American History Tellers - The Wright Brothers | The Art of the Bird | 1
Episode Date: January 1, 2025In the late-1890s, two brothers from Ohio, Wilbur and Orville Wright, became obsessed with what Wilbur described as “the problem of flight.” With no formal training or funding, they threw... themselves into studying the mechanics of birds, determined to design a new method of flying for humans. They soon began building a glider in the small workshop above their bicycle shop in Dayton, Ohio.It wasn’t long before the Wright brothers would travel to North Carolina’s Outer Banks to test their glider. Facing swarming mosquitoes and biting winds, they would risk their lives in their quest to be the first pilots to the sky. Order your copy of the new American History Tellers book, The Hidden History of the White House, for behind-the-scenes stories of some of the most dramatic events in American history—set right inside the house where it happened.Be the first to know about Wondery’s newest podcasts, curated recommendations, and more! Sign up now at https://wondery.fm/wonderynewsletterListen to American History Tellers on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Experience all episodes ad-free and be the first to binge the newest season. Unlock exclusive early access by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Start your free trial today by visiting wondery.com/links/american-history-tellers/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Imagine it's a breezy August afternoon in 1899, and you're standing in a field on the outskirts of Dayton, Ohio. You're a bicycle maker
But today you've left the bicycles behind in the shop to test a theory
You've become obsessed with you and your brother are going to fly a kite, but not any kite
It's a prototype of a glider you dream of one day flying in yourself
As you assemble your materials on the grass you notice a few boys have gathered to watch.
You nod in their direction.
Hey boys, stand over there please, out of the way. My brother and I are working.
Your younger brother Orville gives them a friendly wave.
I mean, you can watch, but stay off the field. We don't want anyone getting hurt.
You finish assembling the large kite, which consists of two rectangular wings
each five feet long and 18 inches wide, stacked on top of each other. They're separated by vertical
struts and all of it is held together by wire. Orville looks over to you for
instruction and you hand him a length of cord. Alright, let's get these lines tied
to the end of each wing. Alright, just make sure the other ends are tight tight.
If we want to control the kite's movements. All these lines need to be taught.
Once the lines have been secured, you grasp a wooden control stick in your hand while
your brother takes another.
All right, you ready?
I'm ready.
You each lift one end of the kite and hoist it in the air until the breeze catches it.
In an instant, it's 20 feet overhead and then 30.
You weren't sure it was going to fly so easily, but now you're amazed to see it
magically dancing on the wind.
Looks like it's working.
Let the line out slowly.
Let's go a bit higher.
Oh, she is beautiful.
You feel a surge of excitement.
You're one step closer to solving a problem that has entranced and inspired mankind forever.
How to soar like the birds.
You only wish your father and your sister Catherine
were here to see this.
All right, I'm gonna try turning her now.
But suddenly, there's too much slack in one of the lines
and the glider begins diving.
Pull, pull, pull, I can't control her.
Watch out, boys!
The glider is headed straight for the boys
who scatter and dive to avoid getting hit.
You watch as your prototype smashes to the ground and into pieces.
Ah, darn it.
You throw the control stick to the ground in frustration.
Then you turn to your brother, who's chuckling.
Oh, and what's so funny?
Well, we learned what not to do.
You feel your anger subside and your mood lighten a bit.
It's impossible not to appreciate your brother's optimism.
Well, I suppose we did. Back to the drawing board, eh?
As the boys nearby jeer at you, Orville gathers up the pieces of the broken kite.
You know, next time, let's build the glider three times larger. I mean, the idea is that
someday we're going to be riding this thing, right?
Yeah, that's right.
You know you and your brother share the same lofty dream, to build a flying machine that can carry a man
into the sky.
And despite the crash landing,
today's test feels like a promising step in that direction.
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In the mid-1890s, two brothers, Wilbur and Orville Wright, began building a small glider
in the workshop above their bicycle shop in Dayton, Ohio. The two devout sons of a clergyman had a
natural inclination towards science and mechanics. And after developing an interest in the burgeoning
field of aeronautics,
the self-trained brothers decided to devote themselves to what Wilbur called
the problem of flight.
So in the fall of 1900, the Wrights traveled to the remote, windswept
dunes of North Carolina's Outer Banks to begin testing their first
full-sized glider, large enough for a human to pilot.
For the next three years, they would
return to the small town of Kitty Hawk, testing and adjusting their flying machines, determined
to successfully complete the first powered, controlled airplane flight.
But more than becoming the first to fly, the Wright brothers nursed an ambitious vision
for their inventions and for themselves. Despite initial disinterest and skepticism
from the media and scientific community, Wilbur and Orville hoped to build a business empire
that would capture the world's attention and prove that aviation was America's future.
