For our Museum Guide, click on the logo above.


Home
Up














Need to
get your
bearings? 
Try our Museum Guide for help in navigating or Search the Museum to find specific information.

Meanwhile:
How about a
little music?

We have a selection of tunes that were popular during the first days of aviation, performed by Sue Keller, courtesy the Ragtime Press:

Alexander's Ragtime Band
Irving Berlin 1911
Aviation Rag
Mark Janza 1905
Maple Leaf Rag
Scott Joplin 1909
St. Louis Rag
Tom Turpin 1903
Waiting for the Robert E. Lee
Gilbert/Muir 1912

Want to ask a question? Tell us something? Arrange a showing of one of our airplanes? Ping:
mailto:[email protected]

nvention is where poetry and engineering come together. It is a creative endeavor where the heart beats faster with each intuitive leap, yet success is measured by the stern, unforgiving ruler of the Scientific Method. It’s not a predictable process; you never march a straight path to your goal. Instead, you crisscross the same ground over and over again as you search for the answer that you’re sure is there somewhere. Every successful invention is the result of false starts, dead ends, disappointments, self-doubt, perseverance, and the elation that comes when your faith in yourself is at last rewarded.

Nowhere is this more evident than in the tale of the invention of the airplane.

It was one of the most perplexing and dangerous research projects ever attempted, and it came within a hair’s breadth of death and disaster many times. The Wright brothers built seven flying machines in their quest for a practical aircraft, each a test bed for untried theories and assumptions. When they guessed wrong, they crashed -- and the Wrights crashed each one of their aircraft more than once. However, knowing what doesn’t work points the way to what does. After each failure, they rebuilt and modified their aircraft, incorporating what they had learned in the new design. In less than a decade they taught themselves to fly.


Click on the pictures to enlarge them.
1901 Glider Landed.JPG (20049 bytes)

Not everything that the Wrights did was a success. Of the seven aircraft that they built from 1899 to 1905, only two worked well enough to be flown any length of time -- the 1902 glider and the 1905 Flyer 3. Some, like the 1901 glider (above) were dismal failures. But the Wrights had the ability to learn from their failures as well as their successes, and so made steady progress toward creating a practical airplane.
Timeline:
  • 1896   The Wright brothers read news stories of glider pilot Lilienthal's death. They surmise it was caused back lack of control and begin to think about a control system for an aircraft.
  • 1899 to 1899   The Wrights read everything they can find on aviation and aeronautics.
  • 1899  Wilbur is twisting a long, slender box in his hands when an idea hits him for an aircraft control system. By warping the wings, he could control roll, banking an aircraft left and right. The brothers test the concept with a kite and it works like gangbusters.
  • Spring 1900   Wilbur looks around for a place to test a glider. He settles on Kitty Hawk, North Carolina because the high winds will help launch a glider and the soft sands will cushion a rough landing.
  • Fall 1900    The Wrights build a glider with wing warping controls and fly it a Kitty Hawk. It does not produce the desired lift, but the controls work well and they are encouraged enough to try again.
  • Summer 1901   The second glider is a disappointment. The controls do not work as well as the first glider, and it produces no more lift. They contemplate giving up their flying experiments.
  • Fall 1901 to Spring 1902   After a speech that Wilbur gives to the Western Society of Engineers is well-received, he and Orville decide to carry on. They test over 200 wings shapes in a wind tunnel to find which ones produce the most lift. The brothers build a new glider based on the results.
  • Fall 1902   The Wright's third glider produces the expected lift, but is still hard to control in a turn. They decided to make the tail movable, and this cures the problem. They make flight after flight, gliding over 600 feet. They begin to plan a powered machine.
  • Winter 1902 to Summer 1903   The Wright contact engine manufacturers and look for literature on designing propellers, but to no avail. They decide to make their own engine and they invent a method to design efficient propellers.
  • Spring 1903   Octave Chanute tells the Aero-Club de France about the Wright's experiments, and the members begin to copy Wright gliders in an attempt to beat them into the air with a practical airplane.
  • Fall 1903 to Winter 1903   The Wrights construct their first powered flyer at Kitty Hawk while making practice flights in their 1902 glider. They have trouble with the propeller shafts, requiring two trips back to Dayton to repair them. They aren't ready to test the Flyer until mid-December.
  • December 17, 1903   The Wrights make the first sustained, controlled, powered flights in an airplane, the Flyer 1, covering up to 852 feet and staying in the air for up to 59 seconds. After four flights, the aircraft is overturned by a gust of wind and destroyed.
  • Spring 1904 to Summer 1904  The Wrights build the Flyer 2, a copy of the Flyer 1. They resume test flight at Huffman Prairie, a field near Dayton, Ohio, but find their new machine has too little power to make more than brief hops.
  • Fall 1904  The Wright build a catapult system to sling their underpowered Flyer 2 into the air. It works well, and they begin to make progress again. Although they find the Flyer 2 difficult to control, on September 20 they fly the first complete circle in an aircraft.
  • 1905  The Wright completely rebuild their aircraft, salvaging only the engine, propellers, and hardware. The new Flyer 3 is much easier to control, and the Wrights begin to stay in the air for longer and longer periods of time. On October 5, Wilbur flies for 39 minutes, covering over 24 miles and running the gas tank dry. The Flyer 3 is the world's first practical airplane.
Box_Warp_2_small.JPG (1263 bytes)
To see the experiment that Wilbur performed with the box, click on the thumbnail of the box. To make your own box and perform the experiment yourself, click HERE.

Kite_Soaring_small.jpg (1754 bytes)
A replica of the 1899 Wright kite built by first-to-fly.com.

1900gl3.jpg (22348 bytes)
The 1900 Wright glider flown as a kite.

1901 Glider Flying.JPG (23339 bytes)
Wilbur flying the 1901 Wright Glider.

1902_Glider banking right.JPG (32729 bytes)
The 1902 Wright glider, the first ever fully controllable aircraft with roll, pitch, and yaw controls. This was the airplane on which the Wright's based their patent, and as such, is the granddaddy of all that flies.

1903 engine on bench.jpg (10667 bytes)
Unable to find a powerful, lightweight engine for their aircraft, the Wright brothers built their own.

1903_Flyer_after_4th_flight.jpg (240125 bytes)
The 1903 Wright Flyer 1, after it's fourth and final flight. This photo was taken just before a gust of wind overturned it.

1904 Flyer in flight at HP.JPG (39569 bytes)
The 1904 Wright Flyer 2 in flight over Huffman Prairie.

Wright Flyer taking off from Huffman Prairie.GIF (555685 bytes)
The 1905 Wright Flyer 3, the first practical airplane.


Back to Top 

 

Like all good scholars, we don't pretend to have all the answers, and we're constantly searching for new information or ways to make our exhibits better and more accurate. We also welcome Wright scholars and enthusiasts who would like to participate. If you have information that we should include, or want to add to what's already here, please write. Address your comments to mailto:[email protected].
Last updated: August 28, 2006.