Showing posts with label Wright. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wright. Show all posts

August 19 - National Aviation Day in the U.S. of A.

 Posted on August 19, 2021


This is an update on my post published August 19, 2010:


Celebrated on the birthday of Orville Wright, the first pilot of a successful airplane flight, National Aviation Day is a day meant to encourage people to visit aviation history sites (many small airports feature small but cool museums!), read about aviation, watch videos about aviation and early flight, and so forth.


Learn about lift and other forces of flight...



...make a paper airplane or paper helicopter...



...and do other experiments about flight.




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June 19 – Happy Birthday, Maginel Wright Enright

Posted on June 19, 2016

A fairly famous family:

Maginel Wright, born in Massachusetts on this date in 1881, grew up to be a children's book illustrator and a graphic artist, called by some one of the very best artists for children.

Her brother, Frank Lloyd Wright, grew up to be a renowned architect.

Maginel married another artist named Pat Enright, and her daughter from that marriage was Elizabeth Enright, who also became a children's book illustrator—and also a writer. Elizabeth Enright won the prestigious Newbery Medal.


Maginel Wright Enright illustrated books by such well known authors as L. Frank Baum (famous for his Oz books), and she illustrated now-classic books such as Heidi and Hans Brinker or the Silver Skates. In all, she illustrated 63 children's books. She also illustrated textbooks; her daughter credits her with revolutionizing textbook illustration.



Here is some of her work:












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February 1 – National Freedom Day

Posted on February 1, 2016


There are several holidays surrounding the freeing of the African American slaves, such as Emancipation Day and Juneteenth

Today, I introduce another: National Freedom Day, celebrated on February 1, commemorates the date when Abraham Lincoln signed a joint resolution that proposed the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, outlawing slavery. Lincoln signed the resolution on this date in 1865.

The first time National Freedom Day was celebrated was in 1942; a wreath was laid by the Liberty Bell as a part of the ceremony. That wreath became an annual tradition.

When I read that this holiday was created due to the efforts of a former-slave, I wondered about him...

So, let me tell you a bit about this holiday-creator:

Major Richard Robert Wright, Sr., was born into slavery in Georgia in 1855. When the slaves were emancipated, Wright's mother and her son walked 200 miles to get to a place where a freedman could attend school. Wright went to the Storrs School, which was at first held in an abandoned railway car (!), but which became Atlanta University. Wright became the valedictorian at Atlanta University's very first graduation ceremony!

Wright earned both bachelor's and master's degrees.

Wright did a ton as an adult. He became principal of a school, bought a white newspaper and started one of the first African-American-owned newspapers in Georgia, served in the U.S. Army and rose to be Army Paymaster, which made him the highest-ranking African American in the Army. He established the first tax-supported public high school for African Americans in Georgia and founded an industrial college. He conferred with leaders and developed curricula and founded organizations and served as a delegate to national conventions. When he was 67 years old, he became a banker, and the bank that he founded became the largest African-American owned and operated bank in the North (at that point in his life he he had abandoned Georgia for Pennsylvania).

Wright lived to be 92 years old. The last chapter of his life, he worked to get National Freedom Day as an official commemoration, and he lived long enough to celebrate National Freedom Day five times! 

It seems that Wright's efforts to create this holiday are what led to February being Black History Month!






Another contribution from Wright...

While he was still a child in school, a retired Union general named Oliver Howard spoke to the assembled students. At the end of his speech, he asked the children what message he should take back to the children of the North. Wright stood up and said, “Sir, tell them we are rising.”

Those words, “tell them we are rising,” were simple yet hopeful. They made a big impact on many, especially when they were immortalized in a John Greenleaf Whittier poem called “Howard at Atlanta.” That poem reads as extremely condescending and racist, today, but it is interesting that the white poet took inspiration from Wright's words. After quoting Wright (not by name, he spoke of him as “a little boy”), Whittier wrote:

O black boy of Atlanta!
But half was spoken
The slave's chain and the master's
Alike are broken.
The one curse of the races
Held both in tether
They are rising,--all are rising,
The black and white together!

Eventually Wright's granddaughter wrote a book with the title Tell Them We Are Rising.




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June 8 – Happy Birthday, Frank Lloyd Wright

Posted on June 8, 2014

On this date in 1867 was born the man who was “the greatest American architect of all time (according to the American Institute of Architects).

...The man who created “the best all-time work of American architecture” (according to an article in Business Week) and more than 1000 other wonderful structures.

Frank Lloyd Wright believed that buildings should be in harmony with their environment as well as with humanity; this belief is called “organic architecture.”


Offices, churches, schools.
Skyscrapers, hotels, museums.
Exteriors, interiors, furniture, stained glass window.

Wright designed it all.

Here is a bit of (I assume) backwards prophecy:

Once her son had become a famous architect, his mother wrote in her biography that she told people when he was still in her womb that he would grow up to design beautiful buildings, and she says that she decorated his nursery walls with pictures of beautiful cathedrals.

I'm not positive I buy it. But...maybe... If for some reason she really, really wanted her son to be an architect, she might have told him so many times, he decided it was what he wanted, too.

Here's that “best all-time work” – Falling Water:













Not only is it one of the most famous homes ever built, it's been recreated in gingerbread...







LEGOS...








...and Minecraft.






Learn more about architecture at Kinder Art and Loggia. 



Also on this date:


Upsy Daisy Day 



















Children'sDay in the U.S.A. 







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