Categories
Aircraft Bicycles Dayton Ohio History

The Ordinary

Part 1 of 3โ€ฆ

The man sitting atop a penny-farthing in the summer of 1879 is five feet off the ground. He weighs maybe one hundred and fifty pounds. The wheel beneath him is fifty-four inches across โ€” taller than most of the children who stop to watch him pass. He got up there by running alongside the machine, hooking a foot on a small peg above the rear wheel, and vaulting himself upward in a single practiced motion. He will dismount the same way: a controlled fall forward, a hop, gravity made manageable by repetition. He has done this so many times that he no longer thinks about it. He thinks about the road ahead.

He is not a daredevil. He is a commuter.

The people on the sidewalk call his machine a penny-farthing, which is a joke dressed up as a name. A penny was the largest British coin; a farthing the smallest, worth one quarter of a penny. Seen from the street, the big front wheel and its tiny rear companion looked exactly like the two coins set side by side. Some wit had noticed, and the name stuck. The riders themselves refused it. They called their machine the ordinary โ€” because to them, it was exactly that, the standard form, the rational machine, the obvious answer. They said ordinary with complete seriousness while everyone else was calling it loose change.

This tells you something about the people who rode it. And about the machine they thought they were riding.

The penny-farthing was not a circus prop. It was the highest expression of an engineering logic that had no other options. The pedals connected directly to the front axle. One rotation of the legs meant one rotation of the wheel. If you wanted to go faster, you needed a bigger wheel. It was that simple. It was that brutal. The geometry of human ambition ran directly through the circumference of that front wheel, and the front wheel kept getting bigger, and the riders kept climbing higher, until the whole enterprise teetered at the edge of what a human being could reasonably mount and survive.

The high-wheeler was not a mistake. It was the answer to a question no one yet knew how to ask differently.

The machines were built in Coventry, England, by craftsmen who bent and brazed steel frames by hand, fitted wire spokes under tension โ€” a Starley innovation that made the wheel lighter than anyone expected โ€” and pressed solid rubber tires onto rims by feel and experience. James Starley had essentially invented the industry in 1871, and Coventry became its Detroit: a concentration of metalworking skill that fed on itself, that knew things in its hands it couldnโ€™t fully explain on paper.

Then, in the mid-1880s, someone put a chain on it.

The chain-and-sprocket drive seems obvious now, the way all elegant solutions seem obvious after the fact. Decouple the pedals from the wheel. Run a chain from a sprocket near the riderโ€™s feet to a smaller sprocket at the rear axle. Suddenly the wheel didnโ€™t have to be enormous โ€” the gearing could do what only size had done before. The front wheel came down. The rear wheel came up to match it. The rider dropped five feet closer to the earth. The machine that emerged from this rearrangement was called, without any particular irony, the safety bicycle. It was safe. It was fast. It was something a woman in a skirt could ride, something a child could learn on, something that didnโ€™t require a running vault to mount.

The ordinary had been a machine for athletes. The safety bicycle was a machine for everyone.

By the 1890s it had become something close to a religious phenomenon. Factories couldnโ€™t keep up with demand. Doctors wrote approvingly of its effects on the nervous system, the cardiovascular system, the general disposition of the modern soul. Roads were improved because cyclists demanded it. The bicycle arrived before the automobile and prepared the world for it โ€” softened the ground, culturally speaking, for the idea that ordinary people might move through space under their own mechanical power, faster than their feet could carry them, farther than their legs could take them. It was the first technology to feel like freedom to people who had never felt that way before.

In Dayton, Ohio, two brothers watched all of this happen and decided to get into the business.

Orville and Wilbur Wright were not, in the beginning, aviation pioneers. They were bicycle mechanics. They opened their shop in 1892, right at the peak of the craze, and what they learned there โ€” the feel of a machine in motion, the gyroscopic principles of balance and control, the importance of getting the weight right, the importance of understanding what a human body can and cannot do at speed โ€” was an education no university offered and no book could fully provide. They learned it with their hands. They learned it in the gap between the machine that existed and the machine that should exist.

