Wright Brothers
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Wilbur and Orville
"From bike to Flight"
Before they built airplanes, the Wright brothers built
bicycles. Like so many Americans in the early 1890s, they embraced the
bicycle craze that swept the country in the wake of the invention of the
"safety bicycle" -- a bicycle with two equal-size wheels, front and
back. This design was much easier to mount and ride than the "ordinary
bicycle," which we now remember as the high-wheel bicycle.
First Bicycles
Wilbur Wright bought a used high wheel ordinary bicycle for
just $3 while the Wright family lived in Richmond, IN between
1881 and 1884. In 1892, Orville bought a new Columbia safety
bicycle for $160. In the same year, Wilbur purchased a used
Eagle safety bicycle for $80.
First Bicycle Shop
The Wrights opened a bicycle sales and repair shop called the
Wright Cycle Exchange at 1005 West Third Street in
Dayton, OH in 1892. They carried many brands of bicycles,
including Fleetwing, Reading, Coventry Cross, Envoy, Smalley,
Warwick, Duchess, and Halladay-Temple. Prices ranged from $40 to
$100. The Wrights also rented bicycles and sold parts and
accessories.
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Click on a photo or drawing to enlarge it.

This newspaper ad for the Wright Cycle
exchange appeared in 1893. |
Bicycle Shop Locations and Names
As their business grew, the Wright brothers moved their
bicycle shop six times and changed the name once.
- 1892 -- Wright Cycle Exchange at 1005 West Third Street,
Dayton, OH.
- 1893 -- Wright Cycle Exchange at 1015 West Third Street,
Dayton, OH.
- 1893 to 1894 -- Wright Cycle Exchange at 1034 West Third
Street. The name was later changed to Wright Cycle Co.
- 1895 to 1897 -- Wright Cycle Co. at two locations
-- the main store at 22 South Williams Street, Dayton, OH
and a branch in downtown Dayton at 23 West Second Street.
The branch store was closed in 1896.
- 1897 to 1908 -- The Wright Cycle Co. at 1127 West Third
Street, Dayton, OH.
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The third Wright bicycle shop at 1034 West
Third Street. It was at this location that the Wrights changed
the name of their business to the Wright Cycle Co.

The fifth shop at 22 South Williams
Street. Here the Wrights began to manufacture their own
bicycles. |
Manufacturing Bicycles
In late 1895, the Wrights began to make preparations to
manufacture their own bicycles. They introduced the "Van Cleve"
on April 24, 1896. The Van Cleves had been among Dayton's first
settlers and were ancestors of the Wrights. Later in the year,
the Wrights introduced a second, less expensive model called the
"St. Clair." Again, the name was drawn from local history;
Arthur St. Clair had been the first president of the Northwest
Territory, which later became Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois.
The Van Cleve was mostly hand made with a choice of
handlebars, metal or wood rims, and single tube or double-tube
pneumatic tires. The St. Clair was largely built up from
high-quality parts that were available through many sources such
as the Davis Sewing Machine Company of Dayton, OH (which later
became the Huffy Corporation) and Pope Manufacturing of Boston,
MA.
There is some controversy over whether or not the Wrights
manufactured a bicycle called the "Wright Special." The only
reference the Wrights ever made to this bicycle was in an
announcement that appeared April 17, 1896: "For a number of
months, the Wright Cycle Co. have been making plans to
manufacture bicycles...we will have several samples out in a
week or ten days, and will be ready to fill orders before the
middle of next month. The WRIGHT SPECIAL will contain nothing
but high grade material. " This can be taken two ways. Either
the Wrights were getting ready to introduce a bicycle especially
manufactured by them, or they were going to introduce a bicycle
called the Wright Special. Since the bicycle the Wrights
unveiled seven days later was the Van Cleve, and the Wright
Special appears in none of their catalogs, most historians tend
to believe that the announcement refers to "special" bicycle and
not a brand name.
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The Wright Cycle Co. at 1127 West Third
Street, where the Wrights built gliders and airplanes.

A Wright Van Cleve bicycle.

A Wright St. Clair bicycle. The horizontal
wheel is part of an aeronautical experiment from 1901.

St. Clair and Van Cleve nameplates,
thought to have been designed by Orville.

1897 newspaper ad for Wright Van Cleve
bicycles. |
Cycling Innovations
The Wright brothers introduced two inventions on their
bicycles. The Van Cleve came with a special "self-oiling hub."
Dayton only had 12 miles of paved streets in those days and the
dust played havoc with bicycle bearings, causing them to wear
quickly. The Wrights sealed the bearings with felt washers and
created an oil reservoir inside the hub, cutting down on
maintenance. This special hub also carried its own spare parts
-- two extra bearing races or "cones" in which the bearings
rode. These were the most likely parts to go on early bicycles.
In 1900, the Wrights announced a "bicycle pedal that can't
come unscrewed." Pedals were mounted to the crank by threaded
posts. On early bicycles, both posts had standard
right-hand threads. As the cyclist pedaled, the action tended to
tighten one pedal and loosen the other, with the result that one
pedal kept dropping off the bike. Wilbur and Orville used
right-hand threads on one pedal post and left-hand threads on
the other so the pedaling action tended to tighten both pedals.
Business Profits
The bicycle business was good to the Wright brothers,
initially. In their best year (1897), they made $3000 or $1500
apiece in a time when the average American worker was doing well
to make $500 per year. They also managed to save $5000, which
went a long way in financing their aviation experiments. By the
turn of the century, however, the hand-made bicycle business was
no longer lucrative. The American market had been saturated by
thousands of businesses that had sprung up to satisfy the
initial rush to own a bicycle. Huge manufacturing firms had
geared up to manufacture bicycles for as little as $10 apiece.
The Wrights were forced to lower their prices again and again to
remain competitive.
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A section of a page in the 1900 Wright Van
Cleve catalog, describing the Wrights special wheel hub. |
Selling the Business
The Wright manufactured very few bicycles after 1902 and
none after 1904 -- they were much too busy developing and trying
to find a market for their airplanes. When they finally began to
sell aircraft in 1909, the bicycle shop at 1127 West Third
Street was converted to a machine shop where employees of the
Wright Company -- the brothers airplane manufacturing business
-- turned out parts for the airplane engines and drive trains.
In 1909 or 1910, the Wrights sold all their remaining bicycle
parts and the rights to the Van Cleve name to W.F. Meyers, a
bicycle salesman, repairman, and machinist. Meyers did not make
his own bicycles, but had another company put them together and
he put the Van Cleve nameplate on them. Meyers continued to sell
Van Cleve bicycles until 1939.
From first to fly |

A Meyers Van Cleve made in the 1930s. |
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