This is episode one in our three-part series on the Wright Brothers, The Art of the bird.
In 1884, Bishop Milton Wright and his wife Susan settled into a modest home in Dayton,
Ohio, with their three younger children Wilbur, Orville, and Catherine. Their two oldest sons,
Lauren and Roichlin, had already moved out of the house. And while for years the family
had moved from town to town due to Milton's job as an itinerant clergyman
with the Church of the United Brethren. Now, with the Wrights' two older sons on their
own, the rest of the family looked forward to a period of stability in Dayton.
Thirteen-year-old Orville and seventeen-year-old Wilbur became known around the neighborhood
as Willenorf or the Bishop's Boys. Along with their ten-year-old sister, Catherine,
the Wright brothers were raised in a disciplined, deeply religious home. Although there was no electricity or indoor plumbing,
and meals were cooked over a wood stove, the Wright household was full of books and toys for
the children to play with. Orville would later say that he and Wilbur were lucky enough to grow up
in a home environment where there was always much encouragement to pursue intellectual interests to investigate whatever aroused our curiosity.
By the age of ten Orville had begun building toy kites, sometimes selling them to classmates.
And when their father brought home a rubber-band-powered toy helicopter, the boys played with it until
they broke it, then figured out how to build their own replacement.
Orville was gentle and shy, but also known for causing mischief at school.
Wilbur was more social, athletic, and academically inclined, and by high school there was talk
of sending him to Yale.
But in 1886, while playing hockey, another boy hit Wilbur in the face with a hockey stick,
knocking out his front teeth.
Homebound after this incident, Wilbur became depressed and his studies fell by the wayside.
By then their mother Susan had become ill with tuberculosis and required constant care.
Susan Wright was the brains of the family.
Her father had been a carriage maker and as a child she spent many hours in his workshop learning to work with his tools.
And before her illness she built sleds and toys for her children and it was from her that Wilbur and Orville inherited their gift
for mechanics. They both loved to work with their hands and make things which their mother
encouraged.
In 1889, after working summers at a local print shop, 18-year-old Orville left high
school to start his own printing business in a carriage house behind their home. But that summer, Susan Wright died of her illness. She was just 58 years old,
and the family was devastated.
After the death of their mother, Wilbur joined Orwell's printing business,
and together they started publishing a weekly newspaper, The West Side News.
It made a small profit and in 1890 became a daily, the evening item.
But four months later, they closed the item to focus on their more profitable printing
business.
By their early twenties, it was clear the Wright brothers had become, as their father
once said, inseparable as twins.
They both played music and liked to cook.
Neither drank or smoked.
Both were painfully shy around women and neither seemed interested in marrying.
Wilbur once said he had no time for a wife, but they remained close to their sister Catherine,
who had a deep influence on the two brothers, especially after their mother died. Catherine
was more outgoing than her anti-social brothers and soon became the only family member to attend
college with plans to become a schoolteacher. Orville and Wilbur were content with their small commercial printing business, but in
1892, a traveling bicycle exposition called American Wheelman stopped in Dayton and inspired
Wilbur to try something new.
He decided to open the Wright Cycle Company, where he sold and repaired bikes.
Orville was intrigued by his brother's new venture and asked a family friend to run
the printing company while he joined Wilbur's new shop. The brothers soon expanded their business
and started making their own bicycles, selling them for $65 each, about $2,400 today.
And in their free time, they began to explore a long-simmering interest in gliders and kites.
And by the summer of 1896, with a cycle shop
profitable, the industrious brothers began to devote more time to their growing interest
in aviation. Wilbur especially had developed a near-obsessive curiosity with birds and
the science of flying, a subject he read about constantly. But that summer Orville contracted
typhoid and doctors said there wasn't much they could do and that Orville might die.
This frightened Wilbur who spent countless hours by his sick brother's side.
Imagine it's a cool afternoon in late September 1896 and you're riding beside your brother
in one of your hand-built bicycles.
The eyes you wearily as you slowly pedal along the path
that runs along the Miami River.
Now, you sure you're up for this?
I don't want you overdoing it.
Absolutely.
I mean, if I have to spend another day
in that stuffy room, I'll explode.
For six weeks, you've been in your bedroom
on Hawthorne Street in Dayton, Ohio,
suffering from a severe bout of typhoid
and drifting in and out of consciousness.
Your brother and sister nursed
you through, reading to you as your temperature sometimes spiked to 105. But now you're finally
recovering and thrilled to be out of the house. Well, the doctor did say the fresh air would do
you good, although I wonder if you're just trying to get out of having me read to you more about
Lilienthal's crash. You laugh because lately your brother has been obsessed with the news about the
German inventor, Otto Lilienthal, who died after crashing an experimental glider he was
flying. No, I really appreciate all the things you mean to me. Even in my delirium, I feel
like I got an education in the art of the bird. Ah, well you were listening after all,
okay. Well, you know, they say his last words were, sacrifices must be made. I guess they were.
