William Hazelgrove’s
Wright Brothers, Wrong Story
A NecessaryReview
By Marcia Cummings Hubbard, Editor
Part I of Ii
In the summer of 1899, writes William Hazlegrove, Wilbur Wright took his first aeronautical contraption out to a field near his house in Dayton, Ohio. It was a simple kite that was constructed after a Chanute or a Herring biplane glider. According to Wilbur’s account, he wanted to test warping the wings of the kite for lateral control, after he had gotten the idea from twisting the box of a bicycle inner tube. Wilbur and later historians described the kite event as eminently successful, and author William Hazelgrove crows in his book, Wright Brothers, Wrong Story,
“Already Wilbur knew more than anyone else investigating aeronautics."(page 69) [1]
Already balderdash. To any serious student of aviation history, this statement is ridiculous. The principles of flight had been studied for centuries by the time Wilbur Wright inserted himself into the picture. By 1899, all that was really needed for man to successfully fly was a light and powerful enough engine to lift the plane and its pilot into the air.
See Dr. Albert Francis Zahm "Conspectus of Early Powerplane Development" - preface shown below.
As stated by Dr. Zahm, "nineteenth century contributions to aviation art...[included the] addition of three-torque control." "Three-torque control" is three-way control, one of which is the lateral control that some aviation historians credit to the Wright Brothers. Wilbur Wright did not "discover" the principles involved in lateral control when he did his kite experiment in 1899, as some lightweight history detectives claim. Methods of lateral control were well known by that time and had even been patented. For examples, lateral control had been investigated by such pioneers as John Joseph Montgomery and Louis Pierre Mouillard and patented as far back as 1868 by British scientist Mathew Boulton, based on his publication “On Aerial Navigation.” Mouillard had been granted a patent in 1897 and Montgomery, who had experimented with ailerons as far back as 1885, in 1906. Even warped or twisted wings for control, as opposed to ailerons, were not a new idea, according to expert aviation pioneer Octave Chanute, who published the landmark “Progress in Flying Machines” in book form in 1894.
Nevertheless, Hazelgrove states that Wilbur’s wing warping in 1899 “was an aviation first....The first ailerons fitted to an experimental kite or aircraft of any kind.” (page 68)
These assertions alone should discredit William Hazelgrove’s book as serious aviation history. But the author, unbelievably, goes even farther in his claims for the Wrights.
According to Hazelgrove, no one before the Wrights had studied the wings of the plane and what gave them lift. (page 57) This is nonsense! By the time of Wilbur's kite experiment, the important cause of the lift of an aircraft's wing was a fact already known to more than one pioneer. To aeronautical engineers, it's called the Bernoulli Principle. Since air travels faster over the top curve of a cambered (curved) wing, there is less pressure exerted above than from the slower moving air underneath. According to Joe Bullmer in The WRight Story, it's clear from Wilbur’s early writings and statements that he didn't know the Bernoulli Principle. Further, the Wrights claimed they discovered from their wind tunnel experiments in 1901 that the aspect ratio contributes to lift. They were late. Professor Langley's research as well as others before had shown that the wing's aspect ratio contributes to lift. It was Langley who nearly perfected the correct number of Smeaton's coefficient (to .003), for calculating lift, not the Wrights. That is clear from a letter that Wilbur wrote to Octave Chanute.
Dr. Albert Zahm, referenced above, was among the pioneer investigators of wings and what gives them lift. From the University of Notre Dame:
"In 1882, an ambitious Notre Dame student named Albert Zahm built what might have been the first wind tunnel in the United States so that he could study the lift and drag of various wing shapes.
Astoundingly, Hazelgrove's hyperbole rockets his readers even farther into Wright outer space. He genuinely believes that Wilbur was a scientific genius of the caliber of Isaac Newton,see Galileo, or Leonardo da Vinci - the very stuff of greatness.
He maintains that the hitherto unknown "secret" of flight came to Wilbur like the flash of inspiration that manifests in the mysterious muses of artists like Mozart, Rembrandt, or Vincent Van Gogh. This is beyond balderdash. Even Newton knew that he stood on the shoulders of the giants who came before him.
“...[It] was up to [Wilbur] to crack the code of flight," says Hazelgrove. (page 56) When and where? As already stated, the “code of flight” had long been cracked before 1899. As rival Glenn Curtiss remarked when he first saw a Wright plane in 1908, "He [Orville] has nothing startling about his machine and no secrets." [2]
But proponents of the Wrights believe these brothers didn't need shoulders to stand on. As time went along, the Wright followers basically claimed for them the discovery of the principles of flight and the invention of the airplane. Everyone who preceded them was a failure; everyone who came after them was a thief who copied them. The Wright adherents indeed have come to resemble a gigantic cult that celebrates ignorance and ignores science.
