Today’s Photo Story – In 1908, Wilbur Wright flies by the Mulsanne Straight!
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Today’s Photo Story – In 1908, Wilbur Wright flies by the Mulsanne Straight!

On 14 November 1910, Eugene Ely made the first successful take-off of a plane from a ship at sea, taking to the air from his biplane from the light cruiser USS Birmingham. He then achieved the first shipboard landing of an aircraft two months later and naval aviation was born. Two years earlier, Wilbur Wright had completed a flight that took off from Les Hunaudières Hippodrome in Le Mans on 8 August 1908.

Brothers Orville and Wilbur Wright made their first successful flight in 1903 at Kill Devil Hills in North Carolina, where a monument and museum stand to their honour today. Léon Bollée subsequently invited them to France, Wilbur agreed and came over with one of the Flyers that he’d used for tests in June and July 1908. He gave a public flight demonstration on 8 August 1908, taking off from Les Hunaudières Hippodrome, right next to the renowned Mulsanne Straight that forms part of the 24 Hours of Le Mans circuit.

Photo: copyright ACO archives.

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