I don't know, sounds like someone made that up.
But he was the pioneer, wasn't he?
Yeah, designed a dozen gliders.
I mean, his understanding of the mechanics of flight,
his development of the wing, right far beyond anyone else.
That man was fearless.
Suddenly, your brother comes to a stop,
and he looks into the sky off to your left.
What is it?
But he doesn't answer. You stop and look looks into the sky off to your left. What is it? But he doesn't answer.
You stop and look in the same direction where a turkey buzzard is circling.
He just smashes his bike and walks over to you, looking very serious.
Well, now listen, I've been thinking.
I can tell.
No, seriously, I have an idea.
I think we should pick up where Lilienthal left off.
What, flying gliders into the ground?
No, Lilienthal crashed plenty of times and survived.
He just got unlucky this time.
See, look at that buzzard.
He knows how to rise, how to float, how to use the wind.
That's what we should do.
What do you want us to do, close the bicycle shop and study birds?
No, we can't close the shop, of course.
We'd need the income to pay for our experiments.
Experiments?
Yeah, build a glider of our own.
Better than Lilienthal's.
You're serious, aren't you?
I'm dead serious.
Just like Lilienthal said,
it's not enough to simply want to fly like the bird.
We need to gain an understanding of the problem of flight.
We'll study how man can fly the way birds can fly,
in control, working with the wind, not against it.
That's the art of flight.
You look at your brother and you haven't seen him this energized in quite a while. You also
share his fascination with the possibility of flight. You know he's smart enough to do
just about anything he sets his mind to, and clearly he set his mind on this. Well,
I mean, if you're in, I'm in. We're a team, right? Let's just hope this doesn't kill one of us.
You grin with excitement, but you know that flying can be a deadly business,
and that more than a few men have lost their lives trying to keep their experimental machines
in the air. But you're determined that with your mechanical know-how and your brother's
knack for numbers and theory, you can succeed where others have failed.
brothers knack for numbers and theory, you can succeed where others have failed.
In the summer of 1896, as Orville battled typhoid, Wilbur had sat by his side and read to him about birds, experimental gliders, and the German innovator Otto Lilienthal. The Wright brothers
had both shown interest in flying machines as kids. but in the late 1890s, Wilbur's revived curiosity and passion infected them both.
At the time, gas-powered automobiles had begun to appear on the dirt streets of Dayton, and
Orville initially wanted to try building his own car, but Wilbur convinced him they should
build a glider instead. By 1898, their bicycle shop had become successful, bringing in $3,000
a year,
and that gave them the funds they needed to start experimenting with homemade flying machines.
Orville and Wilbur had no training, no funding, and no real expertise,
but they threw themselves into studying birds and the work of other flying enthusiasts.
Hungry for even more information, in May 1899, Wilbur sat down to write a letter to the Smithsonian
Institution in Washington. The Wright brothers were familiar with flying experiments conducted
by the Smithsonian's head secretary, Samuel Langley, and in his letter Wilbur explained
that he had been interested in the problem of mechanical and human flight ever since
I was a boy. He went on to say he was about to begin a systematic study of the subject
and asked for any papers the Smithsonian had published. He declared that he believed human
flight is possible and practical and also insisted he was an enthusiast but not a crank.
At the time, engineers and adventurers around the globe had been pursuing various schemes to
reach the skies. The earliest successful flyers had been aboard hot air balloons, which became known
as lighter-than-air machines.
They required wind to carry them from point A to B, but the Wright brothers were more
interested in gliders known as heavier-than-air machines.
The best-known glider tests had been conducted by German Otto Lilienthal, who was killed
in 1896.
In the United States, the field had
been advanced by the writings and wing designs of a Chicago-based engineer, Octave Cheneut,
and by Samuel Langley, who had successfully flown unmanned, steam-powered gliders through
the 1890s and begun working toward an engine-powered glider that could carry a pilot. That was
the Wright brothers' goal, too. A controlled, powered,
heavier-than-air glider. The Smithsonian responded to Wilbur's request with a list of books
and sent along a number of pamphlets on aviation which the brothers devoured.
Wilbur had developed a theory he called wing warping, which he believed was the key to
controlled flight. He once used an empty cardboard box to explain it to his brother and sister.
If he twisted one end of the box, the other end twisted in the opposite direction. This
was similar to the way birds tipped up the end of one wing to turn in the opposite direction.
For a glider to warp in this manner, Wilbur believed its wing should be flexible and not
rigid.
To begin testing this theory, in 1899, the brothers crafted their first glider in the
workshop above their cycle shop.
