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  1. They would spend the next month repairing their various craft, and building a new glider featuring three wings set one on top of the other and braced together with an innovative design, the Pratt truss configuration that Chanute had employed in constructing railroad bridges.

  2. May 18, 2018 · Eschewing secrecy, they were very public, and also very successful. More than 700 glider flights yielded a treasure trove of information, unlocking some of the vexing mysteries of the calculus of flight. Chanute graciously shared with the larger aviation community the solutions to the aerodynamic riddles he solved, seeking no patents on his work.

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  4. Octave Chanute (February 18, 1832 – November 23, 1910) was a French-American civil engineer and aviation pioneer. He advised and publicized many aviation enthusiasts, including the Wright brothers. At his death, he was hailed as the father of aviation and the initial concepts of the heavier-than-air flying machine.

    • French, American
  5. Octave Chanute was a leading American civil engineer and aeronautical pioneer. (Read Orville Wright’s 1929 biography of his brother, Wilbur.) Immigrating to the United States with his father in 1838, Chanute attended private schools in New York City. His first job was as a member of a surveying.

  6. back to hall of fame. Octave Chanute. 1999. about. (1832-1910) Early Pioneer; Glider Designer. Bio. Octave Chanute was possibly the first person to publicly promote the sport of gliding and soaring in the United States of America. In September 1896 a Chicago Tribune reporter quoted him as saying, "...

  7. Octave Chanute's Glider Experiments. Octave Chanute arrived at Miller Beach, Gary, Indiana, on June 22, 1896, to perform gliding flight experiments in the Dunes just west of this site. Over 700 successful flights provided him with significant aerodynamic data.

  8. Chanute was born in 1832, a native of France, and came to his adopted country at the age of six, when his father accepted the post of vice-president of Jefferson College in Louisiana. In 1844 they removed to New York City, where Chanute completed his common-school education, and, to use his own expression, became thoroughly Americanized.

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