Box 19B
Container
Contains 4 Results:
Profile view of a Wright Model A Flyer in a low flight at Montgomery, 1910
Item — Box: 19B, Folder: 5, Item: 11
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:
1910
Arch Hoxsey pouring water into the radiator of the Wright Model A Flyer while standing with one foot on a front support and the other on the shoulder of Walter Brookins, while Spencer Crane looks on, 1910
Item — Box: 19B, Folder: 6, Item: 11
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:
1910
A view of the crowd and the capsized Wright Model B Flyer taken from the harbor boat, Mark Twain., 1912
Item — Box: 19B, Folder: 7, Item: 11
Scope and Contents
Lines are being fastened to the pontoons prior to hoisting onto the bank.
Dates:
1912
Arch Hoxsey’s Wright Model B Flyer after it crashed into the crowd in the grandstand at Milwaukee., 1910
Item — Box: 19B, Folder: 8, Item: 11
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:
1910