
The WRIGHT BROTHERS
In a modest Dayton bicycle shop two brothers turned a childhood fascination with a toy helicopter into a lifelong quest to conquer the sky. Wilbur and Orville combined a natural knack for mechanics with relentless curiosity, tinkering with kites, printing presses, and home‑made tools long before they ever imagined powered flight. Their early years were marked by countless experiments, each one sharpening the intuition that would later reshape transportation.
When they finally set up a crude wind tunnel and crafted precise balance devices from bicycle spokes, the brothers gathered the data they needed to build a true airplane. Their breakthrough culminated on a windy December day at Kitty Hawk, where a modest, 12‑second glide lifted off the ground, proving that heavier‑than‑air machines could stay aloft. That historic moment captured the daring spirit of two inventors whose methodical, hands‑on approach opened the door to the age of aviation.
Language
en
Duration
~34 minutes (32K characters)
Series
Carillon Park booklets
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2021-09-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Some of literature’s most enduring works were created without a known name attached, which gives them an extra sense of mystery. In many cases, the missing identity shifts attention away from the writer and onto the story, ideas, or tradition behind the work.
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