was resolved.
Since the fate of the Flyer could not be resolved, Piersol mentioned that Ford
was interested in preserving the bicycle shop at 1127 West Third St. where the
Flyer had been built. Ford was interested in some of the artifacts in the shop
such as the lift and drag measuring balances used in the wind tunnel tests as
well.
Orville was interested in this proposal. Following the meeting, Edsel Ford
worked with Orville to complete the deal. Piersol paid the Charles Webbert
family, $13,000 on July 2, 1936 to complete the transfer of ownership. He then
donated the building to Ford for the park.
During the discussions about the shop, Orville mentioned to Piersol the
possibility of also acquiring the residence on Hawthorn St. where Orville and
Katharine been born and Wilbur had died. Orville was concerned that both
buildings wouldn’t be preserved. Henry Ford was interested. Henry and Edsel
visited Dayton to see both buildings in October 1936.
Lottie Jones, the Wrights’ laundress when they lived on Hawthorn St. and
at the new mansion at Hawthorn Hill,
owned the house. She had acquired it when Milton Wright left it to Katharine
when he died. Katharine sold it to Lottie for $4,000, including most of the
furniture. Lottie sold it to Ford for $4,100.
The two buildings were moved to Dearborn in boxcars and reconstructed piece
by piece in their original configuration. Every piece had been marked in Dayton
to permit identification. Ford’s specification even required that five dump
trucks of soil (some 20 tons) be taken from beneath the house so that it would
continue to stand on Dayton soil. Charlie Taylor, the Wrights mechanic, was
hired to help with the reconstruction in order to assure accuracy. He also
helped Orville and Mabel Beck, his secretary, locate surviving machine tools
that were used in the shop.
The dedication of the two relocated buildings took place on the anniversary
of Wilbur’s birthday, April 16, 1938. Orville was the guest of honor. A. D.
Etheridge and John T. Daniels from the Kill Devil Lifesavings station and
William J. Tate from Kitty Hawk were in attendance.
Not everyone in Dayton was happy with what happened. But in the long run it
was the best decision. The neighborhood around the buildings in Dayton was
deteriorating. Buildings were neglected and forgotten. Businesses were closing.
Money was scarce because it was in the middle of the depression. The house next
to the Wright home burned down and most likely would have burned down the
Wright’s house with it since there was only four feet between them.
Also, more people can see the buildings. Last year, 1.4 million people
visited Greenfield Village. The park was opened in 1929. Ford’s idea was to
illustrate forever the role of a handful of innovators in improving American
life. That idea has now been expanded to celebrate things that demonstrate
innovation, resourcefulness and ingenuity.
The park includes a 40,000 square-feet "Heroes of the Sky" exhibit
containing a collection of famous airplanes in the context of history making
aviators. The most recent addition to the exhibit is the reproduction Wright
Flyer that attempted to fly at Kill Devil Hills on December 17, 2003 built by
the Wright Experience. It did fly on two practice flights at Kill Devil Hills
prior to the 17th.
In the 1950s, Andy’s Used Furniture store was built on the site of the
cycle shop, which was than a parking lot. In August 2002 it was demolished in
anticipation of building a false facade of the cycle shop at the site.
Unexpectedly the demolition crew ran into some limestone blocks from an earlier
foundation that were thought to be two segments of the foundation of the cycle
shop. Tony Sculimbrene, Executive Director of the Dayton Aviation Heritage
Commission, immediately realized that there might be more original historically
significant artifacts below ground.
Tony related the information to Robert Riordan, Department of Sociology and
Anthropology of Wright State University. This set the ball rolling for the
Heritage Commission’s awarding a contract to Wright State’s Field School in
Archaeology to conduct an archaeological excavation during the Inventing Flight
Celebration in July 2003. The timing would be great because thousands of
tourists would be in the area to visit the historic sites and the National
Historic Park.
The first building on the site was a one story home built by Jacob Zearing
in 1861. Charles Webbert, who owned a plumbing and hardware store, subsequently
purchased the building. He converted the home into a business with two
adjoining storefronts.
In
1897 the Wrights leased one of the storefronts from Webbert and moved the
"Wright Cycle Company" for the last time into the storefront on the
West Side.
Several additions were made to the building over the years for needed space.
Eventually the building consisted of a single building with three separate
storefronts two stories tall.
One of the businesses that shared the building was an undertaker, Fetters
and Shank. They occupied the storefront on the East Side from 1905-1910.
The Wrights continued to build, repair and sell bicycles until 1904.
Thereafter they employed others to sell and repair other brands until 1908.
They continued their printing business upstairs and by this time had
co-mingled the financial assets of the bicycle and printing businesses. They
sold the printing business in 1899 after Ed Sines, Orville’s friend from
boyhood, was no longer able to work because of health problems.
The Wrights (Wilbur died in 1912) continued to use the building until 1916
as a laboratory and office and built the early Wright airplanes there,
including the first airplane that they shipped to France in 1907.
When Orville became president of the Wright Company after Wilbur's death, Orville
preferred to work at his office at the cycle shop. He retained Mabel Beck, who
had been Wilbur's secretary for his secretary.
Wilbur left the building in 1916 and moved up the street to his newly built lab and
office on South Broadway St.
Fourteen volunteers, full and part-time, including college, high school and
others under the direction of Dr. Robert Riordan conducted the excavation of
the 65-ft. by 165-ft. site. Dr. Frank L Cowan, a consulting archeologist
provided part-time assistance.
They found some 6,100 artifacts including architectural products and debris,
household items such as glass bottles, personal items such as buttons and
shoes, and industrial byproducts such as valves and brackets. They also found
children toys such as marbles and two fragments from porcelain dolls.
Most important, they found a number of bicycle parts and printer’s
linotype slugs 70-cm below modern grade. Both types of items have actual links
to the Wrights and their associates.
The
bicycle parts consisted of 44 spoke nipples that are used to tie the spokes to
the wheels, 4 valve caps and a one-centimeter brass button with the wording
"Kelly Handlebar Co." on its face.
