Wright Brothers (Orville & Wilbur) — "We do not believe that the difficulties are insurmountable, and we are confident…"
We do not believe that the difficulties are insurmountable, and we are confident that we shall yet succeed.
We do not believe that the difficulties are insurmountable, and we are confident that we shall yet succeed.
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"We had no idea of the amount of publicity that would follow our flights."
"No flights of any kind were made except those of our own machine, which, strange to say, did not become a public amusement."
"The machine is a success and we are well pleased with it."
"Success comes from being prepared for opportunities."
"It is not necessary to be a genius to be an inventor."
American aviation pioneers who achieved the first sustained powered controlled airplane flight at Kitty Hawk, NC, on December 17, 1903. Closely associated with Octave Chanute (their gliding mentor and aeronautical correspondent). For an intellectual contrast, see Samuel Pierpont Langley, Smithsonian Institution Secretary and government-funded aviation researcher — Langley's Aerodrome crashed twice into the Potomac in October-December 1903 with $50,000 of War Department funding; the Wright Brothers' bicycle-shop empiricism beat Langley's institutional Big Science by 9 days. The most-cited example in engineering history of empirical-tinkerer beating institution-funded credentialism.
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The speakers acknowledge the challenges ahead are real and serious but refuse to label them impossible. They express a calm, reasoned optimism: obstacles can be studied, broken down, and overcome through persistent effort. Rather than boasting, they state a working belief that success is still within reach if they keep pushing. It is a quiet declaration that difficulty is not defeat, and that progress requires steady confidence paired with ongoing work.
This mirrors the Wrights' methodical bicycle-shop approach to aviation. After gliders failed at Kitty Hawk in 1901, Wilbur famously doubted flight would come in their lifetime, yet they built their own wind tunnel, rewrote lift tables, and pressed on. They treated each crash as data, not defeat, and reached powered flight on December 17, 1903. The quote captures their engineer's faith: problems yield to patient testing, careful measurement, and refusal to quit when rivals like Langley spectacularly failed.
At the turn of the 20th century, heavier-than-air flight was widely mocked as fantasy after Samuel Langley's government-funded Aerodrome plunged into the Potomac weeks before Kitty Hawk. Newspapers ridiculed would-be aviators, and serious scientists declared manned flight impossible. Yet it was also an age of relentless tinkerers, electricity, automobiles, and transatlantic radio, where self-taught mechanics could outpace universities. The Wrights' confident persistence fit that Progressive-era faith that ordinary Americans with discipline and ingenuity could crack problems experts had abandoned.
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