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Orville Wright
Flying-Machine
Airplane
Orville and Wilbur Wright, American inventors and aviation pioneers, achieved
the first powered, sustained, and controlled flight of an airplane. Wilbur
first became interested in the idea of mechanical flight after reading of
Otto Lilienthal's successful gliding experiments in Germany. From these
studies and observations, the Wrights built their first machine in 1899. It
was a biplane kite which they fitted with wings that could be mechanically
twisted.
Before attempting a powered flight, they decided to master gliding and built
three biplane gliders, which they flew at Kitty Hawk and Kill Devil Hills on
the Outer Banks of North Carolina.
They completed their first powered machine, the Kitty Hawk, in 1903, and made
history's first powered, sustained and controlled airplane flights from level
ground without any assistance at takeoff on the morning of December 17, 1903.
In 1908 they were able to conclude an agreement for production of the Wright
airplane for the U.S. Army.
Wilbur made the first public flight on August 8,1908 in France and continued
his exhibition flights there to the end of that year.
Invention Impact
They made history's first powered, sustained and controlled airplane flights
from level ground without any assistance at takeoff.
Inventor Bio
Wilbur was born in Millville, Indiana; Orville in Dayton, Ohio. They were the
sons of a bishop of the Evangelical United Brethren Church. Both completed
high school courses, but neither graduated formally.
In 1893 the brothers opened a shop for the sale, repair, and manufacture of
bicycles. Income from the shop supported them during the early years of their
aeronautical experiments.
Both the brothers died bachelors; aviation had been their only passion.
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