Monday, June 24, 2019

The Wright Brothers, by David McCullough

NOTE: In honor of the 50th anniversary of Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin's walk on the moon, my book groups are reading about space.   Wilbur and Orville Wright started it all in 1903!

December 17, 1903
“Their flights that morning were the first ever in which a piloted machine took off under its own power into the air in full flight, sailed forward with no loss of speed, and landed at a point as high as that from which it started” (page 107)
Wilbur Wright
Orville Wright
Katherine Wright
Bishop Milton Wright – father
Susan Koerner Wright - mother, deceased
Lorin and Reuchlin – brothers

Carrie Kayler – housekeeper

Oliver Crook Haugh – threw bat that injured Wilbur, became notorious murderer

Paul Lawrence Dunbar – poet, high school friend, African American, first published in West Side News, became nationally known

Charles Taylor – managed bicycle shop

William J. Tate – postmaster at Kitty Hawk, NC

Octave Chanute – civil engineer, trusted advisor

Otto Lilienthal – German glider enthusiast, published unreliable data

Timeline:
1889 – Orville started printing local newspaper, West Side News
1891 – Ended newspaper, concentrated on printing business
1893 – opened Wright Cycle Exchange
1899 – Wilbur wrote Smithsonian asking for books on subject of flight
1900 – Wilbur flew manned flights at Kill Devil Hills
1903 – first piloted flight under own power
1908 – test flights in France and US
1908 – September, first death in plane accident


For Discussion:

NOTE: Page numbers are from hardback edition of book.

  1. Because of the bat injury thrown by Oliver Haugh, Wilbur did not go to Yale and instead spent three years at home reading.  How would history have been different if he was not injured?
  2. A friend commented that, when growing up, Wilbur and Orville had no special advantage. Wilbur disagreed and said, “…the greatest thing in our favor was growing up in a family where there was always much encouragement to intellectual curiosity” (page 18).  How was this important in their lives?
  3. Discuss the importance of reading to the brothers’ success.   Their father “heartily championed the limitless value of reading” and “Between formal education at school and informal education at home, it would seem he put more value on the later” (page 17).  How did this shape the brothers’ success?
  4. How has reading impacted your life?
  5. How were the brothers able to maintain their faith in what they were doing for so many years? How did they keep going despite so many setbacks? 
  6. Through everything, how did the brothers maintain their friendship and collaboration?  For example, when the plane arrived damaged in France due to rough handling by customs inspectors, Wilbur blamed Orville but Orville “knowing the stress his brother was under, made no issue of the matter” (page 163).
  7. How instrumental were the other people (Katherine, Charles Taylor, William Tate) in their success?  What part did each play?  Could they have been successful without one or more of them?
  8. Were you surprised at the end that Orville and Katherine relationship was broken due to Katherine’s marriage at age 58 to Henry Haskell?   Why do you think Orville reacted this way?
  9. Why were they so ignored by the American press and government?  When the editor of The Dayton Daily News was asked why his paper did not notice the important thing happening so close-by he said, “I guess the truth is that we were just plain dumb” (page 116).  The first accurate story was in Gleaning in Bee Culture in early 1904, but the article was rejected by Scientific American in January 1905.
  10. Wilbur and Orville had no idea the role aviation would play in war.   Do you think they would have persevered if they had known what death and destruction planes would cause in the future?
  11. What do you think they would have thought about space exploration? 
*****
First Semester Success, 2nd edition, by Dr. Arden B. Hamer, is available as an eBook and hard copy from amazon.com and hard copy from Word Association.  Click on the upper right link.

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