The button was not used on the Wright-built bicycles but could have been
used on bicycles that they sold but didn’t make themselves.
The linotype slugs consisted of an uppercase "R", a "W"
or "M", another "M" and one that is undecipherable.
They also found two tools, a 14-cm long adjustable wrench and a 25.5-cm
file.
They have many more items to examine so their analysis is continuing.
They also have found that the foundation of the Webbert building remains
largely intact and the foundations of the Zearing residence are well preserved
where examined. There is, therefore, the likelihood that the rest of the
foundation structure is as well preserved and capable of providing for the
original architecture dating back to 1861 and for the sequence of additions
made to the original building.
Tim
Binkley (standing in picture) and Tasha Hairston, graduate students from Wright State University, provided hundreds of people, including me, with a friendly and
interesting interpretation of the progressing work.
The excavations only sampled a small area and there remains much yet to be
discovered. Ford left more behind than expected. The area is extensively
disturbed, yet the foundations remained and the site appears rich with
artifacts of the pre-1930s era. The excavation team believes that it is very
likely that other intact deposits of Wright associated artifacts remain within
the lot.
Reference: The 2003 Wright State University Field School Investigations at
the Wright Cycle Shop, 33 MY80, Dayton, Ohio (Draft)
Betty Darst is Katharine Wright
Katharine Wright and her Famous Brothers come to life again in the persona
of Betty Geiger-Darst, a dramatist and historian who performs as Katharine in a
one-woman show.
Katharine, the younger sister of Orville and Wilbur, managed many of the
brothers’ affairs and was their confidant and caregiver. She was intelligent
and poised and charmed presidents and Kings providing the social interface for
her shy brothers. She gave them the freedom to dream, research and invent the
airplane.
Darst
is Katharine when she speaks to her audience dressed in a 1909 black pin
stripped duster and a stylish hat with plumes that Katharine would have worn.
She shares with her audience a personal view of the Wright family highlighted
with short vignettes using many letters and diaries written by the Wright
family and recollections by their descendents.
She has spoken to kids and adults around the world, giving 25 presentations
alone during the Wright celebration in Dayton in July 2003. She has made trips
from Oklahoma to Virginia to Nebraska to Massachusetts to Australia to New
Zealand to France, to name a few.
In France she made several presentations at the Paris air Show and visited
Pau, location of the Wrights First Flight School. There, she spoke at the city
hall utilizing her command of the French language.
During December, in honor of the December 17th celebration, she
hosted 37 British aviation enthusiasts in Dayton. They visited the Wright
brothers’ historical sights including a trip to Hawthorn Hill where Darst
portrayed Katharine on a tour of the mansion.
If you would like to experience such a tour you can via a video: "Wright
at Home: A Visit to Hawthorn Hill." Darst’s e-mail: TheDarsts@Donet.com.
In another video, her voice is heard along with Neil Armstrong and John
Glenn in another great video, "Kitty Hawk: The Journey of Invention
that was shown on PBS."
Darst says her goal is to educate youngsters and adults about the Wright
brothers. She is a teacher and historian and has been telling her story from
the perspective of Katharine for 18 years. She says she got started, when after
portraying Katharine on Public Library day in 1985, Ivonette Wright happened to
be in the audience. Ivonette is a niece of the Wrights. She told Darst after
the presentation, "Keep on telling the story. You are doing a good
job" So she has.
Darst is a student pilot and flies as a co-pilot for her husband, Jack. Jack
has flown 500 youngsters on behalf of the EAA young eagles program. Jack is
also active in Dayton heritage activities including Aviation Trail and Nick
Engler’s Wright Brothers Aeroplane Company.
Tough Paying for First Flight Events
Paying for First Flight Celebration events is as much of a challenge as the
first flight itself.
Hampton, Virginia’s celebration never got off the ground because of
insufficient funds. The Festival of Flight Celebration in Fayetteville, NC is
asking for help from the city of Fayetteville and Cumberland County to pay for
some $173,000 that is owed to vendors.
Inventing Flight in Dayton, Ohio reported losing a whopping $3 to $4 million
during its 17-day celebration even though it exceeded its attendance goal of
600,000.
Update: As of December 21, 2003,
Inventing Flight is only $200,000 in debt. Fourteen creditors remain with some
claims still in dispute. More than half of the remaining companies are media
companies.
I spent two weeks in Dayton for the celebration and enjoyed every minute of
it. However, I was interested in hard core Wright Brothers and didn’t attend
the "show business" side of the celebration where most of the money
was lost.
The free shuttle transportation service was one source of the displeasure.
A number of people wrote to the Dayton Daily News about their poor
experience. "Sandra Jones of nearby Centerville wrote about her experience
after attending the opening night ceremonies, "I am appalled that the
media didn’t cover the sea of humanity trying to catch buses after the
Inventing Flight opening ceremonies."
She continued, "There were thousands of people squashed into a very
small area. Many families with babies and small children were being dangerously
crushed in the crowd. Elderly people were passing out."
"The bus service volunteers didn’t have a clue what to do, and the
more than two hours it took to clear the area was a nightmare. No water, no
bathrooms, no safety."
Colin Hall of Atlanta, Ga. wrote about her experience with the
transportation service at the Huffman Prairie site. "We were told the
trolley came by every 20 minutes but there was no schedule. We waited over half
an hour and when the trolley came it was full. The driver would not talk to us
--- one of the passengers explained that we could not get on because it was
full. So we were told we would have to wait another 20 minutes to half an hour.
By this time children were crying and we were beyond lunch time."
(Note: There is no food available at Huffman Prairie)."
"At this time we were desperate. My husband tried to flag down a RTA
bus but the driver just waved and zipped on past us. As the next bus came we
stood in the middle of the road to get it to stop."
