First Flight History — Wright Brothers, December 17, 1903

On December 17, 1903, on a windswept dune near Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, two brothers from Dayton, Ohio achieved something humans had been attempting for centuries: powered, controlled, sustained flight in a heavier-than-air machine. This is the story of the first flight — what happened, who made it possible, and where it took place.

Who Were the Wright Brothers?

Wilbur Wright (1867–1912) and Orville Wright (1871–1948) were self-taught engineers who ran a bicycle shop in Dayton, Ohio. They had no formal engineering education, no government funding, and no large team. What they had was a unique approach: they treated flight as a problem of control, not just power. While others were trying to build engines big enough to lift an aircraft, the Wrights focused on making the aircraft controllable in three axes — roll, pitch, and yaw.

Why Kitty Hawk?

In 1900 the Wrights wrote to the U.S. Weather Bureau asking for a location with strong, steady winds and soft terrain for gliding experiments. Kitty Hawk, on the Outer Banks of North Carolina, was recommended. The brothers traveled there each fall from 1900 through 1903, gliding from the sand dunes at Kill Devil Hill — about four miles south of Kitty Hawk village. The location offered three advantages: consistent Atlantic winds, soft sand for safe crashes, and remoteness from prying eyes.

The 1903 Wright Flyer

The aircraft that flew on December 17, 1903 was a biplane with a 40-foot, 4-inch wingspan. It weighed 605 pounds empty and was powered by a custom 12-horsepower gasoline engine that the Wrights and their mechanic Charlie Taylor built themselves — no off-the-shelf engine was light enough. Two pusher propellers, connected to the engine by bicycle chains, generated thrust. The pilot lay prone on the lower wing and controlled the aircraft using a hip cradle that warped the wings for roll control. A forward-mounted “canard” elevator controlled pitch, and a rear rudder, linked to the wing-warping system, handled yaw.

The Four Flights

The morning of December 17, 1903 was cold and windy — about 27 mph from the north. Five witnesses were present: three men from the nearby Kill Devil Hills Life-Saving Station, one local businessman, and a teenage boy. At 10:35 AM, Orville released the restraining wire and the Flyer lifted off.

  • Flight 1: Orville Wright. 12 seconds. 120 feet of ground covered.
  • Flight 2: Wilbur Wright. About 175 feet.
  • Flight 3: Orville Wright. About 200 feet.
  • Flight 4: Wilbur Wright. 59 seconds. 852 feet of ground covered — the longest of the day.

Shortly after the fourth flight, a strong gust caught the Flyer and tumbled it across the sand. It was damaged beyond easy repair and never flew again. But the brothers had proven their point.

The Famous Telegram

That afternoon, Orville walked to the Kitty Hawk weather station and sent a telegram to his father in Dayton: “Success four flights thursday morning all against twenty one mile wind started from level with engine power alone average speed through air thirty one miles longest 57 seconds inform Press home Christmas. Orevelle Wright.” The telegram operator misspelled both Orville’s name and the flight duration (59 seconds became 57). Few newspapers paid attention. It would take years before the world fully accepted that the Wright Brothers had actually done it.

Visit the Site Today

The exact location of the first flight is preserved as the Wright Brothers National Memorial. Marker stones show the takeoff point and each landing point. The original 1903 Wright Flyer is on display at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC, but a full-scale reproduction is at the memorial visitor center. Pilots can fly into First Flight Airport (KFFA), which is located on the same grounds.