Professionally converted for accurate flowing-text e-book format reproduction, this Air Force publication describes the major milestones in Air Force history. Milestones include: Our First Military Aeroplane, The Wright Flyer, 1909 The Opening of the Air Corps Tactical School, 1920 The Air Corps Act of 1926 Establishing the GHQ Air Force, 1935 Formation of the Army Air Forces, 1941-42 AWPD-1, August 1941 FM 100-20, "Command and Employment of Air Power" July 1943 Hiroshima, August 1945 Air Force Independence, September 18, 1947 The Flight of the "Luck Lady II," 1949 The Decision to Build the Hydrogen Bomb, 1950 America's First ICBM Launch, December 17, 1957 Achieving Unity of Air Command - the JFACC Our First Military Aeroplane, The Wright Flyer, 1909 Man had dreamed of flying for centuries, but it was not until Dec. 17, 1903 that Orville and Wilbur Wright, bicycle mechanics from Dayton, Ohio, achieved the feat of powered, controlled flight. It would be nearly three years before anyone else in the world was able to duplicate the achievement. Even so, few knew of the brothers' flights, partly due to their extreme secretiveness; they feared unscrupulous competitors would steal their ideas. As a result, little publicity attended the Wright brothers and their airplane. But word got out. Taking off from the Ft. Myer parade field, the "Flyer" headed south to where the Masonic Temple now stands in Alexandria, turned around and climbed to a record 400 feet, and then went into a gradual descent to pick up speed for the sprint back to Ft. Myer. They crossed the finish line at a blistering 42 mph. President Taft was on hand to congratulate the brothers for their astonishing achievement. The Army had just bought themselves an airplane. Over the next century the airplane would revolutionize war, but even at the beginning there were those who foresaw that things had changed dramatically and irreversibly. Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the telephone, said simply that the airplane made armies "an impertinence" and battleships "so much junk." Time would test his judgments.
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