Borrowed Bones
Families build you up, tear you down, and sometimes drag you into something truly unhinged. Borrowed Bones unearths the bizarre, toxic, and fascinating stories of family dynamics gone sideways. From the macabre to the just plain strange, we’re digging deep to uncover the skeletons hiding in the closets of history, culture, and beyond.
Borrowed Bones
The Wright Bros. (and sister).
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Everyone knows the Wright brothers. Almost nobody knows the sister who kept the whole operation running. Katharine Wright packed the trunks, managed the politics, and got erased anyway. Listen to hear the Wright family story.
Sources:
Wright Family Bio, Wright Family History, Wright Family Stories , An Unusual Childhood , Milton's Diaries, Wright State University , Brittanica , The Wright's Sister , Who Flew First?, Katharine Wright , Katharine's Letters, The World Magazine , NPR- The Forgotten Wright, Bicycle Shop , Printing Press, New York Times , Samuel Langley , In Her Own Wright-Podcast
E-Mail the show at BorrowedBonesPodcast@proton.me
Molly Bz Cookies - Promo Code: Bones
Get Good Feels Cannabis Seltzer - Promo Code: Bones
We’re Back After Life Chaos
SarahHello everyone.
ColeHello.
SarahI'm Sarah.
ColeI'm Cole.
SarahYou're listening to Borrowed Bones, a podcast about fucked up, interesting, and toxic families.
ColeMm-hmm. It's been a minute.
SarahOh man.
ColeSince we were in it.
SarahYes. It's been. Gosh, two months.
ColeYeah. Thereabouts. Since we've recorded an episode.
SarahYeah. Um, yeah. Sorry guys. It's, we've had a lot of life happen.
ColeWith her ceiling caving in.
SarahYeah, well, my double foot surgery, which I was doing. Okay. Mm-hmm. Yeah. And then we recorded
Colesince then. Yeah. Mm-hmm.
SarahAnd then I started getting better, but I got a new job in the middle of healing.
ColeYeah.
SarahSo that was fun. And then
ColeOh, yeah,
Sarahyeah, yeah, yeah. During my recovery.
ColeYeah.
SarahYeah.
ColeYeah.
SarahUm, but then our ceiling
Colecaved in again as it mm-hmm. That was pretty much every year, but
SarahYep. The apartment above us, um, water leakage. And then it turned into like a waterfall in our dining room, which was a lot of fun. And they're just finished with that. Oh. So that's been fun. And we're moving.
ColeYeah. That's the plan.
SarahSo yeah, there's just been a lot going on..
Coleyeah. I'm fighting the after effects of a head cold. Oh yes. A migraine. So if I'm sounding congested or
Sarahmm-hmm.
ColeA bit more lethargic in my delivery than normal. That's why.
SarahYes. He's getting over a cold and I still dragged him into the pod lab'cause I can't sit on this anymore. I've had this script ready to go for a while.
ColeHe almost got a fly on it.
SarahOh.
ColeYou can't contain it anymore, it's gonna fly the
Sarahsubject. Oh, I thought you meant fly like a bug.
ColeI'm doing a other things fly. This all makes sense when the subject is revealed. This is a poor attempt at foreshadowing and pun based foreshadowing.
Why The Wright Family Matters
SarahThis has clearly been a while since we've been here. We're not clean at all. Nothing crisp here today. Nope. We're gonna fumble through this one. Okay. All right, let's go. Alright. Today we are talking about the Wright family,
Coleas in the Wright brothers
Sarahand W Sisters. Yes.
ColeOkay. Like that Wright family?
SarahMm-hmm.
ColeOkay.
SarahW-R-I-G-H-T, the Wright Brothers.
ColeWhich Carolina was it? North, south.
SarahNorth.
ColeNorth. Okay.
SarahThis is not about how they invented flight. Um, this is in there of course, but this is about the family. And how did the Wright brothers Okay. Yeah. I
Coledunno anything about
Sarahem. Yeah. How, how did, how were they raised? How'd they get to the position of being airplane inventors? Yeah. Like how do you just turn into that?
ColeI just know trivia.
SarahYeah.
ColeThey invented Orville and, uh, shit. What's his name? Orville.
SarahOkay. Well
ColeI don't remember the second one. You will learn 1903, right? That was the year.
SarahMm-hmm.
ColeAnd the first flight was only like 18 seconds or something. Technically,
SarahI forgot the numbers. I have
Coleit written down anyway. Yeah, yeah,
Sarahyeah. Yes.
ColeBut that's like the basic, I knew it was one of the Carolinas. It wasn't even positive witch of the two.
SarahYeah. Let's get into it because there's a lot that I did not know either. And I hope that this is a fun surprise for everyone else as well.
ColeYeah. I have no idea. Let's go.
Susan And Milton’s Unusual Parenting
SarahAlright. Susan Corner met Milton Wright in 1853.
ColeOkay.
SarahWhile she was attending Hartsville College in Indiana.
ColeA woman.
SarahA woman, woo.
ColeIn the Antebellum South. Attending college.
SarahIndiana.
ColeOh, Indiana.
SarahYes.
ColeOkay. Sorry. Yeah. I just assumed Caroline in my head already. Again, I'm a little hazy.
SarahYes.
ColeIn my head
Sarahthis will be, he's on, called I firing all cylinders. There's cold medicine in him and a lot of, yeah, yeah. A lot going on. Susan was a student of Hartsville College and Milton was the college minister.
ColeOkay.
SarahHe preached for the Church of the United Brethren in Christ, and that was the same church that Susan's family just joined.
ColeAll right.
SarahSo pretty natural that they met and fell in love.
ColeOne of those many Protestant sects mm-hmm. At the time.
SarahYeah. Yeah. Milton asked Susan to marry him right before he went on a church trip to Oregon. Like he, he does a lot of traveling throughout his whole adulthood mm-hmm. With, um, preaching for the church. When he asked her, he was like, I'm gonna go to Oregon though, but like, will you marry me? And she said, ask me upon your return.
ColeThat's smart.
SarahYeah. That's what I thought too. Yeah. He returned, he asked her again, and she. They married in 1859 and the first part of their marriage, the couple moved around the Midwest a lot like for like about the first half of their marriage.
Colecause he's like a circuit writing.
SarahMm-hmm.
ColeMinister, right? Yes. So he's popping around. Okay. He doesn't have like one church that he, he moves around.
SarahI didn't look too far into what the church is set up like, but that's the reason they moved is the church. And because he is, he eventually becomes the bishop.
ColeOkay.
SarahSo he does travel a lot and I don't know, I don't, I don't know if it's tent, revival, it doesn't matter. Yeah. They travel a lot because he's a bishop and it's all in the Midwest.
ColeOkay.
SarahUltimately though, they settle in Dayton, Ohio in 1884.
ColeOkay.
SarahYeah, we do a big jump here.
ColeYeah.
SarahWe'll go back and forth a little bit because the kids are gonna be born and this is just, the background.
ColeYeah.
SarahSusan would give birth to seven children. Five of them would survive to adulthood.
ColeNot bad odds for the time.
SarahYeah, not too bad.
ColeFive outta seven.
SarahYeah. The first child was his son named Reland. Nice. I'm pretty sure I'm pronouncing that correctly.
ColeCan I see it?
SarahHold on. He was born in 1861 and he was named after the German theologian.
ColeTheologian.
SarahIt's been a while. Yeah. After the German theologian. Johan Reland. Okay. R-E-U-C-H-L-I-N.
ColeSounds. Yeah,
SarahI looked it up and that's how it was pronounced. Okay. To me. So I don't know exactly. If you do know, please let me know.
ColeI know know any better.
SarahIn 1862, another boy was born. His name is Lauren, L-O-R-I-N, and he was spelled
Coleokay
Sarahafter a random city that they found on a map. Okay.
ColeDo you know which country that city was in?
SarahI don't know.
ColeOkay.
SarahSusan then had twins and they were the ones that did not make it past infancy.
ColeThat's fairly common in the era too. The twins to die young,
Sarahthey're usually premature. Yeah. So I mean, I was in the NICU for a few weeks, Sam and I. Yeah.
ColeI
Sarahdon't know. We were like a month early almost. So
ColeJesse James is his wife, had a set of twins that died in infancy between his surviving son and daughter.
SarahAw. See?
ColeYeah. Just, yeah.
SarahUm, Wilbur.
ColeWilbur. Wilbur.
SarahWilbur. There it is. Yeah. He was born in 1867.