The Wrights were not the only ones in Dayton thinking about bicycles. The Huffman Manufacturing Company had opened its doors the same year as the Wright Cycle Company โ€” 1892, the peak of the craze, the same fever in the same city. Huffman would eventually become Huffy, and Huffy would eventually become the bicycle every American child found under the Christmas tree. Dayton was doing something in those years. It was a city that couldnโ€™t stop thinking about how people move. The precision those Coventry craftsmen had developed โ€” interchangeable parts, tight tolerances, the discipline of making things that had to work โ€” migrated into every bicycle shop that followed, including a small one on West Third Street.

The chain drive had taught the world that the right mechanical insight could make an impossible thing ordinary. You didnโ€™t have to accept the constraints you were handed. You could re-ask the question.

Orville and Wilbur had been paying attention.

When they went to Kitty Hawk in 1903, they brought with them a bicycle chain. It connected the engine to the propellers. The same principle โ€” a sprocket, a chain, a transferred force โ€” that had brought the penny-farthing rider down from his absurd perch now lifted two men off the ground for the first time in human history.

The man on the high-wheeler in 1879 did not know he was riding toward the Wright Brothers. He was just going to work. But the machine beneath him, the one everybody called loose change and he called ordinary, was already asking the question that would take twenty years to answer.

What happens when you finally get the wheel the right size?


The roller chain โ€” the specific form that connected pedal to wheel and made the safety bicycle possible โ€” was invented in Manchester in 1879 by a Swiss engineer named Hans Renold. He was refining a design that Leonardo da Vinci had sketched in a notebook around 1500. Leonardo could imagine it. He couldnโ€™t make it. The world needed four hundred years of improving machine tools before anyone could hold the tolerances tight enough to build what Leonardo had already seen. The idea arrived centuries before the craft caught up. It is always this way.

Categories
Dayton Ohio History Memories

The Weight of What Arrived

The first thing you noticed was the smell. Hot metal and oil and something older underneath โ€” not unpleasant, exactly, more like the smell of a thing that knew what it was doing. Dayton Typographic Service on a Saturday morning. Dad already at his machine, pencil tucked over his ear, fingers moving. I was four or five. I had no idea what I was looking at. That was most of the point.

A Linotype machine is the size of a small car and louder than you expect. It sets type by casting individual lines in molten lead โ€” hence the name, line oโ€™ type โ€” and the whole apparatus runs hot, always, a controlled furnace at the center of the work. The operators moved around it with the casual authority of men who understood something dangerous well enough not to fear it. Dad was one of those men. He knew what he was doing with his hands, and watching him work was the first time I understood that intelligence could live in the body, not just the mind. The pencil over the ear was the tell. He was always thinking ahead of his hands.

We lived on Burleigh Avenue in a two-bedroom ranch so small the rooms felt like suggestions. There was a garage out back on the alleyway. The basement held more than youโ€™d expect. The furnace, coal-fed, which Dad stoked every morning before the rest of us were awake โ€” that heat, the warmth that was simply there when I came downstairs, was something he had made. He tended it the same way he tended the Linotype: with patience, with knowledge, with hands that knew the work.

But there was also the kiln. My folks did ceramics, and in a corner of that basement sat the kiln they fired their pieces in. To check the temperature you pulled out a cone โ€” a small pyramidal piece of clay engineered to droop at a specific heat โ€” and peered in at it through the door. I remember doing this, leaning in toward that rectangle of orange light, the blast of heat against my face, checking whether the cone had begun to bend. It was one of my earliest understandings that transformation was not instantaneous. You watched for it. You waited for the material to tell you.

There are men like that in every generation and then one generation there arenโ€™t. They knew how things worked because they had no choice but to know. The furnace would not stoke itself. The type would not set itself. The knowledge was not academic. It lived in the hands or it didnโ€™t live at all.


Union Station was only a few miles from Burleigh Avenue but it existed at a different scale entirely. You went through the main doors and there was a model railroad in the lobby โ€” an elaborate layout, HO scale or maybe O scale, I was too young to know the difference โ€” and sometimes they had it running, the little locomotives making their rounds through their little landscape, and I would stand there watching it with the focused attention that children bring to things they love. I did not know then that I was watching a miniature version of what was waiting upstairs.

The aunts and uncles came from New Jersey on the Pennsylvania Railroad. The Spirit of St. Louis, which ran between New York and St. Louis and stopped at Daytonโ€™s Union Station, was a name that meant something to me before I fully understood what a railroad was. What I understood was this: when they came, they brought TastyKakes.

