Taking Flight: Inventing the Aerial Age from Antiquity Through the First World War

By (author): "Richard P. Hallion"
Taking Flight: Inventing the Aerial Age from Antiquity Through the First World War
ISBN0195160355
ISBN139780195160352
AsinTaking Flight: Inventing the Aerial Age from Antiquity Through the First World War
CharactersOrville Wright, Wilbur Wright
Original titleTaking Flight: Inventing the Aerial Age, from Antiquity through the First World War
The invention of flight represents the culmination of centuries of thought and desire. Kites and rockets sparked our collective imagination. Then the balloon gave humanity its first experience aloft, though at the mercy of the winds. The steerable airship that followed had more practicality, yet a number of insurmountable limitations. But the airplane truly launched the Aerial Age, and its subsequent impact--from the vantage of a century after the Wright Brother's historic flight on December 17, 1903--has been extraordinary. Richard Hallion, a distinguished international authority on aviation, offers a bold new examination of aircraft history, stressing its global roots. The result is an interpretive history of uncommon sweep, complexity, and warmth. Taking care to place each technological advance in the context of its own period as well as that of the evolving era of air travel, this ground-breaking work follows the pre-history of flight, the work of balloon and airship advocates, fruitless early attempts to invent the airplane, the Wright brothers and other pioneers, the impact of air power on the outcome of World War I, and finally the transfer of prophecy into practice as flight came to play an ever-more important role in world affairs, both military and civil.