Box 19B
Container
Contains 78 Results:
Arch Hoxsey, Walter Brookins, and Orville Wright with a Wright Model A Flyer on the launch rail, 1910
Item — Box: 19B, Folder: 6, Item: 23
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
Photograph showing a Wright Model A Flyer being prepared for a flight at St. Louis., 1910 or 1912
Item — Box: 19B, Folder: 7, Item: 1
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 or 1912
Wright Model B Flyer being prepared for takeoff with a crowd of spectators watching, 1910 Oct.
Item — Box: 19B, Folder: 7, Item: 2
Scope and Contents
Bud Dozier’s flight during the St. Louis aviation meet.
Dates:
1910 Oct.
Theodore Roosevelt seated with Wright exhibition team pilot Arch Hoxsey in a Wright B Flyer at St. Louis, 1910 Oct. 11
Item — Box: 19B, Folder: 7, Item: 3
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 Oct. 11
An exhibition pilot doing the “Dive of Death” in a Wright Model A Flyer at St. Louis, 1910 Oct.
Item — Box: 19B, Folder: 7, Item: 4
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 Oct.
View of wreckage following Ralph Johnstone’s accident in a Wright Model B Flyer at Kinloch Park, 1910 Oct. 10
Item — Box: 19B, Folder: 7, Item: 5
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 Oct. 10
William Kabitske’s crash into the Mississippi River at St. Louis, in a Wright Model B Flyer equipped with floats, 1912 Fall
Item — Box: 19B, Folder: 7, Item: 6
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:
1912 Fall
William Kabitske standing on his sinking Wright Model B Flyer in the Mississippi River., 1912
Item — Box: 19B, Folder: 7, Item: 7
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:
1912
William Kabitske rescued by a motorboat from his sinking Wright Model B Flyer., 1912
Item — Box: 19B, Folder: 7, Item: 8
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:
1912
A rowboat and a motorboat near the capsized Wright Model B Flyer., 1912
Item — Box: 19B, 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:
1912