Marty Tommy relates a scary story. "To cap off the evening, we were on
one of the first busses to arrive back to the University of Dayton Arena’s
dark and desolate parking lot (A designated parking area). It was quite scary
for a single MOM alone with a young child. We could only make out white cars,
it was so dark, and my car is not white. Where were the lights? Where was
security? It was honestly frightening."
I didn’t experience these problems because I ignored the instructions to
park at designated parking areas and ride the shuttle. I drove to all the
locations.
The opening ceremonies were a big disappointment for many. It cost a million
dollars and was produced by Entertainment Design Corp. of Los Angeles who had
planned events for the Olympics --- so expectations were high.
William Kincaid from Miamisburg, Ohio represented many comments when he said
that he couldn’t believe that he paid $125 for two tickets to see the opening
ceremonies.
"Not only could I not see the stage, I didn’t see one minute of the
sorry show. All in all, if I had paid $5 a ticket, I would have been
distraught. I’m quite sure that I’m not the only one who thought the whole
thing was a big disappointment."
Matt Engel of Oregona commented that the public wouldn’t be fooled again.
"I will not belabor how cheesy the opening ceremonies were, other than to
say I did not expect the flying saucer to enter via a wheelbarrow."
"I am not critical of the performers. The production stunk. I am
curious as to how they spent the million bucks."
Another attendee commented, "There were so many glitches and detractive
moments it was almost embarrassing! The first musical cue was cut off before
the speaker reached the front of the stage – not a good sign for the flow of
the evening."
Celebration Central located at Deeds Park across the river from downtown
Dayton was the biggest money loser. It consisted of exhibit pavilions, stage
shows and the nearby Orbit Zone that provided amusement rides for kids.
It was supposed to be a Disney-style affair and had a budget of 10-12
million dollars, but it had difficulty attracting people to attend from the
start.
Dean Neitman of Englewood thought Celebration Central was extremely
disappointing. "I was disappointed to be a Dayton-area resident. If
Orville and Wilbur were alive today to witness this poorly organized circus
being conducted in their honor, I’m sure they both would rescind their
association with Dayton and claim to have secretly developed the plane in some
back alley in North Carolina."
A number of the food vendors deserted Celebration Central because of the low
attendance.
MC2, national known consultants, designed, managed designed and operated
Celebration Central. Bad weather during the initial days didn’t help. In
desperation they cut ticket prices in half from the initial price of $20 per
person. But it never really recovered.
I was disappointed by the few Wright Brother’s displays in the pavilions
at Celebration Central. I did enjoy seeing a beautiful display of the
reproduction of Ken Hyde’s Wright Flyer that is scheduled to reenact the
first flight at Kitty Hawk on Dec. 17.
I also enjoyed attempting to fly the Wright Flyer simulator. I didn’t fare
too well as I crashed the Flyer five times and failed to fly for even the 12
seconds that Orville flew during his first flight.
Nick Engler, general director of the Wright Brother’s Aerospace Co., may
have the answer to what went wrong. He claims that the core of the problem was
the hiring of big national consultants from Atlanta and Los Angles who had no
stake in the community and its history. They created a "celebration
without a heart." They should have capitalized on what the community
already had.
He continued, "Aviation is an art form, and it’s best appreciated and
understood by those whose souls that have been touched by it. It was like
having the Dayton Air Show Board plan next season’s opera."
There were many positive events. The Air Show was the best ever and drew
spectacular crowds of some 150,000 people. The Wright Brother’s historical
sites at the Wright Bicycle shop, the Dunbar State Memorial House and the
Huffman Prairie all had record crowds. So did the Air Force Museum and Carillon
Historical Park. The Sunday morning memorial service for the Wright Family at
Woodlawn Cemetery while the Wright B Flyer circled overhead was special.
President Bush spoke to an estimated crowd of 30,000 people on Independence
Day.
The "Time Flies" shows were excellent. There was "What’s
News" at the Wright Interpretative Center," the "Musicale"
at the Dunbar House, the "Rhythm and Shoes" vaudeville show at
Carillon Park and "Matter of Balance" at Huffman Prairie.
The Black Cultural Festival held in conjunction with Inventing Flight drew a
record crowd of 65,000.
The evening ceremony held by the National Aviation Hall of Fame emceed by
Harrison Ford was an inspiration for a record crowd of 2,130.
The community is a better place to live for having the "Inventing
Flight" celebration. The only thing that didn’t work was the glitz. The
admission prices to Celebration Central were too high and people were not
interested in theme park rides and stage shows.
I doubt that Orville and Wilbur would have attended the glitzy affairs. The
rest of the celebration was great.
The community will benefit in the years to come from the investments made in
the Wright historic sites, the Air Force Museum and the development of the
westside neighborhood near the Wright and Dunbar homes.
Wright State University has estimated that the total economic benefit to the
community from the celebration is $112 million. And you can’t place a dollar
figure on the spirit and teamwork generated among thousands of volunteers who
participated in the event.
Reference: Dayton Daily News
Where Are the Wrights’ Factories?
In November 1909 the Wrights formed the Wright Company to manufacture their
airplanes. They initially rented factory space in February 1910 while they
built their own factory in a cornfield north of Dayton. It took about ten
months to build their first building. Their new factory was used to build
Wright airplanes until 1915, at which time Orville sold the company.
My friend Ed and I, while attending "Inventing Flight" in Dayton
during the month of July, decided to find these two factory locations and
determine what has happened to them.
We found the location of the rented building at the intersection of Miami
Chapel Avenue and Wisconsin Boulevard in west Dayton. That was the good news.
The bad news was that the building had been razed. In fact there were no
buildings at that corner, not even a marker to serve as a tribute to what had
once occurred there. The area is rundown, which may explain why.
The site can be reached from the Wright bicycle shop/residence location by
following South Broadway St. approximately two miles south from West Third St.
The
rented building at the time belonged to the Speedwell Motor Car Company. It was
a brick building with a distinctive sawtooth roof.