In promoting William Hazelgrove's book, Amazon describes it as the "first deconstruction" of the Wright history. This is another falsehood - Joe Bullmer's The WRight Story was published nearly ten years before Wright Brothers, Wrong Story. In this book, aeronautical engineer Bullmer describes "26 myths surrounding the Wright Brothers' research.”
Will the"approved" Wright "Historians" ever get it right?
The notes presented so far are only a sampling of the astonishing number of errors in this book. Hazelgrove and other Wright "historians" simply haven't done their homework. Still, it's disappointing to advocates of historical truth that Hazelgrove’s book was approved by our own Smithsonian Institution, which is supposed to represent the pinnacle of research and science. Hazelgrove was even awarded a December 2018 article in its publication Smithsonian Magazine:"Why Wilbur Wright Deserves the Bulk of the Credit of the First Flight.
The universe is positively teeming with books and publications about the Wright Brothers. Check the list of Wright books on Amazon.com, or just type "Wright brothers" into Google. But these books, articles, and writings all tell essentially the same story, the one both Wright brothers appear to have contrived beginning on or near December 17, 1903. The same one they elaborated on in the news with their press release in 1904 and which Orville tried to cement for posterity in his Century magazine article in 1908. Both Wrights realized they had much to gain by claiming the first manned, motorized, controlled, heavier-than-air flight in history and their spin included exaggerating their own efforts and downgrading those of anyone else.
It worked. In 1943, their story “The Wright Brothers" was widely accepted, written as a biography with the byline of journalist Fred Kelly, but in reality written by Orville and/or checked by him line by line. This was his "approved version," published before he died on January 30, 1948. Based on these stories, writers have continued retelling this basic narrative for another nearly three quarters of a century.
More Wrongs than Rights
But by investing time and scrutiny, we have found more and more holes in the Wright story. until it’s beginning to dry and crumble like old Swiss cheese. Consequently, we are starving for real histories based on the facts we now know, Wright Brothers Wrong Story doesn't meet the criteria for a real history. The reality is that a deep study of Wright statements and writings, and those of their witnesses, uncover too many falsehoods and contradictions. Plus new scientific studies based on mathematics and aeronautical science are also exposing the fiction. See the many posts in this blog, "The Wrights: Truthinavaition history," such as articles by aeronautical engineer Joe Bullmer, studies by author/historian Paul Jackson, and research by yours truly.
Siblings l to r: Orville, Katharine, and Wilbur Wright. (Author William Hazelgrove consistently spells Katharine's name wrong, as "Katherine.") |
Wright Brothers, Wrong Story demonstrates that we are still being served up the same convoluted tales of the Wrights. Adding to that, the retellings can appear slipshod, poorly edited, and laced with errors from picayune to enormous. Writers clearly use their imaginations to fill in the obvious holes left by the Wrights, even though both brothers made attempts to render their story air- (and space-) tight. Orville Wright even directed his heirs to burn selected papers.
Historians Need to Dig
If scrupulous historians want to excavate the true bones of the Wright story, with Wright DNA intact and not doctored by the Wright “historians/writers,” they are going to have to actually dig. Many partially buried clues are protruding out of the cyber sands in plain sight, like dinosaur fossil bones exposed by the weather. Historians are going to have to more carefully examine primary sources, not books by authors in thrall to the Wrights, or to the Smithsonian, or to particular geographical areas like Dayton, Ohio.
Author William Hazelgrove has mostly penned books of fiction, though his Wright story is not his first foray into history. But if Wright Brothers, Wrong Story is an example of his history books, librarians need to re-catalogue them as fiction. As one who has spent the past many years researching the Wright story, this recent effort is mostly an elaborate attempt to reword the same old story with a "new hook" that isn't new at all. If truth in aviation history is ever to prevail, the Wright story will in fact be seen as one of the wonderful mythical tales of our American folk heroes - and much of the "genius" of the Wrights will be recognized as their ability to convince so many of their falsehoods for so long. Of course, as in many folktales, there is some truth in the telling, but this mostly myth becomes an egregious insult to history and those pioneers who came both before and after.
Unfortunately, there is more Wright fiction that must be dealt with.
An (astoundingly inaccurate) theme that slithers through Hazelgrove's book may be one of the reasons why the Smithsonian, whose present influence encourages Wright story adherents, touts this book. It is the story of the Langley Aerodrome, and Glenn Curtiss's supposedly fraudulent attempts to rebuild and fly it. In Part 2 of this review, I will discuss these experiments and Orville Wright's attempt to discredit them, as time will permit. The Orville Wright twenty eight year long episode about this plane may, in the end, take a book.
