Day 3: December 17, 2018
Happy Anniversary

Comment via blog

Previous Day
Prev
Next Day
Next
Site Home
Trip Home

Today's the day this trip was scheduled around. To help celebrate the 115th anniversary of the first flight, admission to Wright Brothers National Memorial is free. I arrived in time to watch the flag being raised. I suspect there may have been an excess of hands involved because it took a considerable amount of time to get things arranged at the base. But once the flag was properly attached to the rope, it was quickly raised to the top of the pole the lowered halfway in recognition of the November 30 death of President George H. W. Bush.

I considered doing some exploring but thought better of it as the crowd was growing rapidly. I did snap photos of the first flight markers and the large monument on top of Big Kill Devil Hill. The stones in the second photo mark the spots where the first flight started and ended. This week's blog post includes a picture of the "Flyover" sculpture in Dayton, Ohio, which traces the flight's path.

The official part of the day's program included some relatively short and very entertaining speeches. Besides honoring the Wrights and their accomplishments, the day is used to induct new members into the First Flight Society. This year's honoree was mathematician Katherine G. Johnson, one of the women portrayed in the 2016 movie "Hidden Figures". Dr. Tom D. Crouch of the Smithsonian Institution did the honors. Her daughter and grandson helped unveil her portrait. Johnson couldn't attend today but she's still counting and reached her 100th birthday in August. Dr. David E. Bowles of NASA's Langley Research Center was the keynote speaker.

When the ceremonies ended, I wanted to head to the flight markers but I wasn't the only one thinking that way and they were immediately surrounded. I decided to walk to Big Kill Devil Hill instead although it was hardly deserted. The hill is a large sand dune that has been covered with grass to preserve it. Climbing to the top on the concrete walkway is something of a chore but it's a far cry from trudging through loose sand carrying a glider.

The view from the top is fantastic. The last picture is of a sculpture on the side of the hill opposite the museum. I would get much closer before long.


A flyover was scheduled for 10:35 which was the time of that first flight back in 1903. I believe was expected to more or less coincide with the end of the ceremonies. The ceremonies wrapped up around 10:00, and I was atop Big Kill Devil Hill when the flyover happened. I missed photographing a few of the planes and can't identify those that I did photograph, but they sure do illustrate some of the changes that have happened in a hundred and fifteen years.

ADDENDUM: Dec 20, 2018 - Reader Mike Austing shared his belief that the four engine plane either a DC-4 or DC-6.


The area where those flights occurred 115 years ago was not deserted but is wasn't nearly as crowded as it had been earlier. The big rock marks where all four flights started. The plaque on it can be read here. The brothers alternated piloting duties. Each flight improved upon the one previous although the first three were all very similar. The fourth and final flight of the day was something of a breakthrough of its own, lasting nearly a minute and exceeding the distance of the first three combined (852 ft. vs. 495 ft.)

The recently refurbished visitors center has a nice museum with lots of well done informative displays. I did lots of reading but not much photographing. The airplane is a replica of the one that flew 115 years ago. The sewing machine is one Wilbur Wright borrowed from local resident Addie Tate to make some modifications to the flyer's wing coverings. I was attracted to it because of another sewing machine I'd recently seen. It appears (but was not described) in this week's blog post that was mentioned earlier. That machine was used by Wilbur and Orville, sometimes working together, in constructing the wing coverings.

Before leaving the park, I drove around Big Kill Devil Hill to the sculpture I had seen from above. Since some of the figures I had seen around the airplane had been moving, I assumed all were live persons and the airplane a replica like the one in the museum. I was surprised to find that it was a fully populated, but static, recreation of the first flight. I couldn't easily fit John T. Daniels, the man who took that first flight photo 115 years ago, in with the others so he is once again left out. This time, however, he gets his own photograph.

With all the day's planned activities behind me, I decided, on the spur of the moment, to head to a brewery I knew existed on Roanoke Island. That's Kill Devil Scotch Ale in the glass, and it's terrific. I sampled three other Lost Colony Brewing offerings and all were good but none matched the scotch ale. I also ate there. I had a bratwurst the menu described as "locally crafted" with "beer braised peppers and onions". I was told where it was from but forgot. I also forgot to take a picture. I do remember it was really good. And so was the scotch ale.

[Prev] [Site Home] [Trip Home] [Contact] [Next]
democrat