ColeAll right.
SarahAnd he was named after a well-known minister at the time. Then Orville was born in 1871, and he was named after a respected clergy man.
ColeOkay.
SarahThen Catherine with a K was born in 1874.
ColeMm. The K.
SarahMm-hmm. She wasn't named after anyone in particular, but because, her name was Catherine, they wanted to make it special, so they added that K in there.
ColeOkay. And I mean, only the boys are needing after notables.
SarahYeah.
ColeWomen weren't doing notable things before then.
SarahWhy? They could have at least
Colecame to her after her mom. Trajectory. Oh, yeah. Or if that's their, like ministers, like there wasn't like female ministers probably for them to name a daughter after,
Sarahbut they're still notable women.
ColeThere's always Mary, like nothing else. You just named Mary. Mary.
SarahWell, they still gave her something with that K. Yeah.'cause that was different for the time.
ColeYeah. Mary Kay.
SarahMm-hmm. I,
Colethere's no Mary, I'm
Sarahjust, yeah. There's no marriage. Just Catherine. Um, it's, I read that Milton and Susan did not give middle names to their kids because their first names were distinct enough.
ColeYeah.
SarahLike they really made it a point. Yeah. As the siblings grew, they formed like two separate cliques. The older two, Reland and Lauren were close.
ColeMm-hmm.
SarahAnd then Wilbur, Orville and Catherine were close.
ColeOkay.
SarahAnd
ColeOh yeah. So there's five surviving. Mm-hmm. Yeah. So two oldest and three. Yeah. Mm-hmm.
SarahAnd for the time, the late 18 hundreds, the Wright children had a really great childhood. All of their emotional and physical needs were met. Something you don't really hear too often from the 18 hundreds,
Colethey're fairly well todo or or middle class, I guess you would Upper
Sarahmiddle, I would think. Upper middle. Yeah.
ColeYeah. I mean, their father is a minister and or a, a bishop.
SarahA bishop.
ColeMm-hmm. So he's gotta be, you know, not living lavishly, but he's in the position of esteem and
SarahYeah. They don't want
Colenot hurt. Yeah. They're not wanting for anything. Anything. Yeah.
SarahSusan and Milton believed all of their children needed to be well educated. Milton. Well, Susan went to college.
ColeOh, that's right. Yes.
SarahMm-hmm.
ColeOkay.
SarahShe's a
Colelittle feminist for her time.
SarahYes. And, um, Milton is an abolitionist too.
ColeOh, oh, shit.
SarahYeah. Yeah. They're, they're, they're liberal leaning for sure. Well, this
Coleis after the Civil War now, though.
SarahWell, he, he was raised an abolitionist, sorry, it is after civil war. It's
Cole1869 and I'm against slavery bolds dance there.
SarahListen,
ColeHey, hey.
SarahLiving in today's world, I don't know anymore when it ended. Okay.
ColeYeah.
SarahAnyway, Milton did grow up with a family that did not support slavery.
ColeOkay. Good to know.
SarahMilton had a large library that the children, were free to use whenever they wanted.
ColeMm-hmm.
SarahSusan encouraged curiosity and independent thought she would repair and build toys around the house. She also fixed appliances that were need, that needed fixing, like sewing machines. Um, there was a hand cranked washing machine. I don't know if they had those things. Yeah. But I was like, what appliances would she have fixed? So things like that.
ColeThis reminds me of the family from the hunting of Hill House. The mini series. One like the, the dad and the five kids and Oh, the moms at home. Like taking care of everything. And I know like he wasn't a minister in this series. Yeah. But just the The family layout. Yeah. Oh
Sarahyeah. And the twins. But even though the twins didn't survive. Yeah. But yeah, I see it.
ColeBut yeah,
SarahWilbur and Orville would later give credit to their mom for their mechanical skills.
ColeOkay.
SarahThey believed that they wouldn't have developed the same way with like their skills at mechanics
Colebecause they clearly wouldn't, we're
Sarahso rust rusty at this.
ColeBeen naturally inquisitive and curious. And she just fostered that
SarahYes.
ColeIn them.
SarahYeah. They wouldn't have been, been able to like sharpen that talent.
ColeYeah. Some kids just naturally wanna know how machines work.
SarahAnd she encouraged it. Yeah. She said, let's figure it out together, boys. And they did, of course, Wilburn, Orville were very close. They often played together and they would start tinkering with toys and other things. They became very interested in aviation though. In 1878 when their dad brought home a toy wooden helicopter that was motorized by a rubber band.
ColeOkay.
SarahAnd you would, I don't know how it word, wind it up, wind it up somehow, and then it would fly up and then slowly fall down.
ColeMm-hmm.
SarahThe boys liked it so much that it eventually broke from overuse, which then just caused them to create their own version of it. Yeah. They're like, all right, well let's make one ourselves. And they both do look back at this as the point of them being interested in flying.
ColeThat's their book of Genesis moment.
SarahMm-hmm. Now we're gonna go to the older boys, Reland and Lauren. They attended Hartsville College together in Indiana the same as their parents.
ColeMm-hmm.
SarahNeither of them got a degree though. They dropped out, they're like, ah, it's not for us. Okay. They moved back to Dayton and they lived in a boarding house for a year. This is, um, 1884 now. And then Reland would marry in 1886 and he moved to Kansas City, Missouri.
ColeOkay.
SarahHe stays there until the end.
ColeIs he kind of out of the picture now or does he Yeah. Okay. He's more or less,
Sarahyeah.
ColeYeah. Alright.
Susan Dies And Katharine Steps Up
SarahUm, Lauren also lived in Kansas City for a little bit with Rein, but then he would move back to Dayton in 1889 to be closer to the family because their mom, Susan was dying of tuberculosis.
ColeOh. Consumption.
SarahMm-hmm.
ColeShe's on longer.
SarahIt sounds like she had it for a while. I didn't write it down. Oh, yeah. But I think she had it for a few years.
ColeThere's, yeah. People could live with it 20 years at times. Yeah. Gosh. And it didn't always just infect. It doesn't,'cause it's still, it's still around, but like, it wasn't always just the lungs. It could be different organs. Really? Yeah. It could affect your livers, your intestines, your stomach.
SarahOh, I didn't know that. I just
Colethink of most commonly it was the lungs. That's what we think of, you know, doc holiday, that felt like, yeah. You think of doc holiday? Yeah. You could have tuberculosis of your intestines. Tuberculosis of your
Sarahew
Colekidneys and whatever.
SarahOkay.
ColeYeah.
SarahOh, I don't wanna know about that. Anyway, moving on. Susan Wright passed away in 1889.
ColeAlright. She never saw her kids go airborne.
SarahNo. Milton the father, father, he wrote in his diary, she expired and thus went out the light of my home. Aw. Isn't that sad? Aw. Wilbur was Susan's main caregiver for the last two years of her life. He was staying by her side. He, he was all in. Katherine was only 15 when her mother died, and then she had to assume all of those responsibilities as a woman of the house.
ColeMm-hmm.
Sarah (2)She would manage the household and whenever her father would travel, she would take care of everything. Milton Was a nice dad. He was really great. You can get a sense of that. Like he writes in his journal a lot. He loves his wife, but he still expected Katherine to rise to the occasion. He was like, you're going to high school. Yeah. You're graduating and you're gonna maintain this household. And she was like, I got you dad. And then she did great. She graduated high school in 1893.
Cole1893.
SarahMm-hmm. What else happened?
ColeI dunno. For some reason that date just flew my head. For some reason,
Sarahthe Fox sisters were on their shit at this time.
ColeOh, okay.
SarahListen to that episode guys. The Fox Sisters
Colecrossover.
SarahYeah.
ColeWe're playing Easter eggs for our previous ones. Ooh, the Bar of Bones Universe.
SarahYes. I'm creating a universe here.
ColeThey're all gonna team up in our fanfic later.
SarahI wanna team up with morbid.
ColeOoh.
SarahAnyway, back to Lauren just for a second. Now
ColeThe second born.
SarahYes.
ColeI keep thinking of like Lauren Michaels to remember that it's a boy and uh, a girl. You know, it's spelled differently.
SarahOkay. I was like, it's Lauren. Yes.
ColeYeah, yeah.
SarahUm, in 1892, Lauren married and had four children with his wife.
ColeSame year he had four children.
SarahJust kidding. No, no, no. I'm just giving a background of these two guys of what's happening, so I don't wanna forget about them, but this is what they're doing.
