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The Wright 1903 Flyer holds a special place in aviation history as the vehicle in which mankind first achieved controlled, powered, and sustained flight. The Wrights made no drawings of the aircraft when they originally built it and they continuously modified the craft during flight tests. The aircraft also underwent modifications due to damage suffered following its last flight, and the reconstruction work of 1916 and 1925-1927. Thus, there will always be some doubt about the exact configuration of the aircraft during the 1903 flights.

Identifier

NASM.1986.0152

Creator

Science Museum of London

Date

1928-1986

Provenance

NASM, Science Museum of London, Ford Museum, Gift/Transfer, 1986-0152, Some NASM

Extent

9.3 Cubic feet ((3 48"x36"x3" drawers))

Archival Repository

National Air and Space Museum Archives

Scope and Contents

This collection consists of drawings of the 1903 Wright Flyer executed at various times during the life of the aircraft: Science Museum of London Drawings -- commissioned when the aircraft was on loan to the Museum; Ford Drawings -- sponsored by the Ford Motor Company which were supervised by Orville Wright and Charles Taylor; Christman Drawings -- drafted by Louis Christman who consulted with Orville Wright and other sources; and the National Air and Space Museum Drawings -- commissioned by the Museum during the 1985 restoration of the Wright 1903 Flyer. These drawings include three view drawings as well as both the airframe and engine components.

Rights

Material is subject to Smithsonian Terms of Use. Should you wish to use NASM material in any medium, please submit an Application for Permission to Reproduce NASM Material, available at Permissions Requests

Restrictions

Some restrictions on distribution.

Topics

Aeronautics

Aeronautics -- 1903-1916

Wright (Brothers) 1903 Flyer

Type

Collection descriptions

Archival materials

Drawings