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The Wright Company - From Invention to Industry (Paperback)
Loot Price: R525
Discovery Miles 5 250
You Save: R78
(13%)
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The Wright Company - From Invention to Industry (Paperback)
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List price R603
Loot Price R525
Discovery Miles 5 250
You Save R78 (13%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Fresh from successful flights before royalty in Europe, and soon
after thrilling hundreds of thousands of people by flying around
the Statue of Liberty, in the fall of 1909 Wilbur and Orville
Wright decided the time was right to begin manufacturing their
airplanes for sale. Backed by Wall Street tycoons, including August
Belmont, Cornelius Vanderbilt III, and Andrew Freedman, the
brothers formed the Wright Company. The Wright Company trained
hundreds of early aviators at its flight schools, including Roy
Brown, the Canadian pilot credited with shooting down Manfred von
Richtofen - the \u201cRed Baron\u201d- during the First World War;
and Hap Arnold, the commander of the U.S. Army Air Forces during
the Second World War. Pilots with the company's exhibition
department thrilled crowds at events from Winnipeg to Boston,
Corpus Christi to Colorado Springs. Cal Rodgers flew a Wright
Company airplane in pursuit of the $50,000 Hearst Aviation Prize in
1911. But all was not well in Dayton, a city that hummed with
industry, producing cash registers, railroad cars, and many other
products. The brothers found it hard to transition from running
their own bicycle business to being corporate executives
responsible for other people's money. Their dogged pursuit of
enforcement of their 1906 patent - especially against Glenn Curtiss
and his company - helped hold back the development of the U.S.
aviation industry. When Orville Wright sold the company in 1915,
more than three years after his brother's death, he was a
comfortable man - but his company had built only 120 airplanes at
its Dayton factory and Wright Company products were not in the U.S.
arsenal as war continued in Europe. Edward Roach provides a
fascinating window into the legendary Wright Company, its place in
Dayton, its management struggles, and its effects on early U.S.
aviation.
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