ColeMm-hmm.
SarahHe did grow close to Wilbur, Orville and Catherine at this time when he went back home to be with his mom. Like I said, Reland is still Kansas. He's in Kansas City. He's in Kansas City. Mm-hmm. Yeah. And, Lauren stays in Dayton. I I also read that Reland and the family had some distance between them because no one liked Lyn's wife. Oh. And I read that that was true, but I never got an explanation as to why
Coleshe's a stone cold bitch.
SarahSo I, so, so that's the distance there. Like, nothing really happened. It just was like, I'm pretty sure that's it. Like, they didn't like his wife,
Coleshe just didn't fit with the family vibe. Yeah. She just,
SarahI don't know.
ColeThat girl is not sure,
Sarahis
Colejust not my type of girl,
SarahI guess. So, yeah. Now back to Catherine. After Catherine graduated high school, she attended Oberlin College from 1893 to 1898, and she did get her bachelor's degree. She's
Cole93 to 98. Mm-hmm. She's there? Mm-hmm. Okay.
SarahWell, she graduated high school in 1893, so, okay. She
ColeWhere's Oberlin? I've heard of that one.
SarahI forgot.
ColeI don't wanna state that soon.
SarahIs it in Illinois? Look it up.
ColeI'm gonna look it up.
SarahI, I thought I wrote it down, but I didn't.
ColeOberlin is in Ohio. Okay. That makes sense. Oh, it
Sarahis Ohio's,
Coleit's a private college. It's a private, private liberal arts college. In Oberlin, Ohio. Known for its strong academics, progressive history. First co-ed college to admit black students in renowned conservatory of music. Okay.
SarahOh nice.
ColeSo anyway. Yeah, it's in Ohio.
SarahThat
Colemakes
Sarahsense, sense.
ColeConsider they lived in Dayton.
SarahThat's why I didn't write it down because I probably just assumed I'd remember If it was somewhere far flu,
Coleyou would know like, where is that? It's in Nevada. Like you would note that.
SarahUh, again, it's been a while, so we're shaking off the rust here. Yeah.
ColeDust off the bones.
SarahNice. Um, Catherine is the only right child to get her college degree.
ColeReally? Mm-hmm.
SarahThe brothers never went to college.
ColeAnd she was still the fifth favorite. Jeez. Probably. That's cute. You gotta call. Is it because she's a woman? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
SarahYes it is.
ColeYeah. Yes. Exactly. That's what it's, unless one of their brothers turns out gay. Maybe she could move up, drink four.
SarahJesus.
ColeFor the times.
SarahI know. I know. Anyway, she became a Latin. What?
ColeShe became Latina. What?
SarahWe have to get it together. She's transracial in the 1890s. Anyway, Catherine, we,
Coleshe was the head of the NAACP chapter
Sarahcamp getting a laughing fit. Okay. Okay. We okay? Work through it. Work through it. We can do this.
ColeFuck us
Sarahthought.
ColeFocus.
SarahOkay. Focus. Okay. Catherine became a Latin and English teacher.
ColeCool. The language died on her shoulders.
SarahYeah, I know. She's like the last one. The last one. Yeah.
ColeOh, I mean, it's still being taught.
SarahYeah, that's true. Um, when Catherine returned to Dayton, Wilbur and Oroville were beginning their aviation experiments.
ColeOkay.
Printing Press Origins Of Wright Brothers
SarahBut before the boys actually really threw themselves into the business of flying, they got into a couple other fads of the time. Yeah. It would just seemed more, some, they needed to make some money first.
ColeMissteps on the way, or not missteps, but some steps. A staff.
SarahYeah.
ColeYeah.
SarahThey owned and operated a printing press from 1889 to 1899.
ColeFor 10 years. Okay. 10 years. Yeah. Yeah.
SarahI know. It sounds like one
Coleyear
Sarahor 10.
ColeYeah. A yeah. Yeah.
SarahIt's weird.
ColeThrew me for a second. Again. Headache. Yes.
SarahOrville was still in high school at this time. He was 18 years old though. Um, so he
ColeThat's a man.
SarahYeah, that's a man
ColeBack then,
Sarahthat was just an odd reaction. That's funny.
ColeHad, was since is the 20th century adventure.
SarahYeah. Okay. Orville was still in high school at the time and Wilbur was 22 years old. The press itself was designed by Orville.
ColeOh. Mm-hmm.
SarahSo they just started this right out of high school basically. Yeah. I don't know what Wilbur did for, I think, oh, he was helping his mom during the, his younger years.
ColeWilbur, the older of the two of them. Mm-hmm. Okay. Wilbur then, or, okay.
SarahMm-hmm. So Wilbur didn't really do anything on his own right out of high school'cause he was taking, taking care of his mom. So now they're ready to go. They published their own newspaper called The West Side News. It was a weekly paper for the residents of Dayton to read
ColeOn the west side.
SarahYeah, only the west side.
ColeYeah.
SarahTheir dad supported them. He would have the boys print things for the church. One contract with the church was for Wilbur to write an editorial about the United Brethren Church Commission.
ColeOkay.
SarahAnd the cover page credited Wright Brothers job printers as the publisher. And this is the first time we ever see the famous phrase,
ColeWright Brothers.
SarahWright Brothers. In reference to just Wilbur and Orville.
ColeYeah. Okay.
SarahAnd this was about 1889 when this was published.
ColeOkay. Yeah. That makes started there.
SarahMm-hmm. So dad was like, here you go. I'll get you started. And this was the first time they have the Wright brothers. The printing press grew. They were printing 500 to a thousand sheets per hour, thanks to Orville's improvements on the printing press. So he kept making it better.
ColeOh.
SarahAnd they were able to like out print other printing presses in the area because it was so impressive. Others would come to them and pay them to make printing presses for them as well.
ColeOh, all right. So it's become kind of a cottage industry for
Sarahthem. Mm-hmm. In 1893, Lauren began working for Oroville and Wilbur at the Printing press. He's around helping out. He's
Coleworking for his younger brothers.
SarahIt's really, he know. Well, it's
Colea family business.
SarahIt it, yes. But
Coleyes,
Sarahit's kind of, Lauren does this because he knows that the brothers want to. Invent flying.
ColeOkay.
SarahSo he's trying to help them and a family business. Sure. I'm I, I bet. Because it was successful. So he's like, Hey, what's going on here? You know,
ColeI need a job.
SarahI got some kids, I had four kids in one year.
ColeYeah.
Sarahbut yes. Um, Lauren would probably tell you that he did it to help his brothers invent flying.
ColeYeah. Without me, they couldn't have done it, you know? Yeah. Yeah. Okay. We don't know your name, Lauren.
SarahYeah. Um, this, I thought this was interesting, it's a little sidebar, but orville's high school friend, Paul Lawrence Dunbar, who is a black man, he later became a famous writer and poet. He began the Dayton TA newspaper. Oh. And the boys printed it for him.
ColeOkay. Very progressive with them again.
SarahMm-hmm.
ColeRuns in the family.
SarahYeah. Yep.
ColeThey're on the right side of history. Hey,
Sarahhey. I never thought of that. Doing this whole thing. That's funny. That's funny. That's why
Coleyou need me.
SarahJob security, huh? Yeah. But yes, the Dayton Tad was a weekly paper for the black community in Dayton. However, Wilburn Orville only printed. Three issues of it, because they sold their printing press. Okay. They saw that newspapers were like a, a fad at the time. There was a newspaper on every corner. Different companies, different people doing them.
ColeLike a podcast?
Sarah (2)Yeah, just like a podcast. Um, we're not trying to invent things though, and like get a nest egg going from this. Just They are, they're, they're determined. The boys really started ramping up with their inventions and experiments after a man named, I had to look this one up too. He's German, A man named Lily Anth.
ColeOtto Li
SarahYes.
ColeYeah, yeah,
Sarahyeah.
ColeOkay.
SarahOtto Lillian Al died in 1896, and then the boys were really like, okay, we need to get moving on this now. It's our
Coleturn.
SarahYeah. Well, they like, he inspired them and I, I wonder if just the news,'cause he was the, he was a famous gl, right? Yes.
ColeSo yeah,
Sarahhe was the first to create wings for flight.
ColeOkay. It wasn't technically like aero. I don't know exactly what aeronautics are to find on, but there was no energy created.
