Invention of Airplane:orville and Wilbur Wright (1871-1948, 1867-1912)
One day in 1903, a man walked into a restaurant in Norfolk, Va. and asked for a barrel of oysters.
“What for?” the restaurant manager asked.
“There are two loony Yankees down at Kitty Hawk trying to learn to fly,” the man replied. “And they want to eat some lynnhaven oysters before they try this daredevil stunt.”
The Wright brothers, two of America’s most celebrated inventors, survived that flight, and many others. The two men were a curious pair of inventors — both had a great appetite for reading and an intense curiosity for how things worked. In fact, Orville’s housekeeper insisted on using an old-fashioned ice box instead of a modern refrigerator. “He’d only take it apart,” she said.
The Wright brothers learned about flight by watching buzzards. They also read many books on aeronautics, the mechanics of flight. Unfortunately, many of these books contained faulty information, which meant that most of what the Wrights learned came by trial and error.
On December 17, 1903, Orville and Wilbur announced that they would attempt to fly the world’s first airplane: The Wright Flyer. The public and the news media, however, were skeptical. Only five people braved the sandy winds of Kitty Hawk, N.C., that day to witness history.
As the small crowd watched, Orville took the Flyer into the air for 12 seconds. The public was still skeptical, but three years later, the Wrights obtained a patent for their flying machine, taking a huge step toward bringing the far corners of the world within everyone’s reach.
AT A GLANCE:
Orville and Wilbur Wright, American inventors and aviation pioneers, achieved the first powered, sustained, and controlled flight of an airplane.on the morning of December 17, 1903. In the two years afterward, they developed their flying machine into the world’s first practical fixed-wing aircraft, along with many other aviation milestones. 

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Invention: |
Airplane | |
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Function: |
noun / air·plane | |
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Definition: |
Winged vehicle capable of flight.The original Wright Flyer I cost less than a thousand dollars to construct. It had a wingspan of 40 feet, weighed 750 pounds and sported a 12 hp, 170 pound engine. | |
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Patent: |
821,393 (US) issued May 22, 1906 |
Filed Under: Inventions
Tags: 1867-1912), airpalne, orville and Wilbur Wright (1871-1948
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