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  1. ilbur and Orville Wright grew up in a close, caring family. Their father, Milton Wright – a bishop in the Church of the United Brethren – was a strict disciplinarian, but he and his wife, Susan were also warm, loving, protective, and encouraged intellectual interest and constructive activity.

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  2. Sep 23, 2022 · Wilbur, left, and Orville Wright sit on the porch steps of their Dayton, Ohio, home in June 1909. via Wikimedia Commons. By: S. N. Johnson-Roehr. September 23, 2022. 4 minutes. The icon indicates free access to the linked research on JSTOR.

    • As Close as They Were, The Brothers Were Very Opposite in Personality
    • They Went to The Beach Town of Kitty Hawk, North Carolina to Test Their Gliders
    • Orville Described The 12-Second First Flight as 'Extremely erratic'
    • Despite Making History, The Wrights Received Very Little Praise
    • Orville Dedicated His Life to Protecting The Brothers' Legacy

    Unlike the rest of their siblings, including their beloved sister, Katharine, the brothers never attended college. In 1889, while still in high school, Orville started a printing press. Wilbur soon joined him in the venture, and in 1893 the boys opened a bicycle shop they would name the Wright Cycle Company in Dayton, Ohio. Cycling was all the rage...

    When the time came to test their new machine, they decided to travel to remote Kitty Hawk, a small beach community with large sand dunes on the fabled Outer Banks of North Carolina. Here, they befriended William Tate, the former postmaster of Kitty Hawk, and made friends with many locals who were bemused and confused by these stoic, self-reliant br...

    By 1903, the brothers were confident that they could build a Flyer that included an engine and solicited mechanic Charlie Taylor, who ran the bike shop for them in Dayton, to build the light-weight engine. Throughout the year, they built their new improved flying machine. In the fall, they decamped for Kitty Hawk once again, ready to make the first...

    Amazingly, this historic feat barely registered in the local and national news. Only a few days before the brothers’ successful flight, the $70,000 flying machine built by Samuel P. Langley, secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, had crashed in the Potomac River. While Langley’s failure was a sensational, much-covered story, the press-shy brothe...

    In 1912, Wilbur died at the age of 45 of typhoid fever, which he contracted after eating bad oysters at a hotel in Boston. Orville, always shyer and less worldly, sold the Wright Company soon after, making around $1.5 million in the process. He spent the rest of his life tinkering in his workshop, hanging out with his family and protecting the Wrig...

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  4. Apr 2, 2014 · They began building a grand family home in Dayton, where they had spent much of their childhood. On May 25, 1910, Orville flew for six minutes with Wilbur as his passenger—marking the first...

  5. Oct 31, 2022 · With 32-year-old Orville Wright at the controls and lying prone on the lower wing with his hips in the cradle, which operated the wing-warping mechanism, history was made December 17, 1903, at...

  6. Milton Wright (1828–1917), father of Wilbur and Orville, was a bishop in the Church of the United Brethren in Christ and was frequently away from home. His wife, Susan Koerner Wright (1831–1889), who died when Orville was a teenager, was always challenging her sons to tinker and build things.

  7. In 1903, Wilbur and Orville Wright, two brothers from Dayton, OH, became the first people to fly a heavier than air, power controlled machine, known as the Wright Flyer. This did not simply happen overnight. The brothers had been tinkering with the idea of flight off and on since childhood.

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