(Here are two views of the factory)
Speedwell was a prosperous
growing company making automobiles until the great Dayton flood of 1913. The
plant was flooded and they could not recover from the loss of equipment and
inventory.
The site is significant in airplane history because the first mass produced
airplane was manufactured here. The airplane was the Wright Model B.
This was the first model of airplane that the Wrights built that didn’t
place the elevator in the front. It was a two-seat design with dual controls
and utilized a wheel-and-skid design. It took three days to assemble. The
engine was built at the Wright Bicycle Shop and transported to Speedwell
building.
The dual controls were used at Huffman field for pilot training. The student
pilots attending the Wright School of Aviation purchased many of the airplanes.
The Model B airplanes were built in the 1910 and 1911 time period.
The Wright Model R airplane was also built at this location. The Model R was
designed for racing and altitude competition. The Wright Exhibition Team based
at Huffman Prairie set four world altitude records with this machine.
In November 1910 they moved to their new factory upon the completion of
building 1. A second building was added a year later.
We found the buildings several miles north of the bicycle shop on West Third
Street. The buildings now belong to General Motors Delphi.
The one-story buildings have a distinctive curved roofline similar to
airplane hangers. The Wrights built two buildings. Three similar additional
buildings were added later after the Wright Company went out of business.
The
buildings are painted a bright white and can be easily seen just inside the
entrance gate. We drove up to the guardhouse at the gate and confirmed from the
guard that the buildings were indeed the original Wright factory buildings.
I asked the guard if I could take some pictures but was told no! I asked if
he would check with his boss. He did, with the same answer.
We came back on Sunday and found no one at the gate. I took a number of
pictures through the chainlink fence..
The first airplanes manufactured at the new factory were the Model EX, Model
C and Model D. The rest of their models followed. They included the models CH,
E, F, G, H, HS, K, and L along with their instruments and engines.
The Model L was the last airplane manufactured by the Wright Co. It was a
biwing type with a fuselage and was powered with a single propeller in front of
the airplane (tractor type).
Upon completion of building 2, the factory had the capacity to produce four
airplanes per month, a capacity greater than that of any other airplane factory
in the world at that time.
Plaques commemorating the factories exist somewhere for these buildings and
the earlier rented factory. Aviation Trail, Inc. presented them to General
Motors in 1983.
It is unfortunate that General Motors during the Inventing Flight
celebration did not make available to the public these historic factory sites.
Building 1 is located just inside the entrance gate and contains the office
that Orville Wright once used. This is hallowed ground and desires better
treatment.
Farmhouses
Witness Aviation History
Two old farmhouses at
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (WPAFB) stand as silent witnesses to early
aviation history that occurred at nearby Huffman Prairie. Now known as the Arnold
House and Foulois House, they
were named after famous Air Force generals Henry A.
"Hap" Arnold and Benjamin D.
Foulois, who lived in those houses while serving at WPAFB. Both were
taught to fly by Orville Wright.
It was my great-great grandfather
Henry E. Hebble who built the houses. He was a bridge and house builder. Two
covered bridges he also built in the 1800s are still standing. One spans the
Yellow Springs Creek at Glen Haven, the nature preserve at Antioch College. The
other spans Massies Creek near Xenia, Ohio
After he migrated from Lancaster County,
Pennsylvania in 1841, Henry E. Hebble built the house now known as the Arnold
house (building 8) to be used as the family homestead. It is the oldest
building on WPAFB.
The Foulois house (building 88) was built
in 1874. None of the Hebble family lived in the house; it was rented out.
Both houses were eventually sold to the
Miami Conservancy District and the land became a part of the Flood Plain for
the Huffman Dam that was built after the great Dayton Flood in 1913.
In 1917, The Miami Conservancy District
leased Huffman Prairie and the adjacent land (2,074 acres) to the Army creating
Wilbur Wright Field. The area east of the Arnold and Foulois houses became
Fairfield Aviation General Supply Depot.
The Springfield Pike that once ran by the
two houses was relocated to its present site further east. The houses are
located within a block of each other on Wright Ave. a little over a mile from
Huffman Prairie.
Residents in the area traveled to and
from Dayton using the Dayton-Springfield-Urbana (DSU) electric railway. They
boarded the train at Simms Station adjacent to Huffman Prairie. Passengers
sometimes referred to the letters "DSU" as meaning "dammed slow
and uncertain."
There is a group in Dayton that is
raising money and working on plans to restore the railway from near the Dunbar
house in Dayton to Huffman Prairie using a combination of trolleys and buses.
After the Army leased the land,
twenty-four airplane hangers were constructed on a flight line close to the
Foulois House.
In the mid 1920's the Army started to
look for a location to relocate because McCook Field, the engineering center
located just north of downtown Dayton, was becoming too small for their needs.
Dayton businessmen headed by NCR president Frederick Patterson quickly went
into action to keep the Army in Dayton. They formed the Air Service Committee
in 1924 to find a place locally for the Army.
The committee raised the money to
purchase 4,500 acres of land that included Wilbur Wright Field (including the
Arnold and Foulois houses) and Huffman Prairie. They sold the land to the army
for $1.00. The Army named the acreage Wright Field.
In 1931 all of the land east of Huffman
Dam (which included the Arnold and Foulois houses) was renamed Patterson Field
in memory of Lt. Frank Stuart Patterson who died in a test flight in a DH-4
airplane over Wilbur Wright Field in 1918. He was the son of Frederick
Patterson who had succeeded his father John H. Patterson as president of the
NCR.
From
1929-1931, Major "Hap" Arnold lived in the first house that Hebble
built. The house at the time was used to house the base commander. Orville was
Arnold’s houseguest at his residence on the base on a number of occasions.
Arnold, a West Point graduate, learned to
fly at the Wright Brothers flying school at Huffman Prairie. He soloed in 10
days after 28 flights totaling
3 hours and 48 minutes.
He went on to command the U.S. Army Air
Forces during World War II and became a five-star general.