It consisted of two five-foot wings, stacked 18 inches apart.
They attached four cords, two on each end, to control the wings, similar to the way a
puppeteer controls a marionette.
After successfully testing the glider in a field that summer, the brothers then decided to build a larger flying machine, one that could carry a pilot.
Then in May of 1900, Wilbur wrote to an aeronautical pioneer, the French-American engineer and
flying enthusiast Octave Chanute. Chanute had emigrated to the United States in 1838
and was a respected civil engineer who helped design and build bridges and railroads, as
well as America's two largest stockyards in Chicago and Kansas City. In his retirement,
he became interested in aviation, and in 1894, Chanute published an influential book called
Progress in Flying Machines, which Wilbur had read to Orville during his recovery from
typhoid. Now, Wilbur wrote to Chanute seeking advice on where he
and Orville should fly their new glider knowing that they needed a place with
steady winds to test the machine and their theories. Based on Chanute's
suggestions and information from the US Weather Bureau, they chose a desolate
location 700 miles away from their home in Dayton. Until now, their interest and
experiments had been mostly theoretical, but they knew that
to get their glider into the air, they'd have to take an incredible risk.
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They say Hollywood is where dreams are made.
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By the summer of 1900, Wilbur and Orville Wright
were ready to start testing the full-sized
glider they'd built in their Dayton, Ohio workshop. They needed a wide-open testing
ground with steady winds and no rain and, ideally, someplace sandy to cushion any crashes.
Based on these criteria, the civil engineer Octave Chanute had suggested they consider
Florida, California, South Carolina, or Georgia. Then Wilbur received a letter from the
U.S. Weather Bureau that included monthly wind velocities from more than a hundred weather
stations around the country. One location stood out, Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. Wilbur wrote to
the weather station at Kitty Hawk, and in August 1900, received a reply from the town's former
postmaster, a fisherman named William Tate.
In his letter, Tate described the sand dunes and steady winds on the north end of North
Carolina's narrow barrier islands known as the Outer Banks. Tate then suggested the
brother's visit and offered his services, writing,
I will take pleasure in doing all I can for your convenience.
Encouraged by Tate's offer, the Wrights finished work on their glider, then carefully took it apart and packed it into crates. They decided Wilbur would travel
to Kitty Hawk in early September to set up a camp and test area, and Orville would follow a few
weeks later. Wilbur was now 33 and Orville 29, and the farthest either brother had ever traveled
from home was to Chicago for the World's Fair seven years earlier. Kitty Hawk was much farther away and would be no easy trip. Wilbur's
train ride to Norfolk, Virginia took twenty-four hours. From there, it took another day to
reach Elizabeth City, North Carolina. When he missed the weekly mailboat out to the outer
banks, he was forced to spend another four days trying to find someone who could ferry him and his crated-up glider the final forty miles across to Kitty Hawk.
Desperate, Wilbur finally hired a man with a filthy and rat-infested schooner. They left
shore the afternoon of September 11th, but just hours into the crossing they ran into
a violent storm that shredded the sails and threatened to sink the leaky boat. When the
storm finally eased around
midnight, they dropped anchor and slept on board. Wilbur reached Kitty Hawk the following night,
relieved that at least his glider hadn't gone overboard.
By the time his brother Orville reached Kitty Hawk two weeks later,
Wilbur had made a new friend, William Bill Tate, the fisherman and former postmaster who had
encouraged them to come. He had helped Wilbur set up his makeshift camp and together they'd begun assembling
the Wrights glider.
With just 50 small homes in Kitty Hawk, most occupied by fishermen and their families,
the sight of the Wrights flying machine became an instant curiosity.
Also curious were the brothers themselves.
Locals observed that they usually dressed as if for church and often argued with each other but said little to strangers. They also worked
relentlessly to assemble their strange and complicated machine. They slept in a tent,
sometimes shivering beneath blankets as cold winds blew outside. When the wind was too
strong for flying, they watched the many shorebirds and took notes. And by early October, the Wright Brothers' full-size glider was finally assembled and
ready to test.
It consisted of two identical wings, 17 feet by 5 feet, each wrapped in white satin fabric
and mounted on wood framing held together by wire.
A flat rudder section they called an elevator jutted out the front, designed to control
up and down motion.
The glider had no tail and weighed roughly 50 pounds.
The brothers first tested their machine as a kite, holding onto it and steering it with
ropes from the ground, similar to how Wilbur had flown the first smaller glider back in
Dayton the year before.
But at Kitty Hawk, steady winds of 15 to 20 miles an hour and occasionally gusting up
to 30 made it difficult to prevent the glider from soaring off.
In fact, one day a sudden gust flipped the glider as it lay on the ground and sent Orville
flying 20 feet.
