Skip to main content

Box 16B

 Container

Contains 4 Results:

Front view of the airframe of the 1903 Flyer reassembled in the snow at South Field, near Dayton, and photographed as evidence in the Montgomery lawsuit., 1921 Jan.

 Item — Box: 16B, Folder: 4, Item: 9
Scope and Contents From the Record Group: This series includes many original photographic prints made by the Wrights from their own negatives shortly after the images were taken. The Wrights exposed at least 303 gelatin dry plate negatives in the course of documenting their process of invention. All of their glass plate negatives were given to the Library of Congress in 1949, but many of their original prints remained with the Estate of Orville Wright. Many of the Wright Brothers’ original negatives were damaged in Dayton’s great...
Dates: 1921 Jan.

[Does Not Exist]

 Item — Box: 16B, Folder: 5, Item: 9
Scope and Contents From the Record Group: This series includes many original photographic prints made by the Wrights from their own negatives shortly after the images were taken. The Wrights exposed at least 303 gelatin dry plate negatives in the course of documenting their process of invention. All of their glass plate negatives were given to the Library of Congress in 1949, but many of their original prints remained with the Estate of Orville Wright. Many of the Wright Brothers’ original negatives were damaged in Dayton’s great...
Dates: 1904, 1935

Orville Wright piloting flight 23 of the Wright 1905 Flyer at Huffman Prairie, 1905 Sept. 7

 Item — Box: 16B, Folder: 6, Item: 9
Scope and Contents

Orville made two complete circles of the field in 2 minutes, 45 seconds.

Dates: 1905 Sept. 7

Rear view from below of the 1905 Flyer in flight entering the frame from the upper left., 1905

 Item — Box: 16B, Folder: 7, Item: 9
Scope and Contents From the Record Group: This series includes many original photographic prints made by the Wrights from their own negatives shortly after the images were taken. The Wrights exposed at least 303 gelatin dry plate negatives in the course of documenting their process of invention. All of their glass plate negatives were given to the Library of Congress in 1949, but many of their original prints remained with the Estate of Orville Wright. Many of the Wright Brothers’ original negatives were damaged in Dayton’s great...
Dates: 1905