When the Wright Memorial in Dayton was
dedicated on August 19, 1940, Orville’s birthday, Arnold flew into Dayton for
the occasion. In his comments he said, "This monument would stand as a
shrine to aviation as the Plymouth Rock is to America."
The Hebble house was dedicated as the
Arnold house in honor of General "Hap" Arnold on May 16, 1986.
General Foulois played a critical role in
the Wright Brothers’ history. He flew with Orville in 1909 as an official
observer for a speed trial on July 30 to fulfill an Army requirement to qualify
the Wright airplane.
The requirement was for the airplane to
carry two people aloft for one hour at 40 mph. There was a $2500 bonus over the
base price of $25,000 for each one mph the speed exceeded 40 mph. There was
also a $2500 deduction to the base price for each one mph under 40 mph.
The route was from the parade ground at
Ft. Myer, Va. to Sho oters Hill five miles away at Alexandria, Va. and return.
Shouters Hill is where the Masonic Temple now stands. The facility was under
construction at the time of the flight.
Orville
chose Lt. Foulois to fly with him as the official Army observer. He selected
him because he liked Foulois for his avid interest in aviation. It also helped
that he weighted less than 130 pounds and was an experienced map reader.
Foulois arrived for the flight with two
stopwatches hung around his neck, a box compass strapped to his left thigh, an
aneroid barometer strapped to his right thigh and a map on his belt.
The Flight was a success. Orville
completed the ten-mile course at an average speed of 42.586 mph and earned a
financial bonus of $5,000.
Foulois was eager to take flying lessons
and was able to receive three lessons from Wilbur Wright at College Park,
Maryland before he was reassigned to Fort Sam Houston, Texas, home of Signal
Corps airplane #1. He successfully finished his instruction through
correspondence with
Wilbur and Orville. He liked to say he was the world’s first
correspondence-school pilot. At the time he was the Army’s only active pilot.
He
lived in the house that was to carry his name from June 1929 through July 1930
while serving as Chief of the Material Division, Wright Field. He subsequently
rose to command of the U.S. Army Air Corps prior to World War II.
Both Foulois and Arnold played major
roles in establishing the U.S. Air Force as a separate service and guided the
early development of Military Air Power.
The Foulois house underwent a major
renovation in 1986 and today serves as the home of the base commander.
Henry Hebble became a prominent citizen
in the area and was running for county commissioner when he died from a heart
attack. One of his sons, Zebulon Hebble, became mayor of Fairfield. The current
Fairborn City building resides on Hebble St.
Residents of the two houses could watch
the activities of the Wrights at Huffman Prairie during their development of a
practical airplane during 1904-1905 and the further activities of the Wright
Flying School, the Wright Exhibition team and the testing of airplanes built by
the Wright Co. in 1910-1916.
Hebble Creek and Hebble Creek Rd form the
southern boundary of Huffman Prairie, while the
houses that Hebble built remain today as silent witnesses to aviation history.
Where is Orville’s Laboratory?
After Orville sold his aircraft business in 1916, he built an office and
laboratory at 45 North Broadway St. Located at the corner of Broadway and West
Third St., it was not far from the last bicycle shop where the Kitty Hawk Flyer
was designed and built. He wanted a place he could do what he liked to do ---
tinker. He worked there for the next 30 years.
The 39 by 75-foot building was demolished in 1976 to make way for a gasoline
station, but the station was never built. Before the demolition, the Standard
Oil Co. offered the building plus $1,000 to anyone who would move and preserve
the building. Tragically, no one came forward to accept the offer.
The good news is that "Bank One," who has an ATM at the site,
recently donated four parcels of land to establish a memorial to Orville and
his lab at the location. So far, a lookalike facade of the lab containing the
same plain reddish-brown brick used on the original building has been built.
Behind the facade there is a park containing a nice garden with walkways, stone
benches, black iron fence, lampposts and a pagoda.
Future plans call for a bronze statute of Orville at a workbench to be
placed inside the pagoda whenever additional funds become available. I must say
that I don’t understand the connection between a Japanese pagoda and Orville.
I was disturbed to observe that the gardens were full of weeds, some of
which were taller than the flowers and planted bushes.
That same day I had the opportunity to talk to Amanda Wright Lane,
great-grandnephew of Wilbur and Orville. I told her about the condition of the
gardens and I am sure that the problem will be remedied.
One other item I noticed was that there were no plagues describing what the
small park represents. There were stands for them, but they were empty. I
understand that there are still ongoing discussions over what should be written
on the plaques.
I remember when I was attending Oakwood High School, located a few blocks
from Hawthorn Hill, the Wrights’ home. I would sometimes see Orville driving
by the school each morning on his way to his downtown laboratory. He usually
went there six days a week even thought he was retired and well fixed
financially.
He liked to drive fast and regularly exceeded the Oakwood speed limits. The
police in Oakwood have had a reputation for strictly enforcing the speed limits
even to this day. But they never stopped Orville. Since Orville didn’t
believe in having auto insurance either, the police kept their fingers crossed.
In 1913 a flood submerged the crates holding the dismantled 1903 Flyer that
was stored in a shed behind the Wright cycle shop at 1127 West Third St., a few
blocks from 15 N. Broadway. The flood was nearly 12 feet deep.
Prior to building the lab at 15 N. Broadway, a barn was located on the site.
After the water receded, Orville moved the crates containing the Flyer to the
barn.
The barn was torn down in 1916 to make room to build the lab. The crates
containing the flyer, along with all the historic files and photographs stored
there, were moved to the Wright Company factory located off West Third at Home
Ave. There the Flyer was reassembled for the first time since 1903 for display
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as part of a dedication ceremony.
Orville shared his office in the lab with his long time secretary Mabel Beck
who occupied the reception area. Mabel, a forceful and protective secretary,
was Orville’s gatekeeper. Anyone who wanted to see Orville had to get through
Mabel first. It is rumored that even the Bishop had to go through Mabel.