The glider was smashed and took several days to repair.
But finally, after two weeks of testing, taking notes, and making adjustments, Wilbur was
ready to fly the glider himself.
Lying flat in a small gap in the middle of the lower wing, he would control the glider
using his feet to nudge a T-shaped wooden device connected by wires to the wings.
A slight push left or right would twist the wings and turn the glider in either direction.
He controlled up and down movement using a lever that tilted the elevator in front of him. After climbing in and preparing for his test, Wilbur managed to get
airborne a few times, but only for short hops and low to the ground. He needed more speed and height
if he had any chance of staying in the air, and that's when Bill Tate had an idea.
Tate had an idea.
Imagine it's October 19th, 1900. You're a fisherman and former postmaster in the coastal North
Carolina town of Kitty Hawk.
For weeks, you've been helping two bicycle makers from Ohio who've
come to your windswept town to fly their homemade glider.
At first, you thought they were crazy, but you've been impressed
by their hard work and fearlessness.
After watching one of the brothers crash the glider a few days ago though, you suggested they
tried launching from a higher location, a series of high dunes four miles away. So today you're
helping them drag their glider and equipment up to Kill Devil Hills. As you trudge through the sand
beside Orville, ascending the 100-foot dune known as Big Hill. The wind kicks up, and you start to realize this might have been a mistake.
I don't know, are you sure about this?
The wind's much more intense up here.
It can easily gust the 30, even 40 miles an hour.
Well, it is risky for sure, but we need more wind.
If we can get a steady 30 miles an hour, I think that's ideal for taking.
And you can handle up to 40?
I believe so.
Well, at least with the steeper drop, you'll get more momentum sliding down the long trails,
and a downslope to land on. We don't want another repeat of last time. Last time was a first good
flight. But we need more lift, more wind, and more time in the air to work out the kinks of the controls.
As you reach the top of Big Hill, you catch your breath and take in the view.
With the blue-green Atlantic less than a mile to the east,
Roanoke Sound to the west, and the rolling dunes to the north.
Oh, that's beautiful, isn't it?
Not a tree or bush inside, just sand and more sand.
But Orville isn't paying attention to the view.
Well, we've got work to do.
Let's get the launch rail set up.
You join the Wright brothers as they begin to assemble the wooden rails that you hope will launch their glider to the sky. But you also hope it wasn't a bad idea to bring them up to Big Hill.
You'd hate for your suggestion to cause one of the Wright brothers to get seriously hurt.
On October 19th, after weeks of testing near Kitty Hawk, the Wrights agreed with Bill Tate's seriously hurt.
On October 19, after weeks of testing near Kitty Hawk, the Wrights agreed with Bill Tate's
suggestion to drag their glider up to the high dunes known as Kill Devil Hills.
There Wilbur made his first truly successful flights, soaring 100 yards and reaching speeds
of 30 miles an hour.
Except for a few crashes that required repairs, Wilbur managed
to stay airborne for 15 seconds at a time, easily the longest flights the Wrights had
made during their time there. But Bill Tate and other observers who witnessed Wilbur's
crashes were convinced the brothers were crazy to take such risks.
Five days later, the Wrights packed up to leave. The combined total time in the air
of Wilbur's flights was only about
two minutes, but they were satisfied with their accomplishments. Their battered machine had served
its purpose, so they left it behind, and Bill Tate's wife salvaged the sateen fabric from the wings
to make dresses for their daughters. Orville and Wilbur had thrived at Kitty Hawk despite many
hardships, and they returned home to Dayton determined to learn and experiment more so that when they came back to Kitty Hawk it would be with
a bigger, better machine.
Back home in Dayton, Ohio in early 1901, Wilbur wrote again to Octave Chanute to explain how
he and Orville were now building what they believed would be the largest glider ever constructed.
Chanute wrote back saying he'd be passing through Dayton and wanted to visit. The Wrights
were grateful for the interest of a respected aviation pioneer like Chanute, but they also
preferred working without visitors or interruption. Wilbur warned Chanute that he and his brother
were putting in 14-hour days on the new glider, though they would be willing to see him on their day off a Sunday. Chanute arrived on a Wednesday, but the two Wright
brothers and their father and sister welcomed him into their home anyway. Before he left,
Chanute gave the brothers a gift, a French anemometer, an instrument that measured wind
speed to help them with their upcoming flight tests. Then that July, the Wrights headed back to Kitty Hawk with their new glider,
arriving just after a hurricane had swept over the Outer Banks.
This time the Wrights made camp at the foot of Kill Devil Hills,
closer to their launching ground.
And in setting up camp, they were eager to improve their living conditions.
With the help from Bill Tate, they drove a 12-foot pipe into the sand
to get drinking water and had lumber shipped over to build a shed that served as a workshop and sleeping quarters.
