Before Planes: Tower Jumps and Humanity’s First Flights

  Open with LBRY

When we talk about the first human flight, most of us think of the Wright brothers. But humans have been hurling themselves off towers with wings strapped to their arms long before 1903. Abbas ibn Firnas tried it in 875 AD, wrapped in vulture feathers, and managed to sort-of fly before crash-landing. He survived, which already makes him more successful than Icarus.

Fast forward to 1783 and the Montgolfier brothers sent a sheep, duck, and rooster into the Parisian skies in a hot air balloon to see if the air was safe. It was. So next up, humans.

Soon we had airships, dirigibles, and eventually heavier-than-air flight, which is fancy talk for planes that don't just float like balloons. The big breakthrough came with George Cayley, who figured out the physics of flight but didn’t have a light enough engine. Then the Wright brothers came along, built a flying lawn chair with an engine, and took off in 1903.

After that, flight took off—literally. Within decades we were dogfighting in WWI, crossing the Atlantic, and by 1969, walking on the bloody Moon. All in less than 70 years.

So yes, birds probably find our efforts hilarious. But from tower dives to space travel, our obsessive quest to defy gravity might just be one of the most impressive things we've ever done.

Even if an unladen swallow still puts us all to shame.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n2I2LQOhHuc