As you might surmise, Mabel was not a favorite with the Wright family. But,
she was totally devoted to Orville and was doing just what Orville wanted her
to do. Orville, who had a reputation for playing practical jokes, seemed to be
amused that others had problems dealing with Mabel.
Orville had his second and fatal heart attack while working at the Lab.
Mabel called a physician from across the street. He died at Miami Valley
Hospital three days later on January 30, 1948
Were Did Wilbur Fly His Kite?
In 1899 Wilbur flew a kite in a park near his home to test
his idea of wing warping. The success of this experiment led to further
experimentation at Kitty Hawk and the invention of the airplane.
While I was in Dayton for the Inventing Flight celebration I
decided to find the location of this park. It is not marked on the map and
there is no marker at the location. Ed, a good friend of mine who lives in
Dayton, and I took on the challenge.
Before I proceed further with the search, let’s review what
occurred in 1899.
Wilbur for some time had been "afflicted with the belief
that flight is possible to man." He knew that the German, Otto Lilienthal
and Englishman, Percy Pilcher had died because they couldn’t control their
gliders by shifting the weight of their bodies.
Wilbur looked for a better way to achieve control by watching
how birds obtained control. He observed that they did it by changing the lift
on one side and then the other by twisting their wings.
Orville thought about the possibility of building a
mechanical mechanism into a flying machine to twist the wings. The brothers
gave up on this idea because they couldn’t figure out to build such a
mechanism strong enough, but also light enough to be practical.
The breakthrough came one day when Wilbur was talking to a
customer in their bicycle shop and was absentmindedly twisting a bicycle tube
box. It immediately occurred to him that they could build a box kite type
glider with similar structure that would be sturdy but also have flexible wing
tips.
Orville tells how it worked. "He
(Wilbur) demonstrated the method by means of a small pasteboard box, which had
two of the opposite ends removed. By holding the top forward corner and rear
lower corner of one end of the box between his thumb and forefinger and the
rear upper corner and the lower forward corner of the other end of the box in
like manner, and by pressing the corners together the upper and lower surface
of the box were given a helicoidal twist, presenting the top and bottom
surfaces of the box at different angles on the right and left sides."
Wilbur
proceeded to build a large box kite. It consisted of two 5-foot wings,
13-inches wide constructed in a biplane configuration. The wings were trussed
and braced in such a way that they could be twisted in the desired way by four
control lines connected to two sticks, one in each hand. A fixed elevator was
attached to the trailing edge.
Wilbur ventured to a local field with a group of neighborhood
boys to try it out. It worked. He could make it turn left or right and dive or
climb.
Orville, who was not present during the demonstration, said
later, "We felt that the model demonstrated the efficiency of our system
of control."
The brothers now thought of bigger experiments involving
man-carrying machines. The following year they made their first trip to Kitty
Hawk.
Back to the search for the location of where Wilbur flew the
kite.
I initially thought the location might be Riverside Park that
is along the Miami River and not far from the Wrights’ home. But on further
research the location was said to be near a seminary near Euclid Ave and First
St. At that location there were homes and a small business building. The
seminary was long gone.
I found out later that Bishop Milton Wright had recommended
that the seminary be established.
A short block north of there was a large school building next
to a park known as John Ahlers Park in West Dayton. The park looked like a good
place to fly a kite. We went in the school and found a teacher who was packing
school supplies. He knew nothing about what we were looking for. He did tell us
the school was about to be torn down.
We
went outside and walked around the park and in so doing noticed that the Paul
Laurence Dunbar House was just down the street (Edison St.). We decided to walk
down to the Dunbar House to see if they knew anything about Wilbur flying his
kite in the neighborhood. At the house we were fortunate to be greeted by Ms La
Verne Sci, the director. She was waiting for a group of visitors to arrive. We
popped the question to her. She was quick to respond that the Ahlers Park was
the place.
In hindsight it makes sense that Wilbur would fly his kite in
open field near the seminary that his father had help establish.
We also learned from Ms Sci that Dunbar had chosen this location
for his house because the seminary in the neighborhood had attracted an
intellectual community at the turn of the century.
We had visited the Dunbar house the day before and didn’t
realize that the park was where Wilbur flew his kite just up the street. Which
raises the question, why are there no makers identifying this significant
location in the history of flight?
A Chance to See Harrison Ford
by Mary Lou Stimson
Although reporters sometimes are a bit blasé about some of the dignitaries
they write about, there are always a few celebrities that are just a little out
of the ordinary.
Recently,
this reporter had the opportunity to attend a function (courtesy of my husband)
that took place in our hometown of Dayton, Ohio. Harrison Ford, famous for
acting in films that include Star Wars, the Indiana Jones series and Air Force
One, was featured as the master of ceremonies for the National Aviation Hall of
Fame 2003 Pioneers of Flight Homecoming.
Considering the event was one that should not be missed, I was eager to go
and even more eager to see how close I could get to the actor. Should I have
the good fortune to actually speak to the man, what could I say that would be
different from the other mundane uttering of all those gorgeous babes lined up
to see him?
Doing my homework, I read in the local paper about his passion for flying
his own airplanes, which include a restored de Havilland Beaver DHC-C, a
Bonanza B36TC, a Gulfstream G1V-SP, a Cessna Grand Caravan and a Bell 407
helicopter.
It was reported that Ford, 61, took flying lessons when he was a student at
Ripon College in Wisconsin. At that point, before his star status had been
established, he found that flying was too expensive and he was forced to stop
until he was in his 50’s and could afford the luxury of time and money
necessary to pursue the experience.
On the evening preceding the Harrison Ford Dinner, we met a gentleman who
boasted that he could arrange a meeting between Ford and myself. Promises,
promises. There were 2,200 guests attending the prestigious Ford Dinner. But
nonetheless, I believed the gentleman. His own wife was attending the gala just
so that she could meet Ford.