But despite the improved accommodations, they still had to contend with the unpredictability of nature.
On July 18th, just as they were ready to start flying, a massive cloud of mosquitoes swarmed the area.
Orville wrote to his sister to describe how the insects nearly blocked
out the sun and complained that their bites covered his body, leaving lumps the size of
hen's eggs.
But finally, on July 27, the mosquitoes cleared and the brothers were ready to begin testing
their glider. Again, Wilbur was the pilot. Bill Tate and his brother Dan helped Orville
carry the glider back up to its launch spot after every one of Wilbur's flights. Unfortunately, this new machine performed poorly, worse than
the previous year's glider. Wilbur found it difficult to get enough lift, and when
they made adjustments to the front elevator, it created too much lift. Wilbur declared
that something was radically wrong. He and Orville tore apart the wings and rebuilt them
with less curvature,
hoping that flattening them would help. And by early August they were ready to try again.
Now with the reconstructed wings, the glider performed better, reaching speeds of 20 miles
an hour. But there were still some control issues and in one crash Wilbur badly bruised
his face and ribs. Still, with every flight, they managed to achieve a little bit more success.
Octave Chanute, who had come to visit for a few days,
thought the flights were quite impressive.
After watching Wilbur sail 100 yards at a time
and skimming the ground for smooth landings,
Chanute left Kitty Hawk convinced
that the Wrights had made more progress
than anyone else in the flying game so far.
But the brothers, on the other hand, returned home to Dayton dejected.
On a train ride west in late August 1901, Wilbur complained that many of their calculations seemed
worthless and they were still just groping in the dark. It had been a rough summer of rain and
mosquitoes, and in a rare expression of gloom, Wilbur told Orville that not in a thousand
years would man a-flying.
They soon realized that they would have to rethink everything and cast aside all their
previous assumptions in order to crack the code of flight.
I'm Tristan Redmond, and as a journalist, I've never believed in ghosts.
But when I discovered that my wife's great grandmother was murdered in the house next
door to where I grew up, I started wondering about the inexplicable things that happened
in my childhood bedroom.
When I tried to find out more, I discovered that someone who slept in my room after me,
someone I'd never met, was visited by the ghost of a faceless woman.
So I started digging into the murder in my wife's family, and I unearthed family secrets
nobody could have imagined.
Ghost Story won Best Documentary Podcast at the 2024 Ambys and is a Best True Crying
Nominee at the British Podcast Awards 2024.
Ghost Story is now the first ever Apple Podcast Series Essential.
Each month, Apple Podcast editors spotlight one series that has captivated listeners with
masterful storytelling, creative excellence,
and a unique creative voice and vision.
To recognize Ghost Story being chosen as the first series essential, Wondry has made it
ad-free for a limited time only on Apple Podcasts.
If you haven't listened yet, head over to Apple Podcasts to hear for yourself.
Hey, it's Dan Tuberski, and my team and I are excited to share that our series, Hysterical,
has been named Apple Podcasts Show of the Year for 2024.
From Wondery and Pineapple Street Studios, Hysterical dies into one of the most shocking
outbreaks in American history, a medical mystery that had ripple effects well beyond the tight-knit
community where it began.
In 2011, the girls at One High School in upstate New York began exhibiting a bizarre mix of
neurological symptoms.
Ticks and twitches and strange outbursts.
Question is, why?
Was it mold in the school buildings?
Was it a contaminated water source?
Or what if the cause of the contagion
wasn't coming from their physical environment at all?
As their symptoms got worse,
their search for answers brought a media firestorm
down upon their small town,
and soon enough the entire nation
was trying to solve the medical mystery,
from Dr. Drew to Aaron Brockovich.
Believed by some to be the most severe case of mass hysteria since the Salem witch trials,
Hysterical is a podcast about the desire to be believed, and what happens when the world
tells you it's all in your head.
Follow Hysterical on the Wondery app, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can binge all episodes of Hysterical ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus.
In the summer of 1901, the race to create a flying machine was picking up pace. Inventors in Britain, France, and elsewhere were launching experimental aircraft skyward,
but by the turn of the century, one of the most promising and best known was the large multi-wing machine being developed by Samuel Langley of the Smithsonian Institution.
Based on the success of the unmanned steam-powered gliders he had flown in the 1890s,
Langley had received $50,000 in grant funding from the United States War
Department to build his newest machine, a dinosaur-looking beast called the Great Aerodrome.