The Bicycle Shop Funds Flight
SarahRight. Air. There was no motor. He's just, yeah. He's just gliding. He couldn't control air. Yeah. He was just gliding. Yeah. Yep. Now, the boys were really interested in making money fast. They needed to fund their dream and they saw this new bicycle craze that was everywhere at the moment. And the boys themselves loved riding bicycles and they were always. Improving their bicycles and fixing them, repairing them, adding, things to them as they do, they like to bells and whistles. Bells and whistles. Yes. And their friends would come to them when they needed repairs
ColeYeah. Bring a penny fathering in.
SarahYeah.
ColeGet your wheels oiled and lubed.
SarahSo the Wright brothers were like, let's open up a bicycle repair shop. Mm-hmm.
ColeDo they sell vacuums too?
SarahOh, no.
ColeThat's a weird, reference I just made because, and basically for some reason where we live, there's bicycles and vacuum cleaners go together in stores. Yep. There's like three or four that are just. Vacuum cleaners and bicycles, and I've never in my head associated them as two items you'd buy together or shop for at the same time. But
Sarahyeah,
Coleit's a thing in mid-Michigan. I don't know.
SarahI have taken a vacuum to get repaired there and then browse the bicycles as I'm waiting for the vacuum cleaner.
ColeYeah, it's weird.
SarahIt's so strange. But I
Colelove it. It's like having, like we have microwaves and pogo sticks. That's what we have here. Why?
Sarah (2)Yeah, so they start their own bicycle repair shop. They also will sell bicycles at this shop. It was called the right cycle company.
ColeThey're not the most original when it comes to branding. They're very literal. Just Yes. Right. Brothers this right, brothers that.
SarahWell, back then everything kind of was, yes. Yeah. I don't think you could trick people like, or you could easily trick people and they didn't want that. They wanted to be very blunt.
ColeYeah. They didn't have like bone willie's bike store.
SarahYeah. Um, Wilbur and Orville also had a machinist working for them at the bicycle shop. His name is Charlie Taylor and he would end up helping with their experiments with flying. Okay. Eventually too. So I just like to give him a shout out'cause he exists as well. These boys didn't do this alone is pretty much what I'm getting at here with this whole story. Okay. You learn how much help and s not help, but support they had.
ColeMm-hmm. Sponsors.
SarahYeah. The right cycle company was very successful. It ran from 1892 to 1907.
ColeYeah.
SarahThey would have five locations by the end of it, and the final one was used for their flying experiments and it's where they would build their first motorized plane. The fourth location of the bicycle shop, was the last one that they did any bicycle business in, and it's also the only one left standing today.
ColeWhere's that at?
SarahIt is located on South William Street in Dayton, Ohio.
ColeOh.
SarahAnd it's open to the public.
ColeIt's Is it like a museum or a functioning bike shop?
SarahIt is a part of the Dayton Aviation Heritage National Historic Park.
ColeOkay.
SarahReferred to today as the Right Cycle Company complex.
ColeOkay.
SarahCool. It's so funny you asked the perfect questions. Yeah. That went straight with my script.
ColeYeah. Is it a functioning bike shop or is it a museum?
SarahCan we do that every time? Yeah, just you ask the questions that I assume you will. That's awesome. No, I like the surprises though, too. Those are my, those are my favorite really. But yes, this is a museum with multiple attractions. Of course it has the Wright Brothers, but it also has Paul Dunbar in the museum.
ColeOkay.
SarahThis makes me kind of wanna go to Dayton, Ohio.
ColeI think I've been there. I think I've driven through it.
SarahI mean, yeah, but like go there with a new set of eyes. Like actually go there as a tourist instead of just like, right. Wouldn't that be funny?
ColeYeah. The tourism industry in Dayton, Ohio.
SarahThe Wright brothers, it's everywhere.
Yeah.
ColeIt's not even thing, they're most famous. It's not even the state that has them on the license plate,
Sarah (2)which is silly to me. It's so silly to me.
ColeYeah. We even got to how they wound up in
SarahYeah.
ColeThe Carolinas yet.
SarahI know. It's crazy. We will,
Coledidn't Randy Newman do a song called Dayton, Ohio? Someone did a remos piano bell. I think it was Randy Newman. I dunno, go
Sarahahead. I'll have to look for it.
ColeI'm gonna see if I can find it, if it's true or. So, yeah, Randy Newman has a song that I thought was called Dayton, Ohio, but it's not just Dayton, Ohio. It's the full title is Dayton, Ohio, 1903.
SarahOh, see,
Coleand it's about the Wright Brothers, essentially. Yeah. It's all about, yeah. And the song came out in 1972 off his album Sail Away. So yeah.
SarahAnyway. Their bicycle business was so successful that they made somewhere between 2000 and 3000 a year, which equates pretty good. Equates to 77,000 to 116,000 a year. Yeah. So
Colefive's day standards
Sarahpretty good. Yeah. By today's standards, they were able to save up$5,000 to finance their experiments. This, that's about 194,000 today.
ColeOkay.
SarahBy 1902, the brothers were not very involved in their bicycle shop anymore. The day-to-day stuff was managed mostly by Lauren, Lauren and Catherine
ColeCath. Oh,
Sarahmm-hmm. Ation. She's still teaching.
ColeYeah.
SarahCatherine's still teaching, still minding the household because her dad is still traveling everywhere as a bishop and helping the brothers with their bicycle shop and their experiments.
ColeOkay.
SarahThey sold their bicycle company in 1907.
ColeNot to Lauren though, right? No.
SarahNope. The whole family's in it together. Yeah, they all move with the brothers. Okay. In 1909, this is when they converted their fifth bicycle shop building into the machine shop
Kitty Hawk And Wing Warping Breakthrough
Colein Flint, Michigan. I'm just joking because that's like a music venue in Flint.
SarahOh yes, that's right.
ColeI've never been to it'cause Mike and I, bands don't go there, but
SarahOh
Coleyeah, I've heard things.
SarahI've never been, I just know it exists.
ColeYeah.
SarahOkay. The boys do give credit to their bicycle days, um, saying that it let them practice and improve on their mechanical skills.
ColeMm-hmm.
SarahThis is a great example of it. So Catherine was like hanging around with the boys while they were tinkering with things, trying to figure out this wing warping for the plane.
ColeOkay.
SarahSo they had the glider. But they need to learn how to manipulate the wings to do what they want them to do for direction. And they called it wing warping. And Wilbur twisted a bicycle inner tube box to show Orville his breakthrough idea for warping aircraft wings and how they can imitate bird's wings. So they pretty much played with the bicycles to learn how to make airplanes.
ColeOkay.
SarahAnd maybe that's what the bicycle shop and the vacuum cleaners do because they repair vacuum cleaners at the store in Bay City.
ColeWhat, what?
SarahSo maybe they use their mechanical
Coleskills. I don't even think the same parts.
SarahNo, they're not
Colelike, and there's, I'm sure there's some overlap, but like no more than like any other household appliance. Like what? It's so baffling to me.
SarahCome to Bay City, get a vacuum and a bicycle. Yeah. One stop shop.
ColeYeah.
SarahOkay. The boys first experiments with wing warping were made with like small plane kites that were flown in the summer of 1899. The wing warping that they figured out how to do, allowed them to control the direction of the kite. So for them that was success. They were like, all right, now we're gonna make a full sized glider and try this wing warping out. In September of 1900, the boys took their first flying machine to Kitty Hawk, North Carolina to test it out.
ColeWhy do they go from Ohio to North Carolina?
SarahLauren actually helped them pick the location.
ColeOkay.
SarahBecause it was. A little more of a private area. Not a lot of prying eyes, but mainly a lot of space, a lot of wind and good elevation.
ColeOkay.
SarahThey never lived there, to my knowledge.
ColeYeah. I was like, yeah.
SarahYeah. They would go there for the experiments and then come back to Dayton.
ColeOkay. So it'd be Lauren or someone like just researched ideal locations?
SarahThat's my takeaway from it. Yeah. I didn't search too hard, but I did read that, so. Okay. Um, I do believe that that's the case, that they were like, this is a good spot to do it because of the physics of it all. Okay. Yeah. When they made their first trip to test the glider, Catherine lent Wilbur her trunk, and she packed food for them while they were gone. She let Orville know that she fired the guy that he put in charge of the bicycle shop.
ColeOh. Yeah.
SarahShe's like, by the way, I fired this guy.
ColeWhat was he doing?
SarahI don't know.
ColeEmbezzling,
Sarahwho knows? Probably embezzling
Colepennies.
SarahStealing something.
