Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Historic Ohio factory complex damaged by fire; no one hurt

- AMANDA HOLPUCH AND CHRISTINE NEGRONI

A fire that broke out at a building complex in Dayton, Ohio, on Sunday damaged a factory founded by Wilbur and Orville Wright, the brothers who were the first people to successful­ly fly an airplane.

The fire throws into doubt the future of the factory, where the brothers built planes starting in the 1910s. It became part of the National Park Service’s group of aviation-related sites in Dayton in 2009.

The factory is a monument not just to the brothers and their consequent­ial invention but to the role of leading industrial­ists of the day in giving birth to the age of commercial aviation. The factory was built shortly after Wilbur Wright visited New York in 1909 and “got buttonhole­d by the Vanderbilt­s, the Colliers, J.P. Morgan, folks like that,” said Dean Alexander, who was the park service superinten­dent in Dayton when the site was added. “The first thing they paid for was building that factory,” Alexander said.

The Dayton Fire Department said it is investigat­ing the cause of the fire, which started at 2:28 a.m. Sunday and damaged the roof and interior of buildings in the complex. No one was injured, the department said.

But for the many in the area who take pride in the city’s role in the developmen­t of aviation, the fire left has left a pall. “I was there yesterday watching them put out the fire,” said Stephen Wright, of Dayton, the great-grand nephew of the brothers. “People were expressing their sadness at seeing something like that burn.”

The Wright Company Factory was under developmen­t by its owner, the city of Dayton, and other groups that sought to preserve its history. The building complex includes two buildings that the Wright brothers erected in 1910 and 1911, which made up the first factory in the United States built for airplane manufactur­ing, as well as newer buildings.

Restoratio­n of those buildings was part of a larger improvemen­t project in West Dayton where the loss of industry and the economic downturn of the past few decades left the neighborho­ods around the factory riddled with shuttered homes. The $12 million Dayton Metro Library, located adjacent to the factory was part of those plans. It opened last year.

The Wright brothers were from Dayton and formed the Wright Company in 1909, according to the National Aviation Heritage Area, a nonprofit that manages more than 15 historical aviation sites in Dayton, including the factory complex.

In December 1903, the brothers became the first people to fly an airplane in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. The brothers then refined their plane, the Wright Flyer, for several years before making the first public flights in August 1908, dazzling crowds and ushering in the age of aviation, according to the National Air and Space Museum.

The Wright Company produced about 120 airplanes in 13 models before the factory was sold; Orville Wright sold his share of the company in 1915, and his brother had died in 1912. Since the factory was built, the site changed ownership several times and for decades was used to make auto parts.

The city of Dayton purchased the property in October 2018. The next year, the Wright Company Factory was officially listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Last year, the Dayton City Commission authorized more than $1.4 million to be used to preserve the site, including plans for a museum created in partnershi­p with the National Park Service.

As a historical site, the factory has hosted “hundreds, if not thousands,” of people for hard-hat tours, said Mackensie Wittmer, executive director of the National Aviation Heritage Area in Dayton.

Historical sites connected to the Wright brothers and buildings named after them dot the city.

“Dayton is known as the birthplace of aviation, but we continue to be an aviation and aerospace city, that is our industry,” Wittmer said. “It’s part of who we’ve been for over 120 years.”

At the same time that the factory became part of the National Park Service, the agency added the home of Orville Wright into the park. Stephen Wright is a frequent host when the home, called Hawthorn Hill, is open to the public.

“There is a fair amount of pent-up demand to see Hawthorn Hill. I presume the factory will have the same draw for people,” Wright said. “The factory site and the new library are things we hoped would infuse the area with visitors and help to revitalize that part of Dayton. I am still hopeful they can evaluate the factory structures and bring them back to some state that will allow that.”

When firefighte­rs arrived, flames had breached the roof and were so intense that they could not enter the building. The fire was not fully extinguish­ed until Sunday evening, said Capt. Brad French of the Dayton Fire Department, and crews continued to check the smoldering debris Monday for hot spots.

The city of Dayton said in a statement that the partners in the project were “saddened” by the fire and would convene a meeting to discuss future redevelopm­ent of the property.

“Despite over 100 years of intense use, the Wright Company Factory still had most of its original wood roof, windows and other historic fabric intact,” said Kendall Thompson, the parks superinten­dent in Dayton. “We are working with our partners to assess the damage to this irreplacea­ble resource.”

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