By comparison, the Wright's glider, really an oversized kite, seemed like a modest competitor
to Langley's well-funded, well-publicized invention. And while Langley received public
funds and adulation from the press, the Wright brothers worked mostly in obscurity and on
their own dime. So it was especially discouraging
to return home from Kitty Hawk with less than stellar results. But the brothers did what
they always did, got back to work in their shop. Optimism, determination, and recovery
from setback came naturally to them. Orville would later say that during rough patches
there was some spirit that carried us through. They also had an eager champion, an Octave Chanute, who had been impressed by the flights
he witnessed at Kitty Hawk. In late August of 1901, just days after returning home, the
Wrights received a letter from Chanute. He wanted Wilbur to come to Chicago and speak
about their experiments before a meeting of the Western Society of Engineers. Wilbur reluctantly
agreed and on September 18th, he nervously
delivered an address he called, Some Aeronautical Experiments. This would be the first public
account of the Wright Brothers' glider flights and their theories on flying. In the years ahead,
it would be quoted frequently, becoming something of a bible for future aeronautics enthusiasts.
In his address, which was later published in the Society of
Engineers journal, Wilbur made the point that practical experiments were essential to progress,
telling the audience, if you really wish to learn, you must mount a machine and become
acquainted with its tricks by actual trial.
And a few months after giving this talk, on January 25, 1902, the Wright brothers received
their first ever mention in the press, a brief
article in the Dayton Daily News that said their successful experiments in North Carolina
might revolutionize the work of experts in making tests of aerial navigation.
The two brothers appreciated the recognition, but they were already looking ahead to next
year's trip to Kitty Hawk, and there was much work to be done.
So in the second floor workshop above their bicycle shop,
they built a wind tunnel to conduct tests on wing shapes.
This six-foot-long wooden box had a high-powered fan at one end.
At the other, they tested the effect of the air on miniature wings they made with
old hacksaw blades cut into different sizes and hammered and bent into different shapes.
They tested the aerodynamic performance of each tiny wing by attaching them to a contraption consisting of the rim
of a bicycle wheel mounted on the handlebars of another bicycle.
Octave Chanute knew the brothers were using their own funds for their scrappy homemade
tests, so he offered to help find them a financial patron like Andrew Carnegie, who Chanute knew
personally. Wilbur politely
declined, telling Chanute they intended to keep paying for all their own equipment and experiments
with profits from the bicycle shop. The brothers had decided early on that they'd rather control
their experiments and own any future patents without entering into a relationship with an
outside partner. This decision to keep their work a family enterprise would contribute to their reputation as secretive and insular. It also meant they'd have to
constantly raise their own funding, and in fact they couldn't afford to build their
next glider until they sold enough bicycles to pay for it.
The end result of all their hard work, the wind tunnel tests, and further tinkering was
a redesigned glider with reshaped and much larger wings. At thirty-two feet long, they
were nearly twice the size of the glider Wilbur had flown two years earlier. And in September
of 1902, the brothers disassembled the glider, packed it up in crates, and returned to Kittyhawk
for the third time. For weeks they assembled their camp at
Killdevil Hills, including a more elaborate shed that served as sleeping quarters and a workshop
where they reassembled their third full-size glider. But then they received a surprise visit
from their older brother, Lauren, followed by another unexpected visitor, Octave Chanute.
Wilbur and Orville preferred working alone, and rather than welcoming the support,
they were irked by having guests. They also didn't like sharing their workspace and cramped
living quarters. So by the time they were ready for Orville to take his turn at piloting his
first ever flights, the brothers were both in foul moods. Then, on one of his test flights,
Orville crashed. The brothers spent the next few days arguing over what went wrong
and how to fix it.
Imagine it's October 3, 1902. You and your younger brother are standing in your work
shed sawing wood for a wing frame. You've been at Kitty Hawk for nearly a month and
the initial glider tests were going well. You even commenced Orville to finally make
his first flights, but a few days ago you
watched in horror as he rose straight up more than 30 feet in the air, veered hard right,
and then crashed into the sand.
You were relieved that he wasn't badly hurt, but the glider was in pieces.
So now you're trying to repair it.
All the while, you and your brother haven't stopped arguing about what went wrong.
I still say you forgot to use a front rudder. It'll take at least three days to make these repairs.
I didn't forget. The front rudder isn't the problem. There's something wrong with the rear rudder.
It's causing the machine to skid sideways.
Now you just need more practice making turns.
I've had plenty of practice, brother. I really think it's the rudder that's the problem.
So I have an idea. What if we replace the fixed rear rudder with a larger one that moved? Something we could control? Give us another way to offset the
drag? What, and take the whole machine apart again? Well, not necessarily. I mean, if we removed the
two vertical fins and built a single finned rudder, maybe five feet high, we could make it hinged.
A rear under that's hinged, not fixed? How would we control it? We can't keep adding components.