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References:
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Follow this blog. Also coming up: Critiques by aeronautical engineer Joe Bullmer of the most commonly accepted narrations, therefore, “references,” about the Wright Brothers' history.
2 comments:
Genie, I've listened to you continually trying to discredit the Wrights, but it just doesn't ring true to me. The Wrights were in the air flying around successfully before the rest. That is the most important part, and should be weighted very, very heavily. That's why they get the credit. Even after accounting for all of the hyperbole, there just isn't a more ideal person(s) to pin that credit on. I read a quote from Bullmer somewhere (probably here) where he claims there was really no proof that the Wrights flew at all before 1908.... Riiiiiiight. Just can't believe any of his stuff after reading that.
The Wrights had the "right stuff"... The rest didn't (yet). Everything else is just details.
You a pilot, Genie?... What about Bullmer? I've noticed that rarely do we have a historian, who is also an aeronautical engineer, who is also a pilot. My observation is that the perfect person to evaluate this stuff would have all of those credentials, but I'm not sure I've seen it. I'm a pilot and work in a technical field. I'm also an aircraft homebuilder and help with maintenance on certified aircraft. Don't care to really trace historical stuff back to the primary sources (don't speak French, either.), but I do occasionally hear those that have say things that I question having plenty of first-hand flight experience myself. For example, aircraft performance is not a constant. That is incredibly obvious to a pilot. When someone says something like, "The Flyer 1 didn't have enough power to climb." Then, the question becomes: under what atmospheric conditions? New spark plugs or old? Wings wet or dry? Cheap fuel or the good stuff? Fat pilot or skinny? I've flown things that barely leave the ground in the summer that leap off the runway in the winter. If Joe Bullmer says a plane doesn't have enough power to climb, then drop the temperature 20 degrees, and then it does. (Perhaps not an over abundance, but enough.)
I am really curious to know what first-hand flight experience you and Bullmer have. Care to comment on that?
Anonymous,
Glad to have you on board, especially since you have
knowledge and experience. If you want a site that includes a researcher who has all of the qualifications that you name, look no further than right here,"Truth in Aviation History." Joe Bullmer was a pilot (although he doesn't fly now) and has impressive degrees in aeronautical engineering as well as years of experience in the field, and also years of unbiased study of the Wright Brothers' history going to the original sources. You might want to study his book the WRight Story, which he is revising as we speak.
Our Editor Writer, and Resercher, Paul Jackson is a pilot and owns his own plane. He was Senior Editor of "Jane's All the World's Aircraft," the most prestigious publication in aviation in the world until he recently retired. Ws have another consultant, who also flies and may be a flight instructor. I'll have to check.
Sadly, I am not a pilot although I grew up with a father who was a flight instructor for the Army Air Corps during World War II. It was enough for me to pick up some key facts in aviation, such as very early on, being told why the camber on a wing causes lift. I also was treated to one or two actual lessons piloting in a plane before I graduated from high school.
But c'mon. The Wrights deserve to be discredited. They told so many provable lies. It doesn't take a pilot to know that their first telegram was a lie. Essentially they said they took off with engine power alone from level ground. Not level ground. It was from the side of a hill, against a 27 mph wind. And it apparently was only two "flights" and with no one to verify how far those went. One witness said "about 25 feet." Their lies and conspiracies just go on from there. Please read our whole site.
Joe Bullmer has not said on this site that the Wrights never flew until 1908 because he believes from their diaries that they learned what they needed to know to make controlled, sustained flights by 1905. However, you need to know that they never flew after that until 1908 at Kitty Hawk. What they claimed was only word of mouth except one observation by Chanute that went a short distance and then crashed.
So they weren't "flying around" at all before everybody else. They were not able to make controlled turns without "well digging. They couldn't stop their plane from turning because of their wing warping.
I myself might have published a newspaper clipping here by Drinkwater, a resident of Kitty Hawk at the time, who said their first flights were really glides and they didn't truly fly until 1908. In fact that was the year they were photographed from afar at Kitty Hawk by a photo journalist. Unfortunately, the AEA, including Glenn Curtiss, were already flying around by then and Curtiss was the first to make a pre-announced public flight, July 4, 1908. Orville and Wilbur didn't fly in public until after Curtiss's demonstration.
I can imagine it is hard to believe what I am saying here after reading so much that contradicts it. But we can verify what we say with witnesses and facts.
Looking forward to your response,
Genie, Founder and Editor
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