On the night of the dinner, we managed to find the gentleman and his wife
and I am sure that they never got any closer than we did. Harrison Ford had a
magnificent security system. The president of the United States could not have
been more closely guarded. Sitting with some other Ford Fans, I was invited to
join a group of ladies that vowed to tackle Ford as a group and subdue him.
He had previously mentioned that he did not think Calista Flockhart would be
able to attend, so I knew I would not get to speak to her to tell her to eat,
as instructed by our son, Dan. As it turned out, the closest I got to Harrison
Ford was to take his photo as he spoke at the podium.
Actually the dinner was not a total loss in spite of my inability to speak
to Harrison Ford. The purpose of the black tie event was to salute the 178 men
and women enshrined in the Hall of Fame in honor of the Centennial of Powered
Flight. Ford solemnly led us through the memories evoked by such names as Ohio
Senator John Glenn, Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, James A. Lovell Jr. and Walter
M. Schirra Jr., all former astronauts; as well as naval aviator James B.
Stockdale.
Altogether, two dozen enshrinees were introduced to the Aviation Hall of
Fame that night, with a short history given on each one. Included in the
ceremony was a toast to Wilbur and Orville Wright by two members of the Wright
family, Amanda Wright Lane and Stephen Wright. So what if I never got close to
Harrison Ford.
Lilienthal Data Not in
Error
During my visit to Dayton for their
"Inventing Flight" celebration, I found presenters consistently
attributing the Wrights' disappointment with the performance of their 1900
and 1901 gliders to errors in the Lilienthal data upon which the brothers
had based their glider designs. This is a common fallacy that is repeated in
many books on the Wright Brothers.
The truth of the matter is that it was
not a problem of Lilienthal errors, rather it was a misinterpretation of his
data that was the problem. Here is the story.
A frustrated Wilbur exclaimed to Orville in August 1901,
"Not in a thousand years will man ever fly."
At the time they were on a train returning to Dayton after
failing for the second year in a row to achieve the lift for their glider that
their calculations predicted. Wilbur recorded in his diary, "Found lift of
machine much less than Lilienthal’s tables would indicate, reaching only
about 1/3 as much."
After further thought, Wilbur was cheered by the conclusion
that the data they were using might be in error. In a speech on September 18 to
the Western Society of Engineers, Wilbur suggested that "the Lilienthal
tables might themselves be somewhat in error." He also questioned the
accuracy of the Smeaton coefficient.
Both the Lilienthal data and the Smeaton coefficient are used
in the formula for calculating lift.
Otto Lilienthal was a famous German glider experimenter who
had published a table containing coefficients of lift in 1895. The coefficient
of lift is a multiplying factor that takes into consideration the various
angles a wing assumes with regard to the flow of air know as the "angle of
attack." The value of the lift coefficient also varies with the shape of
the wing.
The Smeaton Coefficient was used in the calculation of lift
at the time of the Wright Brothers. It is a constant number used as a
"coefficient of air pressure." It serves as a multiplying factor used
to calculate the numerical value of lift in air, as compared to other mediums,
such as water or oil.
John Smeaton, an engineer, determined the value of this
coefficient was 0.005 in 1759, from his study of windmills. Engineers used this
value for 150 years, although others questioned its value and thought it was
too high, including the famous early aviation pioneer George Cayley in 1809.
Both Lilienthal, in Birdflight, and Octave Chanute, in
Progress in Flying Machines, cited the 0.005 value in their books. This
heavily influenced the Wrights in using the same value.
The Wrights would soon find that the 0.005 value was too
high. The error was a major cause of their calculation of a lift value that was
too high.
However, Smeaton’s coefficient value did not affect the
values of Lilienthal’s coefficients of lift.
Note: The Smeaton coefficient is no longer used in modern
aerodynamic problems. Problems are formulated differently. My son, who is a
graduate aeronautical engineer, had never heard of Smeaton when I first asked
him about it.
Smeaton wasn’t the only source of the discrepancy between
actual lift and the Wrights' calculated values. They incorrectly interpreted the
Lilienthal tables by not understanding that the table only applied to the one
wing shape that Lilienthal used in his study. The wings that the Wrights used
in 1900 and 1901 had different aspect ratios as well as differences in the
location of the maximum camber of the wing.
The aspect ratio is a measure of the relationship between the
length of the wing to the cord (width). The aspect ratio affects the value of
the lift coefficient. Lower values of aspect ratio give lower values of the
lift coefficient and visa versa within limits.
The aspect ratio for the Wright 1900 glider was 3.5 and the
1901 glider was 3.3. These values were considerably lower than the aspect ratio
of 6.8 for the Lilienthal test wing. In other words, the Lilienthal wing was
longer and narrower compared to the Wrights’ wing. The lift coefficient from
Lilienthal’s tables used by the Wrights should have been reduced by 19% to
account for their use of a lower aspect ratio.
Their other problem of interpreting the Lilienthal table had
to do with the location of the point of maximum camber (high point on the
curved wing).
The Wrights located their maximum camber close to the leading
edge of the wing. The Lilienthal test wing was a circular shaped wing with the
maximum point located at the middle of the cord. Here again the value
coefficient of lift read from the table should have been reduced to account for
the difference in location of the maximum camber.
The cumulative impact of the above errors on the calculation
of lift amounted to the 1/3 reduction in lift that Wilbur noted for the Kitty
Hawk 1900 and 1901 glider flights.
After their disappointing glider performance during the first
two visits to Kitty Hawk, the Wrights decided to take a different approach to
the problem of calculating lift. Rather than further examining the existing
data provided by others, they decided to compile their own.
They built an instrumented wind tunnel and developed their
own aerodynamic data by systematically testing some 200 airfoils of widely
different shapes and configurations, going well beyond the Lilienthal table.
Shapes included squares, rectangles, and ellipses in
configurations such as biplanes and triplanes. They included camber ratios
ranging from 1/6 to 1/20 and maximum camber locations ranging from near the
leading edge to the ½-chord position.
They found that the correct value of the Smeaton coefficient
should be 0.003 and developed their own table of lift coefficients (and drag
coefficients).
