“A Wright B Flyer replica, performing an aerial flyover had a malfunction that caused the engine to catch fire, resulting in an emergency landing,” the base said.
Emergency responders were on scene assessing the situation, the base said, reporting that the pilots were unharmed.
More information will follow when it becomes available, the base said.
A base spokesman said the plane experienced a “hard landing ... the pilot was able to put it down. They are unharmed,” base spokesman Marcello Bruni said.
The plane was not an Air Force craft. It belongs to a private organization, Bruni said.
Update (6:25 pm) – Huge shoutout to our Wright-Patt AFB first responders for their quick response. We are grateful the two pilots were unharmed. There is no active emergency, and the incident has been cleared. For further media inquiries contact Wright-Patt AFB Public Affairs. https://t.co/mBO4ST1G3M
— 88th Air Base Wing (@WrightPattAFB) October 10, 2024
At about 6:30 p.m. Thursday, the base said on the social media site X (the former Twitter) that the scene was cleared.
“Huge shoutout to our Wright-Patt AFB first responders for their quick response,” the base said. “We are grateful the two pilots were unharmed. There is no active emergency, and the incident has been cleared.”
Wright Field, an early 20th century Dayton-area military installation and airfield used as a pilot, mechanic, and armorer training facility, was a predecessor institution of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
World aviation traces its beginnings to the pioneering work of Dayton’s favorite brothers, Wilbur and Orville Wright, who refined early flight above the beaches of Kitty Hawk, N.C. and the grass fields of Huffman Prairie in northwestern Greene County.
But 1927 was a key moment when the federal government took formal control of the land that became today’s Wright-Patterson.
It was land that came courtesy of a gift from the people of Dayton a few years earlier, in 1924.
When Army aviators understood they could no longer operate on crowded McCook Field north of downtown Dayton, local leaders took action to control nearby land to keep military functions local.
“The people of Dayton, just like now when there’s a base realignment and closure activity, they didn’t want to lose that great facility,” Kevin Rusnak, chief historian for the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center, said last year on the occasion of Wright Field’s 96th anniversary. “So they got together, they bought all this land that Wright Patt is now sitting on, and they donated it to the government.”
The local group raised $400,000 over 48 hours to buy land from the Miami Conservancy District — the area’s multi-county flood control effort — to give to President Calvin Coolidge and the government.
The formation of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base happened formally in 1948, the year after the official formation of the Air Force, from the merger of Wright and Patterson fields. Wright Field coincided with Wright-Patterson’s Area B today.
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