Dayton Daily News

Doing right by the Wrights

Some aviation history is on the verge of being lost in Ohio

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In the history of powered flight, few places are as significan­t as Dayton the home of Orville and Wilbur Wright, the brothers who invented, built and flew the first successful airplane.

Dayton is where they created the plane that they so famously tested during a 12-second flight from Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, in 1903. Dayton is also where the first pilots were trained and where the country’s first airplane manufactur­ing factory was built.

T he Wright brothers’ achievemen­t was “a moment of evolution” said Tom Crouch, senior curator, aeronautic­s, at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington and the author of the biography “The Bishop’s Boys: A Life of Wilbur and Orville Wright.”

“We were no longer earthbound creatures, we were creatures who learned how to fly,” Crouch said. “That is a profound evolution.”

Yet despite the number of history-making events that happened in Dayton, the preservati­on of the brothers’ legacy here has been mixed.

In 1936, the Wright family home and one of the brothers’ bike shops were acquired by automaker Henry Ford and taken to Dearborn, Mich- igan. In the early 1940s, the flying school building at Huffman Prairie Flying Field was torn down. The airfield, which also became the site of the brothers’ air- plane factory, had been a pasture, owned by Torrence Huffman, where the brothers worked on perfecting their controlled, powered flying technique in the early 1900s.

In 1977, Orville Wright’s downtown Dayton labo- ratory, where he loved to experiment, was demolished to make way for a gas station that was never built.

With so many sites connected to the Wright brothers already gone, many aviation historians are alarmed at the uncertaint­y that now hangs over the factory, where from 1910 to 1916, Wright Flyers, as they were known, were built. The two white brick buildings are, Crouch said, “intimately a part of the Wright story.”

As the factory buildings decay, the owner of the prop- erty and preservati­onists who wish to buy and develop the land there are squabbling over financial and eth- ical issues.

Brad White, a vice president with Hull and Associates and principal at Home Avenue, said he handled environmen­tal issues on the property and soil contaminat­ion in the neighborho­od as part of a $5 million public, private partnershi­p agree- ment with the city of Dayton.

The work was done with an eye toward making the historic buildings the cen- terpiece of a new national park. That project was driven by the National Aviation Heritage Alliance, known as NAHA, a local nonprofit composed of various groups with an interest in the city’s aviation legacy.

It was going well in the fall of 2016, when the alliance announced a plan in which the factory site would be purchased by the National Park Service and the alliance would buy the larger par- cels, developing them for aviation-associated enter- prises. On yet another parcel of the 54-acre site a $7 mil- lion library would be built. Shelley Dickstein, the Dayton city manager, said the projects could generate economic activity in the range of $20 million annually.

“Preserving the Wright legacy is important to the city,” Dickstein said then. “There’ll be tourist activity from folks — there’s a million folks who come to the Air Force Museum every year and flight enthusiast­s who are interested in the begin- nings of Orville and Wilbur Wright, and we think there’s opportunit­y there.”

But, according to the alli- ance, that all changed this year when White announced he would not indemnify the buyers of the property against environmen­tal haz- ards to which nearby home- owners had been exposed through groundwate­r con- tamination.

Spills from chemically contaminat­ed undergroun­d stor- age tanks belonging to Delphi, an auto parts maker and the previous owner, had leeched into the soil and White’s company has been operating cleanup systems for those homeowners. “I’m not the person who caused the contaminat­ion, that was the Delphi corporatio­n,” White said. “I bought it ‘as is’ from Delphi and I’m going to sell it ‘as is.’ “

To NAHA however, the whole deal was thrown into question.

“That was a gigantic change in informatio­n,” Tony Sculimbren­e, executive director of the alli- ance, said about learning of the seller’s position. The well-being of the neighbors was the seller’s obligation, Sculimbren­e said. The alliance lowered the price it was willing to pay and the offer was rejected by the seller.

“It’s pretty straightfo­rward; I have an idea of what I want to sell the property for,” White said in a recent interview. “I’m not prevent- ing anybody from buying it.”

While the details of the transactio­n are unique and complex, similar problems have been encountere­d by others who seek to preserve large historic structures according to Joseph J. Corn, a retired professor from Stanford University and author of the book “The Winged Gospel: America’s Romance with Aviation.”

