These essays in celebration of the Wright brothers' first flight 100 years ago grew out of presentations by a group of prominent scholars in 2003 at a conference sponsored by the NASA History Division and held at the Great Lakes Science Center in Cleveland, Ohio. The volume focuses on the careers of some of the many men and women who helped to realize the dream of flight both through the atmosphere and beyond. These accounts are original and compelling because they examine the history of flight through the lens of biography. Collectively, these individuals helped to shape American aerospace history. There are obviously many other individuals that could, and arguably should, have been included in this collection, but we believe that the cross section of diverse individuals contained in this volume is important because it is symbolic of the dream of flight as a whole. These people all devoted their lives, and sometimes even sacrificed them, to the demands required for its realization.
Virginia P. Dawson is the author of
Nature’s Enigma, Engines and Innovation: Lewis Laboratory and American Propulsion Technology and
Lincoln Electric, a History and has contributed chapters in several collections on aerospace history. She is founder and president of History Enterprises, Inc.,
http://www. HistoryEnterprises.com, and an adjunct professor of history at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. Mark D. Bowles received his B.A. in psychology and M.A. in history from the University of Akron. He earned his Ph.D. from Case Western Reserve University in history in 1999. He has also been a Tomash Fellow form the Charles Babbage Institute at the University of Minnesota. Dr. Bowles is the author of
Our Healing Mission, a history of Saint Francis Hospital and Medical Center in Hartford, Connecticut. He is currently writing
Reactor in the garden, a history of NASA’s nuclear research reactor at Plum Brook station.