ColePennies petty. Follow things. I just like need reference. Any chance I get to reference penny far things.'cause they're a ridiculous thing. Like
Sarahbring them
Coleback. There's hipsters who are, but anyway,
Sarahwe did see them quite a bit in the millennial days. Oh yeah. In like 2014. Yeah. We did see a couple 13.
ColeYeah.
SarahThey were trying to come millennials. Yeah, we can do better.
ColeYeah.
SarahNo, I don't care. I want them back. We can't do better. I want them back. Ugh. Wilbur and Orville would test their first right glider in October of 1900. So they went to Kitty Hawk in September. They're still there. They have to like, put things together when they're there. So about a month later, they're ready to test their first glider.
ColeOkay.
SarahAnd they flew it like a kite, even though it was huge.
ColeSo they're not on it,
Sarahnot on it right
Colenow. There's no one, it's not a man's aircraft.
SarahIt, it can hold, a man can, but they're testing it. But they try it first like a kite.
ColeOkay. Smart.
SarahMm-hmm. And they weren't quite there yet. They, they, they still needed to improve. But Wilbur was asked to speak to the Western Society of Engineers in Chicago in September of 1901. So even though they weren't where they wanted to be, they were further ahead than others. And the Western Society of Engineers wanted to hear what he had to say. Hmm. Wilbur didn't wanna go, he didn't like public speaking. Both him and Orville are very much the awkward, inventors. Yeah.
ColeWe're into it for pure research.
SarahYeah. Yeah. Like they didn't wanna do it, but Catherine
Colemm-hmm.
The 1903 Flights That Changed History
SarahCatherine wrote to her dad, wrote a letter and said that she nagged him into going. She also said that she helped Wilbur pick out an outfit. She wanted him to look swell and Wilbur has bad taste in clothing, so she chose Orville's clothes to give to Wilbur. Okay. So she outfitted him for this speech?
ColeYeah. His presentation.
SarahMm-hmm. Catherine also in a letter to her dad said that she felt the meeting in Chicago would provide Wilbur with the opportunity to get acquainted with some scientific men, which may do him a lot of good.
ColeOkay.
SarahShe understood connections.
ColeShe might find some friends and some peers and
SarahYeah.
ColeNetworks.
SarahRight. Networking connections. And I think the boys were just like, we don't care. We don't need anyone. Yeah. And she was like,
we
Colehave each other and a flight in our planes.
SarahThat is kind of the vibe of the boys. It is. And Catherine's like, we can do a lot more if we just network though. Like it's, we
Colecan do more. I don't know if either married and I hope you don't tell me till it becomes germane.
SarahOkay. In October of 1902, this is when they had their first successful gliding experiment with control. Okay. So they could glide with control now, but they're still not powering their own plane, but they can control the glide. So that's the next step.
ColeOkay.
SarahBefore leaving on their 1902 Kitty Hawk trip, Orville and Wilbur worked at home on fabric wings. They were like literally sewing them and making them, and I just thought this was a cute little window into their home life because Katherine write writes a lot of letters to her father. So this is another letter to her father, she says, will spins the sewing machine around by the hour while orb squats around marking the places to sew. There is no place in the house to live, but I'll be lonesome enough by this time next week and wish that I could have some of this racket around.
ColeHmm.
SarahIt's just, I like that little picture that it painted. Yeah. Just them feverishly working. Yeah. And she's just kind of watching them in attending the home and it's annoying, but I am gonna miss it when it's gone. Yeah. Because they basically go to Kitty Hawk, do the experiments, figure out what they have to do, go back to Dayton, do tweak, tweak this and that, and then they go back to Kitty Hawk. It's this back and forth, back and forth all the time.
ColeI, I wanna see how the distance is from
SarahYeah,
ColeDayton,
SarahI didn't look it up
Coleto Kitty Hawk.
SarahI'm gonna pause it.
ColeSo today, if you are driving from Dayton, Ohio to Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, it'd be almost exactly 11 hours.
SarahOh wow.
ColeIf you're a bicycling, it'd take three days.
SarahOh wow.
ColeYeah.
SarahI mean, they
Colewould stay there. So it's seven 50 miles roughly.
SarahThey would stay there for like months. Or so, yeah, they would stay there for a long time. No. Yeah, they would stay there for a long time. So I don't know where they stayed when they were, if they had a second house. I didn't look that far into that because I didn't want this to be a two-parter, so I had to cut it off. But if you guys want more on this, I can definitely do a two-parter. Um, and I'll just redo it, but I wanted to keep it. One, the boys returned to the outer Banks of North Carolina in September of 1903. They spent seven weeks assembling, testing and repairing their powered flying machine. They were constantly testing it, so they haven't really done it yet, right? Mm-hmm. September, 1903. They've done little tests here and there, but nothing major. Finally, on December 17th, 1903,
Colejust barely made it into the year. I should just wait until January 1st.
Sarah (2)Why?
ColeBecause then it's starting off the new year.
SarahOh. I
Coledunno.
SarahYeah. But now they can say they invented flight one year earlier than
ColeOh, yeah.
SarahYou know what I mean? So,
Coleyeah.
Patents Money And Public Doubt
SarahBut in December of 1903, Oroville made the first successful powered flight. He covered 121 feet for 12 seconds.
ColeOkay. And it was like less than a half minute. It was like 18 seconds and it was somewhere around there.
SarahWell, then Wilbur flew it and he went 175 feet also in 12 seconds.
ColeOkay.
SarahOrville went again 200 feet in 15 seconds, and then the final flight of that day was Wilbur flying 825 feet for 59 seconds.
ColeWow.
SarahThis was the first time in history that a heavier than air flying machine demonstrated power and sustained flight under complete control of the pilot. Very specific.
ColeYeah.
SarahThat's for a reason.
ColeThere's a lot of other people who've claimed they've invented.
SarahMm-hmm.
ColeOr discu. It's, is it invented or discovered?'cause the laws of aeronautics.
SarahInvented powered flight.
ColeInvented powered flight. Yes.
SarahInvented controlled flight. Invented powered flight.
Army Demo Crash And Aftermath
ColeBut you discover the laws of aerodynamics, I guess.
SarahProbably, yeah. Yeah. But this was very specific. Yeah. Like, like, um, yeah, like Otto Lill Andal. He obviously didn't invent flying. Yeah. They give him credit for inventing the glider.
ColeYeah.
SarahSo, yeah.
ColeYeah.
SarahThese first flights were witnessed by five locals. That's it.'cause again, they like to stay private.
ColeYeah.
SarahBecause a lot of people were trying to invent powered flight at this time. Yeah. It was like a race, basically. Like who's gonna do it first?
ColeYeah. It's like a lot of the scientific community at the time, like knew it was possible.
SarahYes.
ColeTheoretically.
SarahYeah. It was like right there.
ColeHow do we do it? Yeah. How do we find the common, how do we tap the laws of aerodynamics? Yeah. Yeah.
SarahThere's even, um, a lot of the planes would get launched instead of having a runway
Coleaeronautics. Not aerodynamics.
SarahOh, I didn't hear that. Aeronautic. I meant to say, hear that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You're sorry.
ColeCorrect. Myself.
SarahGood call. I didn't hear it. I just heard aeronautics.'cause that, yeah. Anyway. Yeah. So there were only five locals there because the rights wanted their privacy. And then once they succeeded, they. Packed up and went to Dayton because they were like, all right, we did it. Now we're gonna like really hone in on this and figure it out, but we don't want everyone to be watching us.
ColeWhat if they were just like we did? It's when are the next thing we're gonna invent?
SarahYeah. Yeah. Thanks
Coleguys. We met scuba gear next, like what? They just do it for the fun of doing it and then we went to some another. Yeah.
SarahUm, by October of 1905, they could stay in the air for 39 minutes and they could do circles 39 minutes and simple maneuvers.
ColeOkay. Huh.
SarahSo a few years, just two years later. Yeah. Yeah.
ColeIt is always amazing without me knowing the steps of it, how quick the whole world got on board airplanes. Yes. Like how short of a span from 1903 to, I mean, world War I just a little bit over 10 years later and there's planes in the war.
SarahYeah. It's crazy.
ColeYeah.
SarahAs they gained fame and notoriety, they realized that they didn't have any of their inventions protected. Ah, uh oh,
Colepatented.
SarahMm-hmm. So then they got into even more hiding. They just kept even more private. They sort of stopped everything for a little bit and then focused on the legal stuff. Mm-hmm. This is now 19 0 6, 19 0 7, and the public is becoming skeptical of their claim because only five people saw it and then no one saw it again.
