Topic: Time » Aviation Eras » Early Flight

Early Flight

The first decades of aviation, marked by the Wright brothers’ first powered flight in 1903
Results 1 - 20 of 51

Artifacts on the Road

A gallery of traveling air- and spacecraft loaned out by the Smithsonian.
September 18, 2012 | By Heather Goss

The Weird World of Folk Aviators

With his whimsical sculptures, Gregory Bryant celebrates early ideas about winged flight.
May 2012 | By Rebecca Maksel

Finley Hunt’s Flying Machine

Designs for a fanciful Civil War airplane fetch big bucks at auction.
September 30, 2011 | By Mary Paltzer

The First Across the Continent

A 100th anniversary remembrance of Cal Rodgers and the Vin Fiz.
September 2011 | By Charles Wiggin, As Told To Howard Eisenberg

Wings Over Washington

In more innocent times, it was okay to buzz the Capitol.
July 01, 2011 | By Roger Mola

Jack Finney

Stealing the Wright Flyer

Back in 1951, sci-fi author Jack Finney had a few questions for the Smithsonian, like: How exactly would someone break in?
March 24, 2011 | By Rebecca Maksel

Mary Groce

The Unrecognized First

Emory Malick, the first African-American pilot, wasn't known to historians until recently.
March 2011 | By Rebecca Maksel

Just months after Lieutenant Paul Beck made an early airborne radio transmission, aviators test a receiving set - with the airplane

Moments and Milestones: Can You Hear Me Now?

When radio communication took to the air.
March 2011 | By George C. Larson, Member, NAA

John Bevins Moisant with his cat "Miss Paris" at the 1910 Gordon Bennett Race in New York.

The Daring Mr. Moisant

The most celebrated American aviator of 1910 took up flying as an act of revenge.
December 30, 2010 | By Gavin Mortimer

A replica of Coanda

Coanda’s Claim

The story of a jet flight in 1910, just seven years after Kitty Hawk, may be too good to be true.
December 06, 2010 | By Frank H. Winter

Glamour Boy

The day Claude Grahame-White thrilled the crowd at the Boston-Harvard meet.
September 08, 2010 | By Gavin Mortimer

From contemporary news articles and earlier hints from Sir George Cayley, a cartoonist created this depiction of what the 1834 mystery craft could look like.

Above and Beyond: The Oldest Powered Flying Machine?

September 2010 | By Tom D. Crouch

The dapper Edgar Mix (1905 self-portrait) avidly documented aeronautical events around Paris.

The Curious Case of Edgar Mix

The celebrated aeronaut found Earth-bound life difficult to navigate.
September 2010 | By Rebecca Maksel

The 1907 Gordon Bennett Race—In Stereo!

3-D photos of early balloons and aero meets, from the Smithsonian vaults.
August 17, 2010 | By The Editors

John, Joe, George, and Matt Savidge (from left) with one of their biplanes, ca. 1912.

In the Museum: Life Among the Savidges

August 2010 | By Tom Crouch

From left to right Wilbur Wright and Orville Wright chat with Wright Exhibition Team pilot Walter Brookins at Indianapolis Indiana June 1910

Moments and Milestones: Mile-High Man

July 2010 | By George C. Larson, Member, NAA

Stashing the parachute in a backpack, Broadwick saved future jumpers from injury or death. Three Broadwick packs survive today; one is stored at the National Air and Space Museum.

Pack Man

Charles Broadwick invented a new way of falling.
May 2010 | By Lisa Ritter

Wright brothers

In the Museum: A Wright Relic Surfaces

March 2010 | By Larry E. Tise

Glenn Curtiss soars in his biplane over Dominguez Field near Los Angeles

The Big Race of 1910

How the first U.S. air race launched an aviation tradition.
January 2010 | By Don Berliner

French aviator Louis Paulhan

A Glimpse of Things to Come

A hundred years ago, the International Air Meet gave spectators a look into the future.
November 17, 2009 | By Paul Hoversten


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