If you didnโ€™t grow up in the Mid-Atlantic corridor you may not know TastyKakes, which is a condition I regard with sympathy. They are small cakes, individually wrapped, and they came in a cardboard box, and my aunts and uncles carried them off the train the way travelers have always carried the irreplaceable things of home. The Pennsylvania Railroad as delivery mechanism for Butterscotch Krimpets. The whole industrial apparatus of American locomotion bent toward that purpose.

But first there was the platform, and the waiting, and then the thing you felt before you heard it and heard before you saw it. The locomotive did not arrive so much as it asserted itself. The platform shook. The air changed. There was a sound that was also a pressure, a physical fact you received in your chest and your feet simultaneously, and then the engine was there, enormous, indifferent to its own enormity, trailing steam. Nothing I have encountered since has prepared me for anything the way that prepared me for everything. The world, it turned out, contained forces at that scale. It was useful to know.

My aunts and uncles stepped down onto the platform and there were embraces and the good confusion of arrival, and eventually the box of TastyKakes changed hands, and we drove back to the small house on Burleigh Avenue where Dad had been up since before dawn making sure it was warm.


I think about scale a lot now. The furnace that heated two bedrooms. The kiln glowing orange in the basement corner. The Linotype casting its lines of lead. The locomotive making the platform tremble. They were all of a piece โ€” a world in which the forces that ran your life were large and hot and loud and present, operated by people who understood them through their hands. You could go see them. You could stand close enough to feel the heat, smell it, watch it do its work on the material.

Dad is gone now. Union Station is gone โ€” demolished in 1976, replaced by a parking structure. The Linotype machines are in museums, or theyโ€™re not anywhere. The coal furnace was replaced by something cleaner and quieter and invisible.

I donโ€™t know what my children will remember. I hope it has weight.

Categories
Dayton Ohio Memories

The Mirror and the Boxcar

When the plane started circling, I needed to disappear.

I was just goofing around on my own with an army surplus signaling mirror in our treeless backyard in Kettering. A thick piece of bright rectangular glass with an opening in the middle where light could shine through a cross. To signal you had to line up the light shining through with the opening.

Living close to Wright-Patterson, C-119 Flying Boxcars were a common sight. I could hear one coming before I could see it. I turned and scanned the sky. There it was.

Maybe this was worth a try. What did it even mean?

I held it up, aimed and hoped.

Then I saw it. The plane started a turn to the left. Uh oh.

I didnโ€™t want to be reported. I ran into the woods behind our house. I watched and waited.

The circle completed. The boxcar flew on.

I walked back into the house and put the mirror back on the chest of drawers in my bedroom.

I never told anyone. Not even you.

Categories
Aircraft Aviation Dayton Ohio

The Gravity of Wright Hall

Thereโ€™s a building in Carillon Historical Park in Dayton, Ohio, that I walked into as a child and never entirely walked out of.

Itโ€™s called Wright Hall, and it was designed by Orville Wright himself โ€” his last major project before he died in January 1948, two years before the park even opened. He didnโ€™t live to see anyone walk through the doors he helped design. But he had a very specific idea about what the experience should feel like when they did.

He wanted you to look down at the plane.

Not up at it, the way the Smithsonian would later hang the 1903 Flyer from the ceiling. Down. The 1905 Wright Flyer III sits low in that room, close to the ground, positioned so a visitor can lean over and see exactly how the pilot lay across it โ€” stomach-down, nestled into a hip cradle, with a joystick-like lever in one hand and a paddle in the other. No seat. No cockpit. Just a man flat on a machine made of spruce and muslin and wire, trusting himself to the sky.

I didnโ€™t understand any of that when I was a kid. What I understood was that you didnโ€™t talk loudly in that room.

The feeling was immediate and hard to name then, though I can name it now: it felt like a church. The building had been made for one thing and one thing only โ€” to hold this object โ€” and that specificity of purpose had given it a kind of sanctity. Other museums have artifacts behind glass with plaques. Wright Hall had a presence at its center, the same way a cathedral has an altar. Everything in the room was organized around the plane. The light. The silence. The way adults moved more carefully than they did outside.