ColeYeah.
SarahBut, at this point though, the rights weren't really concerned about the public image. They were already in negotiations with. Certain financiers.
ColeOkay.
SarahThey had government purchasing agents in Europe and America, so they just didn't care about the general public at the time. They were business-minded. Mm-hmm. In February of 1908, they signed a contract with the US Army. They sold one of their planes to them and they received$250,000 for that plane.
ColeWow.
Sarah8.8 million today.
ColeThis is
Sarahone plane. One plane. Mm-hmm.
ColeWow.
SarahYeah, and by this point, the plane could fly for a little over an hour with an average speed of 40 miles per hour. And there was enough room for a passenger in this plane, two
Colepeople. So you could have two people. Two people, okay.
SarahMm-hmm.
ColeYeah.
SarahOn September 17th, 1908, Oroville was flying his plane doing a demonstration for the US Army with a passenger. And the passenger was Lieutenant Thomas e Selfridge. During this flight, the right propeller, split and shattered, causing the plane to crash from an altitude of about a hundred feet.
ColeOkay.
SarahOrville was very injured and Lieutenant Selfridge, he suffered from a fractured skull and died.
ColeSo is he the first human to die in the air?
SarahHe is the first to die in a powered airplane crash.
ColeWow.
SarahYes.
ColeHow come the, the brothers never get that credit? That why did we invent flight? We invented dying in flight.
SarahWell,
ColeI killed the first man in the sky.
SarahOrville's injuries were very bad. He broke his femur bone and his hip.
ColeOh,
Sarahhe had lacerations to a scalp and he had multiple broken ribs. He was in the hospital for seven weeks and he suffered from chronic pain in his leg and hip for the rest of his life. Upon hearing of Orville's plane crash, Catherine immediately left her teaching job to be by his side. She helped take care of him, during his entire stay at the hospital. So that whole seven week period, Catherine then brought him back to Dayton for the rest of his recovery. He needed a wheelchair for the next several weeks. And then he slowly moved to crutches until he was able to fully walk again. Okay. An Army surgeon was quoted as saying it is dubious whether the aeroplane inventor would have survived his injuries had it not been for the loving care of his sister.
ColeHmm.
SarahI love Catherine Wright. She's one of my new, historical crushes,
Coleand she's still, uh, Catherine Wright at this point. Mm-hmm. She's not married. Married herself. Okay.
SarahNone of them are yet.
ColeOkay.
SarahNope. In December of 1908, Wilbur went off to France to demonstrate their plane looking to make more deals.
ColeMm-hmm.
SarahWilbur wanted Orville and Catherine to come with him. He wanted Catherine to act as their social manager and leave teaching. He wrote to her saying, we will be needing a social manager and can pay enough salary to make the proposition attractive.
ColeYeah. They're essentially millionaires by our standards. Mm-hmm.
Smithsonian Feud Over Who Flew First
SarahYeah. They're like, we'll pay you. Yeah. And she was like, oh yeah, all right. Let's do it. Yeah. And so she quit teaching and went, so Orville and Katherine met up with Wilbur early in 1909.
ColeI just thought of her. But they're such a future in Latin, though.
SarahYeah.
ColeWe are literally inventing something that's never been done before. You're sticking with the language. People haven't spoke colloquially in centuries.
SarahYes. Catherine would introduce the boys to counts, Dukes and Kings. King Alfonso of Spain said that Catherine was the ideal American. She was also the subject of a World magazine article titled. The American girl whom all Europe is watching. Mm. I know. She was like making waves.
ColeNice.
SarahThere's a quote from the article that says, few know what she has done. Few know how hard she has worked to make her brothers machine a working accomplishment, but the Wright brothers realize it all and pay her due tribute hats off then to Ms. Catherine Wright, who has ever been the mainstay of her brothers in their many efforts to conquer the air.
ColeOkay. So they are giving her mm-hmm. Her, her time in the spotlight. Yeah. They're not trying to, you know, we're the inventors. You're just the woman stay in the back. Yep. They're, they're giving her equal footing. Yeah.
SarahYep. Mama raised them right. Hi. Right. Sorry.
ColeAh, that one flew over my head.
SarahShut off
Colebriefly. Like that guy that Orville got killed. Oh. Was
Sarahbefore leaving Europe, Catherine was awarded the French Legion of Honor along with her brothers. So all three of them were. Hmm. And then when they returned home to Dayton, Ohio in May of 1909, they were met with great celebration. And then that June they went to Washington DC and met with the president of the United States. Who is it at this time?
ColeRoosevelt? No. Right after Roosevelt Harding. Taft. Taft
SarahTaft. Yes. William Howard Taft.
ColeBig old Taft.
SarahYeah.
ColeHe was our fattest president.
SarahMm-hmm.
ColeSo far.
SarahYeah. So far.
ColeHe did not get stuck in a bathtub though, that
Sarahbath. No, but it's fun to think about. Anyway, Taft presented them with medals from the Arrow Club of America, and he referred to Catherine as the most important member of the family.
ColeOh
Sarahyeah. Progressive.
ColeYeah.
SarahNow, Catherine was still working on patents and battling over who technically flew first. She was helping fight that fight while the boys were still making the deals. Oh. And doing all that. So that's still happening in the background. I think
Colethey meant between the two of them at first. Like they're gonna bicker over Who flew between the two
Sarahbrothers? Like Yeah. Sorry.
ColeWho gives a shit between the two of them? That's petty?
SarahNo, they're basically the same person. They don't care.
ColeOkay. Other people, competitors. Yes. Yeah. Okay.
SarahThat
Colemakes sense.
SarahSo that's just going on in the background constantly. Yeah. Throughout all of this. And the Smithsonian Institute credited Samuel Langley as the inventor of the first powered airplane. However, his 1903 aircraft was not able to actually fly until 1914, after this guy named Glen Curtis made major modifications to it.
ColeOh.
SarahSo this is gonna get kind of messy'cause it's legal and there's some shadiness
Colehere. I think it's like what? Like Langley Air Force space and everything's named after I've heard that name. Like probably in the Air Force Lang. There's a lot of things named Langley.
SarahYeah. He was something else before all. Like he was something I think the CA, this could have been like a two to three parter. So I didn't wanna go down too many roads. But he was someone, yes, he was someone. Mm-hmm. Um, so in, we're jumping ahead here just so we get the legal stuff out of the way, okay? Mm-hmm. In 1914, Lauren
Colethe
Sarahright?
ColeYeah.
SarahHe spied on Glenn Curtis. When they were trying to make Samuel Langley's 1903, he, it was called an Aome fly, but they made modifications to it. But the reason Curtis was doing this was because he wanted to prove that Langley was the first to fly and not the rights, because Langley wanted to skirt around. The patents.
ColeAh,
Sarahhe didn't, he, he wanted to do whatever he wanted to do because Langley's dead at this point.
ColeOkay. Yeah. And his patent that he took might have existed or did exist, but even that didn't come into fruition. Is that kind of
Deaths Grief And Hawthorne Hill
SarahWell, there is there, so there's so many patents going around. And this one did go through, like the rights did claim that they were the first ones and there was a patent for it. Okay. Like that did happen, but people kept fighting it, so they had to keep defending it. Gotcha. And Curtis is one of those.
ColeOkay.
SarahAnd he was saying Langley did it first because Langley was testing his aome at the exact same time. Mm-hmm. As the rights were in December of 1903. Mm-hmm. But he never got it to fly with control.
ColeYeah.
SarahSo he never could. But Curtis wants that to have happened because then the patent for the Wright brothers doesn't exist anymore because they're not the first. So. That's what Curtis was trying to do, Lauren. Right. I wanna say like Brother Lauren, but that sounds like a monk.
ColeYeah.
SarahSo Lauren was caught spying on them in 1914. He had a camera Oh. And he was caught spying on them, and they took the film out. But according to Lauren, they were not successful in making this Samuel Langley's Aome fly. But the Smithsonian still gave him credit for it, which is weird. So I looked into it more and I was like, okay, who is Samuel Langley? And I don't know exactly what he did, but I know that he's from Massachusetts and he is from like the blue blood line. Okay. Like John Adams and, um, Mathers.
ColeOkay.
