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Wright Cycle Company

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Wright Cycle Shop at Greenfield Village

The bicycle business of the Wright brothers, The Wright Cycle Company (originally the Wright Cycle Exchange) occupied five different locations in Dayton, Ohio. Orville and Wilbur Wright began their bicycle repair business in 1892, and soon added rentals and sales. In 1896 they began manufacturing and selling bicycles of their own design, the Van Cleve and St. Claire, named after their ancestors. They invented the self-oiling hub and the innovation of machining the crankarm and pedal on the left side of the bike with left-hand threads to prevent the pedal from coming unscrewed while cycling. They also ran a printing shop on the second-floor of their rented brick building at 22 S. Williams St., Dayton, Ohio, which remains preserved as a museum.

They used the profits from Wright Cycle Company to finance their aviation experiments.

In 1901 they fitted a third bicycle wheel horizontally above the front wheel of one of their St. Claire bicycles and used the appartatus as a test platform to study airfoil design. Soon after, they conducted pioneering wind tunnel tests on the second floor of their bicycle shop at 1127 West Third St. in Dayton, the last location of their bicycle business.

In that building they designed and constructed their gliders and first airplane, the Wright Flyer. In 1937 the building was moved to Greenfield Village in Michigan by Henry Ford, with the cooperation of Orville Wright.

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