This story was originally published by the Ohio History Connection on Dec. 19, 2011. It is being republished here through a collaborative agreement.
DAYTON — Christmas was so important to the Wright Brothers, the aerial pioneers from Dayton assured their family they would not miss the holiday at home, even in the process of inventing flight.
A diary entry from their father, Bishop Milton Wright, courtesy of Wright State University, shows the excitement of the brothers sharing their progress, but with an eye toward Christmas, too.
Milton noted: Thurs. 17 In the afternoon about 5:30 we received the following telegram from Orvill, dated Kitty Hawk, N.C., Dec. 17.
“Bishop M. Wright: ‘Success four flights Thursday morning all against a twenty-one mile wind started from level with engine power alone average speed through the air thirty-one miles- longest 57 seconds. XXX home christmas. Orville Fri. 18 Wright.’ “
Milton again noted: The Enquirer continued following head-lines on the Wright’s flying. Dayton Journal and Cin. Tribune contain nothing! though I furnished press reporter the news.
Leading up to the holidays in December of 1903, Orville Wright sent a telegram home to his father, about the now world-famous Wright Flyer flights of Dec. 17.
Orville was most excited about the final flight of the day, which spanned 852 feet in 57 seconds. He barely mentions the first and most historic flight, which lasted only 12 seconds and traveled 120 feet.
But that short flight was one of the great moments in history — the first controlled and sustained flight in a motorized aircraft.
At the end of the telegram, Orville writes that he and Wilbur would be home for Christmas.
It would be fascinating to know what their Christmas dinner conversation was and if they understood how much their invention would change the world.
What do you think? Check out this footage from a 1938 Army Air Corps film, posted on YouTube by the Engineers Club of Dayton.
