Tag Archives: December 17th

What Is Wright Brothers Day

Wright Brothers

The celebration of flight is honored on Wright Brothers Day every December 17th, the anniversary of the first successful flights in a mechanically propelled airplane, piloted by Wilbur Wright at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina in 1903.

The Wright brothers are known as the fathers of flight, and with good reason. While man has been reaching for the stars for thousands of years, Orville and Wilbur Wright made such a possibility a reality. Wilbur was born in 1867, while his little brother, Orville, was born four years later in 1871. Both Wilbur and Orville nurtured dreams of building airplanes and flying, and in the early 1900’s they did just that. Orville is quoted as saying; “We were lucky enough to grow up in an environment where there was always much encouragement to children to pursue intellectual interests; to investigate whatever aroused curiosity.”

Flying was more than a curiosity to Orville and Wilbur Wright. It was their passion and their goal, one they obtained on the seashore of Kitty Hawk on December 17th, 1903. Despite years of failure and ridicule, the two brothers forged a path that today has taken mankind to the moon and back. The spirit of the Wright Brothers, born in the sands of Kitty Hawk, now reaches to the far corners of the earth and beyond.

Wright Brothers Day is a cause for celebration within not only the American flight industry, but around the world and anywhere airplanes fly today. If it were not for the determination and contributions of the Wright brothers, flight, as we know it today, could very well have been delayed by decades, if not more.

December 17th is a day when the nation observes and honors the brothers who dared to flaunt gravity, and succeed. Depending on where you’re from, the day is celebrated in different ways. In Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, memorials and civic events draw attention to the most famous location in the history of flight. School aged children across the nation learn about the historic flight at Kitty Hawk in school curriculum and fashion paper airplanes, kites and other designs meant to honor the discovery of flight. Older students learn about man’s attempts to fly, from the beginnings of Greek mythology to the current designs of the space shuttle.

The glory of flight is celebrated on Wright Brothers Day. Airports around the country honor the brothers by hanging posters or banners recognizing their great contributions to the aviation industry. Various ceremonies and activities at local and state levels bring honor to the memory of the brothers who changed the face of transportation forever. Aviation clubs and schools invariably speak of the event that brought mankind rapidly into the 20th century, and was the jumping off point for numerous inventions and discoveries.

While Wilbur and Orville most probably knew that their success would change the face of the nation forever, it is unlikely that they realized how important their experiment would become for all of mankind, regardless of country or language. Air travel today joins continents and peoples from around the globe. Today’s astronauts, descendants of the Wright Brothers, are able to walk in space. The Wright brothers deserve to be honored and remembered every December 17th, as pioneers for an entirely new way to look at the world around us.

Every time an airplane is seen or heard, remember the drive and determination by the pair of brothers who would not relinquish their dream of flight despite numerous obstacles and setbacks. The spirit of America lives on in the legacy left by the Wright brothers, and should continue to be passed down from generation to generation.

Observing Pan American Aviation Day

Pan American

Today, it’s easy to take air travel for granted. Most of the population of the United States can not imagine what it would be like not to be able to fly anywhere in the world, but not so long ago, such an endeavor was impossible.

Thanks to the inventiveness of the Wright brothers, who literally flew America into the aviation era, people today can fly to various destinations, not only within this country, but throughout the world. Pan American Aviation Day is observed every December 17th as a day to celebrate travel between the Americas, and because of such possibilities, people from America, Mexico and countries in South America enjoy cultural communication and experiences on a daily basis.

One of the first American based airlines to offer passengers Mexican and South American destinations, Pan-American Airlines, was created in 1927. According to the founder of the airline, Juan Trippe, it was designed ‘to provide mass air transportation for the average man at rates he can afford to pay’. At first, flights to southern destinations were limited to mail service, the first being to Havana, Cuba. That first flight reached a mere ninety miles from Key West, Florida to Havana, but it was the beginning of something big. In 1928, six passengers flew the same route on a Pan American Fokker F-7. Based in Miami, Florida, Pan American continued to grow and transport passengers until, in 1931, a staggering thirty-three passengers climbed aboard a Clipper Sikorsky while thousands of onlookers watched the pilot, Charles Lindbergh, take the pilots seat. In 1934, another Clipper loaded fifteen passengers on their way to Hong Kong! The plane, traveling at a speed of 130 miles per hour, arrived safely and began an entirely new era of transpacific flights from San Francisco, Los Angeles and ports in the South Pacific and South America as well.

The very first around-the-world flight from Pan American occurred in 1947, when a flight carrying twenty passengers flew from New York City to arrive in San Francisco ninety two hours and some minutes after it had taken off. Of course, the plane landed in ten countries over the 12-day flight duration, but it was a spectacular accomplishment for the aviation industry.

Thanks to such innovations, patience and daring on the part of early generations to develop and improve the aviation industry, people today are able to fly from San Francisco to Hong Kong in less that fifteen hours. Flights depart daily for South American destinations in Peru, Brazil and Venezuela, as well as ports in the South Pacific such as Tahiti and Guam. Pan-American airlines were one of the founding trans-continental airlines to offer passengers safe, economical travel opportunities in the world. The accomplishments of the company opened doors to possibilities that are still being enjoyed today.

Since then, the Pan-American airline company has been absorbed into Delta Airlines, and her former Pacific routes have been sold to United Airlines, while her Atlantic routes were sold to Delta and American Airlines. Nevertheless, the legacy of Pan American continues to this day, and the dedication and determination of their founders are enjoyed by billions of world travelers today.

Pan American Aviation Day celebrates more than an airline however; it celebrates a link between two continents that has fostered good relations between two cultures and languages that have been breeched by travel and good will. Pan American Day is a day for all Americans to honor and remember the discoveries and innovations that a handful of men and women were determined to share with all Americans. To this day, the legacy of those aviation pioneers is celebrated every December 17th, as well as every August, for Aviation Day.