One Saturday in 1903, Wilbur and Orville Wright made final
repairs and adjustments to their aircraft. This was the culmination of
four years’ work by the brothers. Next morning, the aircraft was ready
and wind conditions were perfect, but there would be no flight that day.
It was Sunday - the Lord’s day -and neither Wilbur nor Orville worked
on the Lord’s day.
Wilbur
Wright was born on April 16, 1867 on a farm 13 kilometres east of
Newcastle, Indiana. He was the third son of Bishop Milton Wright, a
minister of the United Brethren Church.
The
family later moved to Dayton, Ohio, where the fourth son, Orville, was
born on August 19, 1871. As boys, Wilbur and Orville loved playing with
anything mechanical and investigating how it worked. Their toys included
a gyroscope, an old sewing machine, and a small helicopter like toy
operated by rubber bands. During their youth, they began building their
own machinery. They built a complicated lathe, and Wilbur designed and
built a machine to fold newspapers. This ability to construct their own
machinery proved extremely valuable.
As
well as being interested in mechanical equipment, the boys tried their
hand at various business ventures, some successful and some not, Their
most successful business ventures included making and selling kites, and
printing leaflets for local shopkeepers on a small printing press given
to Orville by his older brothers. Both these childhood enterprises
foreshadowed their future endeavours.
Broken
Teeth
Both
Wilbur and Orville did well at school, but neither went to University.
Wilbur’s plans to attend Yale College and become a clergyman like his
father were dashed when he lost most of his front teeth in an accident
while playing ice hockey. It was only years afterwards when he was
fitted with artificial teeth that his confidence to speak in public
returned.
After
the accident, Wilbur spent several years at home caring for his dying
mother. In March 1889, Wilbur and Orville started producing a newspaper
in Dayton. Seventeen-year-old Orville was the publisher and 21-year -old
Wilbur was editor. Soon they were publishing other newspapers as well.
However, in 1892, they became fascinated with a more mechanical interest
- the bicycle.
The
present-day style of bicycle was rapidly replacing the penny-farthing
bicycle during the 1890’s. While continuing their publishing, Wilbur
and Orville opened a shop selling bicycles.
Their
active minds constantly sought ways to be more efficient. This prompted
Orville to invent a calculating machine in 1895 to make their bookkeeping
easier. Next year they decided to design and manufacture their own
bicycles rather than merely sell those manufactured by others. Their
mechanical abilities ensured their success, but the manufacture and sale
of bicycles was somewhat seasonal. This left Wilbur and Orville some
spare time during the cold months each year to pursue another interest.
Flying
Machines
Wilbur
and Orville’s interest in flying had begun when their father had given
them a helicopter -like toy, and had continued through years of making,
flying and selling kites. However, in 1899, they decided to seriously
study aeronautics. Neither of them had officially completed High school,
but they were certainly educated and scientific in their approach.
Extensive personal study made them experts on the existing information
relating to aeronautics.
The
first step towards powered flight was to construct a glider which would
lift a man’s weight and which could be manoeuvred in flights. To test
the glider, strong head-winds were needed. The most suitable weather
conditions were found at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, during summer and
early autumn. For the next four years, the Wright brothers spent most of
their time experimenting at Kitty Hawk, and the remainder of the year in
Dayton studying and planning. Although they still owned their cycle
business, they now employed someone to operate it on
their behalf, for their hobby was occupying most of their time.
The
glider which Wilbur and Orville built in 1900 successfully supported a
man’s weight but was difficult to control. Several years earlier
Wilber had realised that the Creator’s ‘flying machine’ - the bird
- had excellent manoeuvrability. Wilbur sought to unlock the bird’s
flying secrets. By spending many hours with binoculars studying birds in
the wilderness near Dayton, Wilbur found that birds manoeuvre by
changing the shape of their wings. The Wright brothers designed a system
of pulleys and cables to change the shape of the glider’s wings in a
similar way. By doing this they achieved manoeuvrability during their
1901 experiments.
But
the brothers were disappointed with the lift they had achieved. They had
designed the curve of the glider’s wings using published tables of
information. But something was wrong. Wilbur wrote: ‘Having set out
with absolute faith in the existing scientific data, we were driven to
doubt one thing after another till, finally, after two years of
experiment, we cast it aside, and decided to rely entirely on our own
investigations.’
