{"id":12271,"date":"2020-03-19T15:02:19","date_gmt":"2020-03-19T19:02:19","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ncseagrant.ncsu.edu\/coastwatch\/?page_id=12271"},"modified":"2024-08-15T12:55:25","modified_gmt":"2024-08-15T16:55:25","slug":"at-the-dawn-of-flight","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ncseagrant.ncsu.edu\/coastwatch\/at-the-dawn-of-flight\/","title":{"rendered":"At the Dawn of Flight"},"content":{"rendered":"\n\n\n\n\n
The first successful flight of the Wright Flyer. Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n BY LARRY E. TISE <\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n Torrential winds, wild ponies, marauding pigs, and an ever-shifting coast \u2014 they all came with one of the best laboratories on the planet for learning how to fly.<\/strong><\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n \u201cI chose Kitty Hawk because it seemed the place which most closely met the required conditions,\u201d Wilbur Wright wrote his father, Bishop Milton Wright, on September 9, 1900. Inscribing his first letter from North Carolina on the stationery of the Hotel Arlington at Elizabeth City, the elder of the two Wright brothers who invented flight explained why the tiny fishing village on the Carolina coast provided the perfect place for conducting \u201cpractical experiments\u201d on what he called \u201cthe flying question.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n \u201cAt Kitty Hawk, which is on the narrow bar separating the Sound from the Ocean,\u201d he continued, \u201cthere are neither hills nor trees, so that it offers a safe place for practice.\u201d Besides, \u201cthe wind there is stronger . . . and is almost constant\u201d \u2014 sufficient, he believed, to lift from the ground a controlled, man-carrying flying machine.<\/p>\n\n\n\n What he called \u201cthe required conditions\u201d at Kitty Hawk had been confirmed to him by both the world\u2019s foremost authority on flight at the time \u2014 Octave Chanute \u2014 and the U.S. Weather Bureau. Those required elements included several crucial items: sustained winds in one direction of 21 miles per hour; soft sands for many inevitable crashes; remoteness from the prying eyes of big-city newspaper reporters; and reliable transportation access from Dayton, Ohio. No other place known to either Chanute or the Weather Bureau contained all those factors the Wrights sought as their most permanent laboratory for testing several modes of flight.<\/p>\n\n\n\n But neither Wilbur Wright nor his brother Orville had ever flown in an airship or a flying machine, nor even attempted to make any kind of device, other than a kite, that would fly. Nor had they ever seen an ocean \u2014 much less the kind of barren, sandy, windswept barrier chain of islands they were about to experience for the first time on the coast of North Carolina. Wilbur described Kitty Hawk as unduly remote \u2014 even to the people in Elizabeth City. \u201cNo one seemed to know anything about the place or how to get there,\u201d Wilbur told his family.<\/p>\n\n\n\n