SarahThose two last names. Yeah. Yeah. And the government, the US Army invested in him. Okay. They gave him money. Gotcha. To make this, they, they, they, they poured everything in him. The Wright brothers paid for everything themselves. He had money given to him, and I don't know why. But the US government just put they bet on him and not the Wright brothers. Okay. And I pretty sure that's why the Smithsonian Institute was like, we are giving credit to Langley. And I think that's why we have such confusion with it today. So even though it seems pretty obvious that Langley wasn't the first one to do it because it, his aome could only fly with modifications to it. Like, okay. Well, that
Colehe didn't himself do.
SarahExactly. Yeah.
ColeYeah.
Sarah (2)However, the Smithsonian refused to retract their statement, they, they sided with Curtis in 1914 and they said, yeah. And then in 1928, Orville lent his restored 1903 airplane. To the science of museum in London. And he told the Smithsonian he's not giving it to them until they apologize and they did apologize in 1942.
ColeOh, so now the Smiths, if you go to the Smithsonian today mm-hmm. Well, yeah. Today. Yeah. But, uh, 10 years ago or more.
SarahYeah.
ColeUm, it would've said that
Sarahthe Wright brothers.
Yeah.
ColeOkay. Good.
SarahOkay. But if you went there in 1930 Yeah. It would've said Langley.
ColeOkay. Yeah.
SarahSo that's a bit of a sidebar that's kind of off track, but it also is important because that's a big part of what they were doing this whole time as well. Mm-hmm. Okay. So let's get back to the family. We're out of the legal world. That's the hard part. We're done In 1911, Catherine and her brothers would have their last Christmas together. All of them.
ColeOkay.
SarahWilbur passed away of typhoid fever in May of 1912.
ColeHmm. Wilbur. And he was the one that was injured in the crash or is that Orville or Orville's.
SarahOrville, yeah.
ColeOkay.
SarahOrville's the younger of the two closer ages Catherine,
Coleright. Or is the younger injured in the crash?
SarahMm-hmm. Okay.
ColeMm-hmm. Okay. So Wilbur dies of Typhus in 1911. Mm-hmm.
Sarah12. 12.
ColeMm-hmm.
SarahYep. After Wilbur's burial in the family plot in Dayton's Woodland Cemetery, Milton wrote in his diary.
ColeOh yeah. Dad.
SarahDad, he's still alive. Yep. He writes in his diary, probably Orville and Catherine felt his loss the most. They say little. Mm-hmm. So that's just sad. They all write quite a bit. There's a lot, if you guys wanna like look up journals and letters, they're out there. There's a lot of them. They wrote a lot. So you can really see what's going on inside their heads. Upon Wilbur's death in his will, he gave Catherine, Lauren and Reland$50,000 each. That's about$1.7 million today.
ColeYeah.
SarahAnd he gave his dad a thousand dollars, which is like 34,000 today. Hmm. Yeah. And of course he left like the business, the company to Orville.
ColeOkay.
SarahAfter Wilbur died, Orville's enthusiasm for aviation waned quite a bit, and he leaned heavily on Catherine. At this point,
Coleone of my wings was gone.
SarahYeah, yeah. Yeah. That's a good way to think of it. Aw. Mm-hmm. I know you were doing it to make fun of like you were making fun of him, but then
Coleit's sad, just, just commentary. Not everything I do is making fun. It's just making something.
SarahOkay.
ColeSorry.
SarahIt's okay. Wanna pause
Coleand we're back.
SarahUm, but Catherine would continue to encourage Orville to keep going and keep moving. They actually had plans to, the whole family had plans to make a mansion called Hawthorne Hill. It is in Oakwood, Ohio. And it's still around today?
ColeYou visit it?
SarahYou can. I don't know if it's like free or costs or anything.
ColeThat's good. But yes, fine. It's a good public thing. Okay, cool.
SarahThey broke ground on Hawthorne Hill in August of 1912. A year and a half later, Catherine, Orville and Milton all move in.
ColeJust kind of, this is just my take. It's kind of weird that these are like, they're like adults.
SarahMm-hmm.
ColeWho are like,
Sarahnone
Coleof them are married. We're all gonna live together.
SarahNo one's married.
ColeWhy? All right.
SarahThese, they didn't, they didn't get married yet.
ColeI mean, yeah. Yeah. I don't think they're gonna,
Sarahyou just,
ColeI mean they seem
Sarahthat's how you do
Coleit. Yeah. I've lost track of their age, but they seem to be passed. Like if it's gonna happen, eh, it might happen. But
Sarahyeah, they're in like their forties, the pressure's not there. Fifties something. Yeah. They're older now. Yeah. In 1914, I just thought this was interesting'cause there's a connection to Michigan here.
ColeMm-hmm.
SarahCatherine in Orville went to Grand Rapids, Michigan. Mm-hmm. To purchase furniture for Hawthorne Hill. Yeah. She wanted the dining room to have the best and prettiest pieces. She was anticipating that holiday dinners and parties would be hosted there with, with extended family and, important people, dignitaries. She just envisioned that life for them and she was right.
ColeIs Lauren there too? Do we know? I'm just curious.
SarahOh, he lives with his wife and four kids.
ColeOh, that's right, right, right. Yeah.
SarahHe got married.
ColeUh,
Sarahthat's right. He did get married. Soda Reland, El
ColeReland
Sarahgot married, but the three youngest did not. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
Coleyeah.
SarahThe two eldest did like normal things for the 18 hundreds and early 19 hundreds. The three younger. It was also kind of normal man. I mean the, like, a lot of families just lived together forever that the, that wasn't that uncommon. I know there's compounds now.
ColeYeah.
SarahFamily compounds. Yeah. Out in the thumb.
ColeYeah.
SarahAnyway, Catherine was right, and Hawthorne Hill's guests would include people like Henry Ford, Thomas Edison, Alexander Graham Bell. And Franklin d Roosevelt. Oh, interesting. Yeah.
ColeThey had wheelchair ramps.
SarahNo, I
Coledunno. It's FDR probably before the polio.
SarahYeah. Now, ever since Wilbur's death, Orville became very guarded about his relationship with his sister, and he would even get jealous of others if she got too close to them.
ColeOh
Sarahyeah. It got weird to everything I read though. There was no incest or anything. Catherine was normal. Okay. Orville was weird.
ColeOkay.
SarahHe just had this dependency.
ColeYeah.
Suffrage Marriage And A Sister Erased
SarahYou know, Orville sold his interest in the right company in 1915.
ColeOkay.
SarahThe lawsuits and patent disputes all ended in 1917 because that's when it expired. Milton passed away in April of 1917. He died in his sleep and he was 88.
ColeDamn. He had a good run.
SarahMm-hmm. He might have had pneumonia. I read on his, the newspaper that,
Coleyeah.
SarahOf the time that stated his death. They said that he had a cold and died in his sleep.
ColeAt that age.
SarahWell, yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm just assuming it was pneumonia. Yeah. Reland died of a stroke in 1920 and he was still living in Kansas City.
ColeHe lived three years longer than his dad.
SarahYeah. Lauren began focusing more on himself and his own ventures throughout the 1920s and thirties. He became the owner and president of Miami Woods Specialties.
ColeMiami, Miami, Ohio, Miami, Ohio. Miami, Miami, Ohio. Yeah. I always did a crack up. The fact that there's a Miami, Ohio. Yeah. Like every day you wake up there, you'd be like, fuck.
SarahI know.
ColeFuck.
SarahThis sucks.
ColeIt's like living in Paris, Texas or any of these cities that have like mm-hmm. These American cities that take these great, I mean obviously Miami, Florida is a, but like a still American city, but you know what I mean?
SarahYeah. A good city
Coleyou take a good city can put it in a shitty spot. You're like,
Sarahwhy?
ColeDumps has that one about like Harris, Tennessee, like, oh no, I'm gonna forget where I'm at.
SarahBut, um, the, the wood toy company, they were known for making flips and flops. They
Colepancakes, this is what you're talking about.
SarahFlips and flops are names of clowns. One is named flips and one is named flops. And these toy clowns would flip and flop. And the toy was created by Orville and he also patented them.
ColeOh
Sarahyeah. They were like very popular. Okay. It was like the 1920s, man. Yeah. They also made a lot of wooden airplanes. That was one of their other big sellers, so That's cute. Yeah. Lauren's keeping in touch with his past. Yeah. Lauren also served as a Dayton city commissioner from 1919 to 1927.
ColeOkay.
SarahAnd he died of natural causes in 1939, and he was buried with his siblings at Woodland Cemetery. So they have like a family plot.