T he SS Rotterdam, a steam-powered ship launched in 1959 and last used as a passenger vessel in 2000, was saved from the scrap yard by the efforts of a group of volunteers who formed the Steamship Rotter- dam Foundation. “We only have one ship like this,” said Klaas Krijnen, the group’s chairman, of the largest ocean liner produced in the Netherland­s. Still, the foundation had to pitch investors on a rehabilita­tion project that involved removing cancer-causing asbestos from the ship, finding a place to berth it and finding a revenue-generating purpose for the 748-foot vessel.

After more than a decade and four unsuccessf­ul restoratio­n proposals, the SS Rotterdam now operates as a hotel docked at Rotterdam Harbor. Artifacts from the ship’s glory days are on display. Various halls as well as the engine room are open for tours.

“It took a lot of time,” Krijnen said. “When initiative­s collapsed we were keeping the flag high; we said, ‘We will find another one.’ We just kept on going.”

Saving the Rotterdam was originally projected to cost about 25 million euros (about $29 million), Krijnen said. Ultimately, it cost 10 times that, underscori­ng Corn’s conclusion that large historical artifacts pose large challenges.

“They are expensive to maintain and difficult to protect,” Corn said. “Even if they are built to work outdoors, if left in their native habitat they will crumble.”

This possibilit­y concerns the Aviation Heritage Alliance. Recently it stopped offering tours of the factory buildings and the business offices once occupied by the Wrights because deteriorat­ion of the structure made conditions too hazardous, according to Timothy R. Gaffney, director of communicat­ions for the alliance and author of “The Dayton Flight Factory: The Wright Brothers & the Birth of Aviation.”

Meanwhile, the relationsh­ip between the would-be buyers and the property’s owner has grown increasing­ly antagonist­ic.

“I don’t th i nk they’re being fair with us,” Sculimbren­e said of the seller. White defends his right to do what he wishes with prop- erty he owns.

“Nobody else had the guts to do this,” White said. “I invested my money and my time and until somebody comes and develops the property I’m holding the bag and I have the NAHA folks talking trash about me.”

The impasse casts a shadow over what should have been good news for the factory’s future. This year, the federal government appropriat­ed $450,000 so the National Park Service can buy the buildings. But just owning them will not be enough, said Michael Gessel, who has spent 30 years trying to save Dayton’s Wright family landmarks. The land around them has to be developed, too.

It’s an “urban industrial area and that makes it a particular challenge. It’s not going to be in the forefront of where people, where tourists visit,” said Gessel, vice pres- ident of federal government programs at Dayton Developmen­t Coalition. The factory buildings “will be expen- sive to restore and there is no establishe­d plan for their exhibition and use.”

Despite the difficulti­es, Kendell Thompson, acting superinten­dent of Dayton Aviation Heritage National Historical Park, said he’s optimistic, having seen successful projects emerge from similarly acrimoniou­s relationsh­ips. “What happens with a lot of moving parts is things can go into hiatus, there are slowdowns as roles and capacities are negotiated and worked out.”

It won’t be easy and it probably won’t be quick, but when it is over, Thompson said, visitors from around the world will enjoy the latest addition to the area’s aviation historic district. The lesson to those future park visitors may even be applicable to the present.

“We talk about the developmen­t of airplanes,” Thompson said, “but really the things we talk about at the park are the themes of innovation, resiliency and the ability to do the impossible with little resources. These are universal themes.”

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE 2016 ?? A lifesize cutout of the Wright Brothers hangs in the front door at the original Wright Brothers Factory in Dayton. With so many sites connected to the Wright brothers gone, many aviation historians are alarmed at the uncertaint­y that hangs over the...
THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE 2016 A lifesize cutout of the Wright Brothers hangs in the front door at the original Wright Brothers Factory in Dayton. With so many sites connected to the Wright brothers gone, many aviation historians are alarmed at the uncertaint­y that hangs over the...
 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE 2016 ?? Drawings illustrati­ng what the finished site of the restored Wright Brothers Factory would look like are displayed in one of the original hangars in Dayton. Much of the Wright Brothers’ local legacy has already been lost.
THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE 2016 Drawings illustrati­ng what the finished site of the restored Wright Brothers Factory would look like are displayed in one of the original hangars in Dayton. Much of the Wright Brothers’ local legacy has already been lost.

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