Their airfoil #12 was found to be the most aerodynamically
efficient. Its camber was 1/20 and the aspect ratio was 6. This foil was used
as a guide in designing their successful 1902 glider and ultimately the
successful 1903 Flyer.
The 1902 glider had an aspect ratio of 6.7, about twice that of their
previous gliders, and used camber ratios much shallower than Lilienthal test
wing.
With his new knowledge and understanding, Wilbur wrote to
Chanute in October 1901, "It would appear that
Lilienthal is very much nearer the truth than we have heretofore been disposed
to think."
Here
is a graph comparing Lilienthal and Wright lift-coefficient data. The Wright
data is for their no. 31 wing model. It has the same wing planform shape (see
picture at top of graph) and camber ratio (1/12) as Lilienthal’s. The airfoil
shape is different. The Wright No. 31 has a parabolic shape and the maximum
camber is closer to the front edge.
Although the two model wings are not identical, they are
close enough to demonstrate that the Lilienthal data was close to what the
Wrights determined using their wind tunnel.
If one compares the data around a 3% angle of attack, which
is about what the Wrights were focusing on, the data is almost identical.
It turned out to be fortunate that the Wrights had problems
with the determination of lift. It led them into doing research that propelled
their knowledge far beyond anyone before them and established the Wright
Brothers as the leading aeronautical engineers of their day.
Reference: A History of Aerodynamics by John D.
Anderson, Jr.
Wright Brothers
Tribute at Woodland Cemetery
It
was a special historic moment. As 1,000 people looked on, a 1911 Wright Model B
Flyer flew over as a small choir singing God Bless America. Astronauts
John Glenn and Neil Armstrong spoke on the 34th anniversary of
Armstrong’s Apollo 11 moonwalk; only 66 years had elapsed since the Wright
Brothers flew at Kitty Hawk when Armstrong walked on the moon. Members of the
Wright family lay wreaths on the graves of the famous brothers who invented the
airplane. Reverend Edward Puff pronounced it a "sacred moment and this
is hallowed ground."
The last day of Dayton’s flight celebration couldn’t have ended on a
more memorable moment. The gravesite had been spruced up since the last time I
was there two years ago. A mulched bed of myrtle had been added around the
burial stones. A cobblestone walkway was laid all around. Behind the main
headstone with the words "Wright" inscribed on it. Three flagpoles
had been added and American and Ohio flags, and a Wright pennant, fluttered in
the breeze.
As 40 members of the Wright family listened, Glenn spoke, "Their
bodily remains are buried here. But their spirit lives on in every young person
who is inspired to dream, to do, and to move the world ahead. Their example is
timeless."
Then Armstrong added, "We gather on this glorious Sunday morning to
remember the birth of aviation, but also to honor two good and honorable
men."
Armstrong added, "For 2½ weeks, Dayton has been celebrating 100
years of flight, and has talked about the amazing achievements that have
occurred in those 100 years. We’ve lauded the dedication, creativity and
achievements of Orville and Wilbur Wright, but this morning we remember them
not for those achievements, but as the kind of men they were: Men of honesty,
and men of integrity in all they did. That is something for us to honor and
emulate."
G. Edwin Zeiders of the United Theological Seminary was the next speaker.
Milton Wright had been instrumental in founding of the United Theological
predecessor seminary, the Bonebrake Seminary of the United Brethren in Christ
church more than 130 years ago.
Zeiders noted that "Wilbur, Orville, Neil and John are numbered in
the multitudes of people who have risked everything for the greater good. We
are exceedingly grateful for the sacrifices they made."
Then it was time to lay the wreaths as a bagpiper played Amazing Grace.
Marion Wright placed a wreath on Susan’s grave (mother). Stephen Wright
decorated Milton’s grave (father); Amanda Wright Lane, Katharine’s grave
(sister); Glenn, Wilbur’s and Armstrong, Orville’s.
Lt.General Richard Reynolds, commander of WPAFB, read the famous pilot’s
poem, High Flight.
The historic Woodland Cemetery is located adjacent to the University of
Dayton, whose nickname is the Flyers. Woodlawn is one of the nation’s oldest
garden cemeteries. The Wright gravesite is located on a hill near the eastern
edge of the large cemetery. Wilbur died in 1912 and Orville in 1948. They are
buried on Lot 2533 in Section 101.
A
large family stone marks the spot where the Wright family is buried. Smaller
stones mark where each of the parents, Susan and Milton, sister Katharine and
brothers Wilbur and Orville are buried. The simple graves were purchased when
Susan died in 1889.
When Wilbur died at home his death made international headlines. Some 25,000
people filed past his casket at the First Presbyterian Church in Dayton as the
city came to a standstill. The burial services at Woodlawn were private.
Milton, his father, selected the Reverend E. Maurice Wilson, to officiate.
When Orville died at Miami Valley Hospital in 1948, flags flew at half-staff
nationwide. As his casket was lowered, four jet fighters flew over and dipped
their wings.
I attended the viewing at the Boyer Funeral Home at 609 W. Riverview Ave.
near the Dayton Art Institute. All schools were closed for the day. I drove by
the building again while attending the "Inventing Flight" celebration
and saw no indication of activity at the building.
At the time of Orville’s viewing there were hundreds of people there. It
was one of the largest funerals ever handled by Boyer’s.
Orville had been dressed in a regular suit and looked distinguished with his
snow-white hair and mustache.
Reverend Charles Lyon Seasholes conducted the funeral service at Dayton’s
First Baptist Church in downtown Dayton. Orville had chosen Reverend Seasholes
because he had been a friend. Orville was not a regular church attendee even
though his father had been a bishop in the United Brethren Church.
The grave of the great black poet and friend of the Wright Brothers, Paul
Lawrence Dunbar, is located a stone’s throw away from the Wright’s
gravesite. My wife’s parent’s gravesite, as well as several of her family
members, is located just down the hill.
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