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Wall Street History
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09/19/2003
Kitty Hawk, Part II
[Posted Tuesday PM]
*As I write this, I am supposed to have evacuated already from my place on the Outer Banks of North Carolina in preparation for Hurricane Isabel. But since where I’m headed potentially isn’t much better off, I need to post this column early in case I don’t have power later in the week.
Last week I started the story of the Wright Brothers and this past Sunday I went to their memorial in Kitty Hawk. I need to back up a bit, though, and outline some key dates in the search for human flight, then I’ll finish the story of Orville and Wilbur next week.
1000 B.C. – First known kite, in China.
1232 – Chinese military rockets.
1250 – Roger Bacon theorizes about human-propelled flight. He assumes the pilot must flap the wings.
1485-1500 – Leonardo da Vinci designs flying machines.
1499 – Giovanni Battista Danti attempts to fly with a set of wings from a tower. He fails.
1648 – John Wilkins theorizes about fixed-wing flight.
1680 – Giovanni Borelli concludes that human muscle power is inadequate for flight.
1783 – Montgolfier brothers send aloft a hot-air balloon with a passenger – the first human aerial voyage.
1799 – George Cayley theorizes about fixed-wing aircraft with control surfaces in a tail unit, the first modern configuration.
1809-10 – Cayley publishes papers, ‘On Aerial Navigation;’ lays foundation for modern aerodynamics.
1847 – William S. Henson’s “Aerial Steam Carriage” model – the first propeller-driven heavier-than-air aircraft design – fails to sustain flight.
1849 – 10-year-old boy makes short hops on Cayley’s glider. This is the first unpowered aircraft design to be inherently stable.
1857 – Steam-powered model designed by Felix du Temple makes a brief hop into the air.
1871 – Alphonse Penaud flies first powered inherently stable model aircraft.
1890 – Clement Ader makes a short powered hop into the air with his Eole, but the flight is neither controlled nor sustained.
1891-96 – Otto Lilienthal makes a series of piloted glider flights; he dies from injuries sustained in an 1896 crash.
1894 – Hiram Maxim’s aircraft lifts off slightly from restraining rails but does not fly.
1894 – Octave Chanute publishes ‘Progress in Flying Machines,’ a widely-studied history of aviation.
1896 – Chanute successfully tests a manned glider. Its biplane design and trussing system are adopted by the Wright brothers.
1896 – Samuel P. Langley’s steam-powered model Aerodrome #5 achieves the first truly sustained flight. [Per last week’s piece, Langley failed a week before the Wright brothers in 1903 in a full-sized aircraft.]
1903 – Orville and Wilbur Wright make the first free, powered, sustained, controlled flights in a heavier-than-air machine.
1904-05 – Wrights develop the first practical airplane.
1909 – First air crossing of the English Channel, by Louis Bleriot.
1910-11 – First takeoff from a ship (an adapted naval cruiser); first landing on a ship.
1914-18 – Aircraft used for reconnaissance and bombing in WWI; DeHavilland DH-4 is mass-produced by Dayton-Wright Airplane Co.
1918 – World’s first regular air mail service. William Hopson flew early mail routes.
1919 – First crossing of the Atlantic; initiation of regular passenger service in Germany.
1921-22 – Gen. Billy Mitchell proves vulnerability of battleships to aerial bombing; USS Langley is commissioned as first aircraft carrier.
1924 – Two U.S. Army Air Service planes complete first round- the-world flight.
1927 – Charles Lindbergh is first to fly solo across the Atlantic.
1932 – Amelia Earhart is first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic.
1939 – First flight of aircraft powered by a jet engine.
1939-45 – Airpower is a dominant force in WWII. Paratroopers are used heavily by Germany and by the Allies in the 1944 invasions of France.
1945 – U.S. drops atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
1947 – Charles Yeager breaks the sound barrier in the rocket- powered X-1.
1960 – Scott Crossfield reaches Mach 3 in the rocket –powered X-15; he is the first human to fly three times the speed of sound.
1961 – Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin is the first human to make an orbital space flight.
1961 – U.S. astronaut Alan Shepard is the first American launched into space. He rides in the Mercury capsule.
1962 – U.S. astronaut John Glenn is the first American to make an orbital space flight.
1965 – U.S. astronaut Edward White is the first human to walk in space.
1969 – U.S. astronaut Neil Armstrong is the first human to set foot on the moon.
1981 – Launch of Columbia, first flight of the U.S. space shuttle program.
1986 – Launch of Russian space station Mir, which remains in orbit until 2001.
2000 – Russian cosmonauts Sergei Krikalev and Yuri Gidzenko and U.S. astronaut Bill Shepherd board the International Space Station Alpha.
Back to Kitty Hawk next week.
[Source: “First Flight: The Wright Brothers and the Invention of the Airplane,” Tom D. Crouch]
Brian Trumbore
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