It's going to get too complicated to fly. No, we could control it, and it wouldn't be that
complicated. We could connect the rudder to a cradle on the wing beneath our hips. Maybe
when we twist our hips to tilt the wings and turn, that twisting motion turns the rear rudder at the
same time. Not, well, actually, you normally scoff at Orville's ideas, and to be honest,
at almost any idea that's not yours.
But this time, you're surprised to realize that your brother might be onto something.
You think this might give us more control?
Well, it'd prevent the drag and the skidding I've been feeling in the air.
Ah, well...
Let's build this new rudder of yours.
Okay, when?
Right now.
Let's build this new runner of yours. Okay, when?
Right now.
You realize that your resistance to other people's ideas
and the constant bickering with your brother
aren't your best qualities.
Something your sister has pointed out time after time.
Then again, on days like today,
sometimes these battles of will end up leading to new ideas
and your brother's suggestion
may be a significant step forward.
The Wright brothers had constructed their third glider based on wind tunnel tests they conducted
in late 1901 and early 1902. And during initial flights at Kill Devil Hills in late September of
1902, it performed well enough. But after Orville crashed and repairs were needed, he
argued they should rethink and refine the control system by building a new, movable
Reader-Rutter. This was a significant improvement in their ability to control the glider in
the air. Ock of Chanute and the Wright's older brother Lauren witnessed a few of these
successful flights. And after they left, Wilbur and Orbel stayed, continuing taking turns
flying. Through mid-October they made hundreds of test flights, some of them very short, but all
providing valuable data. Despite dealing with cold weather, heavy rain, and subsisting largely on
canned beans, the two brothers were elated by their most successful set of test flights so far.
Wilbur wrote to his father, We now believe that the flying problem is really nearing its solution.
After leaving the Outer Banks, Octave Chanute briefly visited Samuel Langley at the Smithsonian
Institution in Washington and told him about the Wright Brothers' successes. He encouraged Langley
to go see for himself, but when Langley sent a wire to Kitty Hawk asking the Wrights if he might
visit, they told him it was too late, they Hawk, asking the Wrights if he might visit,
they told him it was too late they were packing up to leave. Back home in Dayton,
the Wrights read stories about Langley, who had continued to develop his aerodrome flying machine.
And in early 1903, Langley announced plans to begin testing it by launching it from a large
houseboat on the Potomac River near the nation's capital. Wilbur and Orville may have enjoyed scrapping with one another, but they rarely got bothered
by competitors.
Yet, in the aftermath of their successful flights at the Outer Banks and now reading
about Langley's attempts, they began to feel slighted.
They had flown farther and longer than anyone in a heavier-than-air machine, but still received
limited recognition from the press or the scientific community.
Overshadowed by well-financed experiments like Langley's, they were still just a curiosity,
two strange, straight-laced bicycle makers from Ohio.
And if they wanted to pull ahead in the race toward flying, they needed more power than
just the winds off Kitty Hawk.
So the Wright brothers would have to make an innovative breakthrough to gain the acclaim and recognition they felt they deserved. From Wondery, this is episode one of our three-part
series, The Wright Brothers from American History Tellers. On the next episode, as Samuel Langley
attempts to launch his highly anticipated aerodrome machine before large crowds outside Washington,
on the sand dunes of North Carolina's
Outer Banks, the Wright brothers make a leap forward.
If you like American History Tellers, you can binge all episodes early and ad-free right now
by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts. Prime members can listen ad-free
on Amazon Music. And before you go, tell us about yourself by filling out a short survey at wondery.com slash survey.
If you'd like to learn more about the Wright Brothers, we recommend The Wright Brothers by
David McCullough and Birdmen by Lawrence Goldstone. American History Tellers is hosted, edited,
and produced by me, Lindsey Graham for Airship. Audio editing by Christian Peraga. Sound design by Molly Bach. Music by Lindsay
Graham. This episode is written by Neil Thompson. Edited by Dorian Marina. Produced by Alita
Rosansky. Managing producers are Desi Blaylock and Matt Gant. Senior managing producer Ryan
Moore. Senior producer Andy Herman, executive
producers are Jenny Lauer Beckman, Marsha Lewy, and Erin O'Flaherty for Wondering.
This is a story that begins with a dying wish. One thing I would like you to do. My
mother's last request that my sister and I finish writing the memoir she'd started
about her German childhood, when her father designed a secret super weapon for Adolf Hitler.
My grandfather, Robert Lusser, headed the Nazi project to build the world's first cruise missile, which terrorized millions and left a legacy that dogged my mother like a curse.
She had some secrets. Mom had some secrets.
I'm Suzanne Rico.
Join my sister and me as we search for the truth behind our grandfather's work
and for the first time face the ghosts of our past.
Geez, who is he?
Listen to The Man Who Calculated Death, exclusively with Wondery+.
Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.