Financial History Issue 122 (Summer 2017) | Page 10

EDUCATORS’ PERSPECTIVE Winning Without Subsidies: Planes, Steamships and Automobiles By Brian Grinder and Dan Cooper David McCullough, paraphrasing Orville Wright, highlights the brothers’ accomplishments at Kitty Hawk: “Their flights that morning were the first ever in which a piloted machine took off under its own power into the air in full flight, sailed forward with no loss of speed, and landed at a point as high as that from which it started.” However, from a finan- cial perspective, the next paragraph in his biography of the Wright brothers is much more interesting. In that paragraph, McCullough notes that the Wright brothers spent less than $1,000 in total to develop their flying machine. In contrast, competitor Samuel Pierpont Langley spent 70 times that amount, much of it financed by the government, in his failed attempt to be the first to fly a manned heavier-than-air craft. The brothers used profits from their bicycle business to fund their experiments in flight. The Wright brothers’ authorized biographer, Fred Kelly, commented on the surprising smallness of their expenses, not- ing that most of the costs involved mechan- ical labor, which the Wrights did them- selves. Kelly goes on to address the legends of where the brothers procured that $1,000. Many of Dayton, Ohio’s wealthy business- men claimed to have funded them. The money, some claimed, came from the sale of an Iowa farm owned by the family or from a mortgage on the family home. Kath- erine Wright, Wilbur and Orville’s sister, was amused by claims that she provided the funds from her schoolteacher’s salary. She found that to be about as laughable as the rumor that her brothers relied on her mathematical skills to build their airplane. According to Kelly, “Their bicycle busi- ness had been giving them a decent income, and at the end of the year 1903 they still had a few thousand dollars in a local building and loan association.” Langley was a professor of astronomy and physics at the Western University The object of the statement, concerning which you made inquiry, was to make it clear that we stood on quite different ground from Prof. Langley, and were entirely justified in refusing to make our discoveries public property at this time. We had paid the freight, and had a right to do as we pleased. The use of the word “any,” which you underscored, grew out of the fact that we found from articles…and…correspondence that there was a somewhat general impression that our Kitty Hawk experiments had not been carried on at our own expense, &c. We thought it might save embarrassment to correct this promptly. — Wilbur Wright to Octave Chanute, January 18, 1904 of Pennsylvania and the director of the Allegheny Observatory when he became interested in aviation. His work in Penn- sylvania enabled him to show that Isaac Newton was wrong when he theorized that motorized flight was impossible. His reputation as one of the foremost scientists of his time led to a position as Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution in 1887. He became Secretary of the Smithso- nian a few months later upon the death of then-Secretary Spencer Baird. In 1896, with friend Alexander Graham Bell as witness and photographer, Langley conducted the first unmanned mechanical flight with two flying machines he dubbed “aerodromes.” Some among early aviation enthusiasts believed that manned flight was achiev- able only with government funding. Of course, aviation’s potential usefulness in times of war attracted the interests of gov- ernments around the world. Thus, anyone with a credible and convincing plan to build a heavier-than-air flying machine would find government funding readily available. Langley believed it would cost at least $50,000 to build an aerodrome that could carry a man, but he was reaching the end of his career and doubted he would be involved in making manned flight a 8    FINANCIAL HISTORY  |  Summer 2017  | www.MoAF.org practical and commercial reality. How- ever, increased tensions between the United States and Spain that eventually culminated in the Spanish-American War renewed the US military’s interest in the possibilities of manned flight. Langley was not politically astute, but his associates in the scientific commu- nity who had important political connec- tions quickly brought his experiments in flight to the attention of President William McKinley. Langley soon found himself meeting with representatives from the Army and the Navy. This led to an agree- ment with the War Department’s Board of Ordinance and Fortification (BOF) to finance Langley’s experiments. The BOF agreed to advance Langley $25,000 with the promise of an additional $25,000 when Langley could demonstrate substan- tial progress to the board. By late 1900, Langley had assembled a staff that included chief engineer Charles Manly, seven machinists and three car- penters. The monthly payroll ballooned to $800 not including Manly’s salary, the cost of building the engine or the cost of building the houseboat that would serve as a launch pad for the aerodrome. Lang- ley burned through the initial $25,000 allotment in no time and nearly ran out