The Flyer III is the one the Wright brothers themselves considered their most important aircraft. Not the famous 1903 machine at Kitty Hawk โ€” the one that made the front pages, that answered the question of could it be done. This one. The one that asked what came next. By October 1905, Wilbur flew it for nearly forty minutes before running out of gas. It could bank, turn, circle, come back and land where it started. It became the first practical airplane โ€” the proof that flight wasnโ€™t just a stunt, but a technology, the first tentative sketch of the world weโ€™d build on top of it.

Eighty percent of the materials in that plane are original. The rest were made to replace parts lost or borrowed. The 1905 engine is in there. Orville oversaw every detail of the restoration and then, before it was finished, died. The plane was completed without him. It opened to the public on June 3, 1950, and the crowds swarmed in.

What I keep thinking about, decades later, is the deliberateness of Orvilleโ€™s final act โ€” the decision to spend his last years not flying, not inventing, but making sure one specific machine would be seen correctly by people who hadnโ€™t been born yet. He chose the building. He chose the angle. He chose to put the plane on the ground so youโ€™d have to lean over it, so the mechanics of it โ€” the hip cradle, the geometry of control โ€” would be legible rather than merely impressive.

He was trying to explain something.

Growing up in Dayton meant growing up in the long shadow of a thing that had happened there before you were born. The Wright Brothers were not myth in Dayton the way they might be elsewhere. They were local โ€” specific, biographical, connected to real streets. The bike shop where they worked the figures out. The cow pasture at Huffman Prairie where they practiced. The house where Orville lived until he died. All of it still there, or mostly there, embedded in the ordinary geography of a mid-sized Ohio city.

But Wright Hall was different. Wright Hall was where the thing itself lived. And the thing itself, seen up close, was smaller than I expected and more fragile and more terrifying. Two pusher propellers driven by chains. A twelve-horsepower engine. Gaps in the ribs of the wing you could see daylight through.

The altar, when you finally stood over it, turned out to be the most improbable thing in the world: a contraption that barely looked like it could stay together, let alone in the air. And that, I think, is exactly what Orville wanted you to feel. Not awe at the achievement from a safe distance. Proximity to the audacity.

He made a room for it. I walked in as a child and it got into me somehow, that room, that plane, that deliberate act of making something matter. Iโ€™ve been thinking about it ever since.

Categories
Aircraft Dayton Ohio

Constellations

Lockheed 749 Constellation Airliner (aircraft; aeroplanes)

As a kid, I grew up in Dayton, Ohio – home of the Wright Brothers, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, the original Air Force Museum, etc. There was a lot of aviation energy in Dayton!

One of things I remember doing with my Dad was driving out (usually on a Sunday – he liked to go for a Sunday drive) to the Dayton Airport which was in Vandalia, Ohio.

We could get close enough to be able to see the airliners coming and going – and the most striking of those back in my era were the TWA Lockheed Constellations. These four-engine beauties were quite a sight to behold – with beautiful streamlined lines, four big rotary engines, that triple tail, and striking red and white TWA colors. Wikipedia notes:

The April 1957 OAG shows 73-weekday departures: 56 TWA, 13 American, and 4 Lake Central. TWA had two nonstops to New York but no other nonstops reached beyond Chicago-Detroit-Cleveland-Pittsburgh-Cincinnati. The first jets were TWA Convair 880s from Chicago in January 1961.

A beautifully restored Lockheed Constellation arrived this week at the annual EAA AirVenture 2023 event at Oshkosh, WI. It brought back good memories of those days with my Dad at the airport in Vandalia. Beautiful to watch this lovely restored “Connie” arrive and land at Oshkosh. This particular Connie is restored as an Air Force VC-121A, a VIP transport model nicknamed Columbine II first used as Air Force One back in the Eisenhower administration.

Hereโ€™s a great article about learning to fly the Constellation.

The Wikipedia note above reminded also that I first saw the Convair 880 jetliner at the airport in Dayton. I always thought the Convair 880 (and the later 990) were the most beautiful jetliners in terms of design!

Here’s a good article about piloting the Convair 880!

The 880 was the fastest of the first-generation jet airliners. We could cruise it at Mach .85 and the Mmo was .88. Some thought that is where Convair came up with the number 880. Others thought it was because the passenger cabin had 88 seats and 88 windows. Your guess is as good as mineโ€ฆ

The author goes on to tell a good story about meeting his future wife – “Sharon is the only thing I ever stole from TWA.”

Ah, so many good memories were triggered by that Oshkosh arrival this week!