Solved
Balance Problem
Wilbur
and Orville’s ingenuity now shone through. They set up a wind tunnel
in their bicycle shop and experimented with different shaped curved
surfaces. Their research produced the first reliable tables of the
effect of air pressure on various shaped curved surfaces. The usefulness
of their new tables was verified during their 1902 gliding experiments
in which they achieved better lift than before, and solved the problems
of balance in flight.
The
brothers were now ready for the final step - the addition of a
lightweight engine. However, no suitable engine was available, and they
could not find an engineering company prepared to take them seriously
and build what they requested. So they designed and built their own
engine. Their experience with bicycles was put to use in the propellers.
Wilbur and Orville also built the propellers themselves, designing them
according to their own data on air pressure.
Delayed
by mishaps, minor technical problems and severe storms, the Wright
brothers continued their 1903 experiments as the bitterly cold winter
set in. Despite the harsh conditions, the tone of their letters to their
sister Kate reflected their continuing cheerfulness. As always, they
steadfastly observed their principle of not working on Sundays, even
though they often had to wait several days for suitable wind conditions
to return.
Finally,
on Thursday, December
17, 1903, Wilbur and Orville achieved their goal - the
world’s first powered flight. Orville flew the Wright Flyer a
distance of 37 meters (120 feet) staying aloft for 12 seconds, Later the
same day Wilbur flew about 260 meters (852 feet) in a flight lasting 59
seconds.
Most
other aircraft experimenters at that time had large crowds watching
their trials. In contrast, Wilbur and Orville had quietly gone about
their work without fanfare. This now proved to be a disadvantage. The
media and the public had not witnessed Wilbur and Orville’s
achievements and were not willing to believe them. A few newspapers did
carry the story but wildly distorted the facts, greatly upsetting the
brothers. This lack of recognition did not dampen the brothers’ enthusiasm for
their work - they merely continued experimentation to produce further
improvements. This was done near their home town, Dayton. For the strong
head-winds of Kitty Hawk were no longer needed once the engine had been
fitted to the aircraft.
It
was not until Wilbur flew before a crowd in France in 1908 that the
Wright brothers’ achievements were finally recognised. Unfortunately,
that same year they were reminded of the dangers of their work when
Orville was injured in a crash which also killed his passenger.
At
the end of 1909, Wilbur and Orville set up the Wright Co. to manufacture
and sell aeroplanes. However, their difficulties were not over. A number
of lawsuits took place relating to infringements of patents. Some people
still did not accept that the Wright brothers were the first to fly a
powered aircraft. Their claims were eventually accepted, but it took
many years. Wilbur did not live to see these problems resolved. He died
of typhoid fever in Dayton on May 30th, 1912 aged 45 years. Orville
lived on for many years, and died from a heart attack in Dayton on
January 30th, 1948 aged 76. Neither had married.
Christian
Character
Wilbur
and Orville had both received Jesus Christ as their personal Saviour
during their youth. Throughout their own lives, they refused to work on
the Lord’s day, and they did not drink, smoke or gamble. The level of
co-operation between Wilbur and Orville was truly remarkable, even
during their somewhat loud debates over possible solutions to problems.
They remained cheerful while experiencing danger and physical hardship.
They were not dependent on praise and recognition for their motivation,
and when fame and fortune finally came, they retained their humility.
The
Christian character displayed by the Wright brothers was evident to
those around them. Co-founder of the Rolls Royce Motor Company, CS.
Rolls, gave the following description of Wilbur and Orville:
They
have lived through continual accusations of bluff; through disbelief and
ridicule and have been unaffected. Now they have seen the sudden turn of
popular opinion and have sprung to fame; but they are still equally
pursuing their daily work with their own hands in their own quiet
way.’
And
what was their father’s explanation for these enviable characteristics
displayed by Wilbur and Orville?
‘He
never tired of relating the positive effect that the Bible had on his
children.’
The
Wright brothers used intelligence, experience, and ingenuity to design
their aircraft. They allowed chance to play no part. From studying
God’s creation in the form of bird flight, they were helped to develop
their own creation of a better aircraft. If we marvel at how great their
achievement was, how much more should we give glory to the Creator who
designed flight in the first place.
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Acknowledgment:
Crossway Magazine, UK AAACF
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Wright
Brothers History on
line |
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About
Wilbur and Orville's faith:
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God
calling |
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Entree to
Faith |
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On Course with
the Christian Faith |