ColeFamily
Sarahplot. Orville remained active in the aeronautics community. He was a member of the National Advisory Committee for aeronautics from 1920 to 1948.
ColeDamn.
SarahDuring the last four decades of his life, he devoted a lot of his energy to defending himself and Wilbur as the inventors of the airplane. Well, this is all happening. Catherine is doing her own thing. She became active in the women's suffrage movement. She helped organize a march in Dayton of about 1300 people. In 1914, the march was for the right for women to vote. And this is before her dad died, so Milton and Orville both marched with her.
ColeNice.
SarahThe march was unsuccessful. We didn't get the right to vote in 1914. Yeah. But they, they were fighting the fight. She also became active in the Young Women's League and the Dayton College Women's Club. She became the president of both. She then became a trustee at Oberlin College, and as a trustee, she reconnected with former classmate Henry, who went by Harry Hesco. They would eventually marry
ColeNice.
SarahCatherine was 52 years old.
ColeCool.
SarahWhen she married Harry in 1926 and
Colenext to no risk of children.
SarahYeah, yeah. Now, the rights were still at Hawthorne Hill, entertaining famous, high-end guests, but now Oroville was the only one entertaining them. When Charles Lindbergh arrived in 1927.
ColeOh God.
Final Reconciliation And Lasting Legacy
SarahYeah, I know. It's interesting. I didn't know,
Colewasn't trying to convert him into Nazism, was he?
SarahI I did not go down that rabbit hole. No, no, no. That's too big. So the
Colereals, oh God. Yeah. Yeah. Shut up Lindbergh.
SarahYeah. Yeah. Catherine was not present because the previous November is when she married Harry. Oh. And Orville felt abandoned and betrayed and he refused to speak to her ever again because
Coleshe
Sarahgot
Colemarried at the age. I think that gonna age of 52 gonna happen. That was gonna happen eventually. Like Yeah. Either she stays loyal to him only, or he ends up never speaking to her again. Yeah. Mm-hmm. Like that was gonna happen.
SarahThat was the choice. Yeah.
ColeYeah.
SarahNow he was so upset. And this is the reason why we don't know about Catherine and why she's the forgotten sister. Orville is a little prick. He's a little bitch boy and would probably be on the manosphere right now.
ColeHe wrote her out.
SarahHe went on a mission to scrub her name from everything she's done for the brothers, everything.
ColeIt certainly seems incestuous.
SarahYeah. Yeah. I think for him it was, yeah. I mean, nothing happened.
ColeNo,
Sarahbut like I think he would have done anything
Colestrange.
SarahYeah.
ColeWould he have, I mean, obviously his brother died, but had his brother married?
SarahYeah. What would he feel? Would
Colehe do the same thing
Sarahexactly?
ColeProbably not.
SarahMm-hmm.
ColeHe'd probably be hurt maybe, but I don't.
SarahYeah. Who
Coleknows?
SarahIt was weird. Yeah. There was an Associated Press internal memo from a few months after Catherine's wedding that was found in an archive. Mm-hmm. So there was like this internal memo, and here's what it says.
ColeOkay.
SarahWe have accepted as a true story that Mrs. Catherine Wright, sister of the Wright brothers contributed financially and scientifically to the first success of the airplane. The Wright family has shown that this is not true. The Wright family, meaning Orville?
ColeMm-hmm.
SarahThat's it.
ColeYeah. Dad's dead.
SarahYeah,
Colebrother's dead.
SarahYeah.
ColeYeah.
SarahPlease see to it that any item offered in our service refrains from accepting as true this very pretty story of sisterly supports in this achievement.
ColeShe could just write the opposite and say that.
SarahYeah, but who's gonna believe her?
ColeYeah, I know, but
Sarahyeah. What the second a woman is. Yeah. I mean, yeah. So yeah. Orville is the reason that his sister isn't praised today.
ColeWell, he had the unfortunate name of Oroville his entire life.
SarahHe would speak to Catherine. One more time though. Catherine had pneumonia in 1929.
ColeMm.
SarahOroville relented and he went to see her. She was in Kansas City at this time, and he. Saw her one time, spoke to her one time before she died, having denied Catherine a wedding at Hawthorne Hill, which is where she wanted to, wed. But Orville said no. He did hold her funeral there. She was buried beside Wilbur. And in a tribute to Catherine helping her brothers change the world, Orville had airplanes drop flowers on her grave, Orville continued on and he worked as a consulting engineer during World War I, helping the US Army. He assisted in the development of a Pilotless aircraft bomb.
ColeMm. A missile.
SarahOh, probably. Or a
Coletorpedo,
Sarahsomething like that. Right. Basically. I didn't think of that. I guess I was thinking more of like a drone, but yeah, that would make more sense. Yeah. Because the
Coledrone doesn't blow up.
SarahYeah. Yeah. Duh. I don't know.
ColeYeah.
SarahOrville lived at Hawthorne Hill until his own death from a heart attack in 1948. Upon his death he donated$300,000 to Oberlin College in Catherine's honor.
ColeOkay.
SarahSo he felt guilt, obviously. Yeah. But like he still should have gone on a fixing tour. Yeah. And had been like, fixed her name, you know,
Colesend another memo to the ap
SarahYeah.
ColeAnd be like that disregard the previous memo. She did contribute.
SarahYeah. Like she did actually help. I don't know. I just know why he don't know why he didn't do that. Orville then joined Wilbur and Catherine in Woodland Cemetery. They have identical headstones with Orville on one side of Catherine and Wilbur on the other. And in death as in life, this remarkable woman is forever at the center of things
Coleand neither are the brothers married or any kids.
SarahMm-hmm.
ColeNice.
SarahNo, Catherine helped them have a life.
ColeYeah, Two thoughts.
SarahMm-hmm.
ColeKind of random. It's okay. But one, because I thought, you know, maybe we always forget that there's, you know, un non, uh, uh, manned flight, but, uh, hot air balloons. Oh, yeah. Going back as early as, at least the civil War. So there's people in the air at certain points before them. Yes. So, like also theoretically, maybe someone was shot out of a basket and died in the air. Yeah. So maybe it wasn't that guy that rode
Sarahwith No, no. He wasn't the first one to die in the air. Oh. He was the first one to die from a powered flight.
ColePowered flight. Okay. Yeah.
SarahThe vocabulary here is very specific. The Wright brothers are the first controlled powered flight inventors.
ColeI do wanna know now, did anyone ever die in a basket? Who is the first person to die in the air?
SarahYou know what? We'll let the commenters tell us that. Yeah. I'm not looking anything else up on Google today.
ColeSecond thought.
SarahYes.
ColeEveryone always blames. Justifiably so, but Oppenheimer for the abo, duh, duh.
SarahMm-hmm. Yeah.
ColeBut Abo would be useless if weren't planes drop him out of
SarahTrue.
ColeYeah. Or the, the unmanned missiles that he also helped develop apparently at the end. Yeah. So like
SarahI know that's what makes me think,
Colelike we never would've looked into like, how do we split the atom and drop this bomb on someone if we didn't have something to drop it out of? Yeah.
SarahBut also similar to what was happening during that time with the bomb, multiple scientists and countries were working on it. Yeah. So someone was going to invent it. Someone was going to invent this powered flight because we had the knowledge that it was possible.
ColeYeah.
SarahSo it sucks. I mean, humanity is its own downfall. That's it. Like if it wasn't them, it'd be someone else. It'd be someone else. It'd be someone. There's always someone else.
ColeYep.
SarahBut yes, that is the Wright family. Look into Catherine Wright, you guys, once you start looking into her. She's everywhere, but no one really talks about her that much. So look her up. There's some podcasts out there and
ColeI just thought, I wonder what happened to her, uh, her husband who died. If she's buried between her brothers, will her husband end up?
SarahOh yeah. I don't know.
ColeWho knows?
Sarah (2)But, yes! That is it. We're back finally. Yay. And I'll be a little more regular from this time on because the sun is out and it's a lot easier to get through life when it's sunny out. So that's, that's it. Follow us on Instagram, borrowed Bones podcast. Uh, leave a comment on Spotify or Apple Podcast. That helps us a lot. Engagement is great. Also, thank you everyone who. Asking if we're coming back. I didn't realize people were consistently listening. And also I'm still seeing quite a few new listeners coming on. So thank you to everyone that's new. Thank you to the people that have asked us to please keep going because you guys thought that we were maybe done. We're not. We just took a pause. We are back and I appreciate all the support and that's it. Yeah.
ColeYeah.
SarahBye. Bye.
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