January 1, 2004

The Wright Brothers Craft Came After Clark Dyer's Flying Machine

As reported by the Union Sentinel, January 1, 2004 by Ethelene Dyer Jones
bullet To view the source site for this and more news articles on Micajah Clark Dyer, click here.

On December 17, 2003, America stood poised to see a reproduction of the Wright Brothers’ flying machine lift from Kill Devil Hill near Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. It was in commemoration of one hundred years of flight, 1903-2003. The replica, however, with all the attention to details, did not fly as well as the Wright Brothers’ plane, and the 100 year celebration hit an unexpected snag.

One Micajah Clark Dyer, an inventor who lived and worked in the Choestoe District of Union County, made a flying machine that pre-dated that of the Wright brothers by fifteen years or more. The reason we do not hear more about this amazing feat of a mountain genius is that he did not secure a patent for his machine and he died before he could perfect it and get the publicity necessary for making his invention a part of flight history.

Micajah Clark Dyer was born in South Carolina on July 23, 1822. His mother was Sallie Dyer (b. about 1804 in SC), eldest daughter of Elisha Dyer, Jr. (b. about 1785, d. 1847) and Elizabeth Clark Dyer (b. about 1783, d. 1861). When Sallie Dyer was about eighteen, she gave birth to Micajah Clark Dyer out of wedlock. It has been a matter of family legend that the baby’s father was one John Meyers, but he did not ever marry Sallie nor claim his son. The baby, Micajah Clark Dyer, was named after Sallie’s grandfather, Micajah Clark, her mother Elizabeth’s father. Elisha, Jr. and Elizabeth Clark Dyer raised Sallie’s son as their own. They did, however, confuse the record a bit, because they had already named their eighth child, a son, born in 1817, Micajah Clark Dyer. Some have surmised that the inventor Micajah Clark Dyer’s father, John Meyers, must have been very mechanical-minded, because Micajah Clark early on showed propensities toward inventiveness.

The 1822 Micajah Clark Dyer moved to Union County, Georgia with his Grandfather Elisha Dyer, Jr.’s large family and they settled in the Cane Creek section of Choestoe District. The family was in Union County when the first county census was made in 1834, two years after the county’s founding.

Micajah Clark’s mother, Sallie, married Eli Townsend and they had a family. However, it is believed that Micajah Clark continued to live in the household of his grandfather Elisha Dyer, Jr. and did not grow up with his half-siblings which included Andrew, Elisha, Thomas, Polly Ann, William and Sarah Elizabeth Townsend.

Micajah Clark Dyer was introspective by nature. His education in the one-room teacher school for a few months of each year was supplemented by his own innate ability to “figure out” things for himself. On July 23, 1842, when he was twenty, he married Morena Elizabeth Ownbey (1819-1892). To them were born nine children: Jasper Washington Dyer (1843-1913 who married Emaline E. Lance); (Rev.) John M. Dyer (1847-? who married Elizabeth Ann Sullivan); Andrew Henderson Dyer (1848-1903 who married Adeline Sullivan); Marcus Lafayette Dyer (1850-1921 who married Clarissa Wimpey); Cynthia C. (1852-1917 who married John P. Smith); Mancil Pruitt Dyer (1854-1916 who married [1] Rebecca Jarrard and [2] Margaret M. Twiggs); Robert F. Dyer (1856-? who married Elizabeth Fortenberry); Morena Elizabeth Dyer (1859-1903 who married James A. Wimpey); and Johnson B. Dyer (1861-1885 who married Mary Hunter. Many descendants of Micajah Clark and Morena Ownbey Dyer still reside in Union County, Georgia.

Morena Dyer had the convenience of running water in their home at Choestoe, as Clark devised his own water system consisting of hollowed-out logs run from the bold spring on the mountain to their house. When he was not busy with cultivating the land on his farm and tilling the crops necessary to the economy of his large family, Clark Dyer labored in his workshop.

There, he experimented with a flying machine made of lightweight cured river canes and covered with cloth. Drawings on the flyleaves of the family Bible, now in the possession of one of Clark’s great, great grandsons, show how he thought out the engineering technicalities of motion and counter-motion by a series of rotational whirli-gigs. He built a ramp on the side of the mountain and succeeded in getting his flying machine airborne for a short time.

Evidently, to hide his contraption from curious eyes and to keep his invention a secret from those who would think him strange and wasting time from necessary farm work, Clark Dyer kept his machine stored behind lock and key in his barn. Those who would not ridicule the inventor were allowed to see the fabulous machine. Among them were several who bore testimony to seeing the plane; namely his grandson, Johnny Wimpey, son of Morena and James A. Wimpey; Herschel A. Dyer, son of Bluford Elisha and Sarah Evaline Souther Dyer; and James Washington Lance, son of the Rev. John H. and Caroline Turner Lance.

Just when the fabulous trial flights (more than one) occurred on the mountainside in Choestoe is uncertain, but it certainly happened before Clark Dyer’s untimely death on January 26, 1891 when he was 68 years of age. Prior to his death, he had invented a “perpetual motion” machine. Mr. Virgil Waldroup, a justice of the peace and merchant in the area, had helped Clark Dyer to “send off” to Washington for a patent on his inventions, but these were not forthcoming before Dyer’s death. It is also a part of family tradition that his son, Mancil Pruitt Dyer, turned down an offer of $30,000 for the patent purchase of the perpetual motion machine, evidently thinking that if he held out for more money he could receive it. And still another family story holds that Clark’s widow, Morena Ownbey Dyer, sold the flying machine and its design to the Redwine Brothers of Atlanta, who, in turn, sold the ideas to the Wright Brothers of North Carolina.

The facts of the fabulous flying machine of Choestoe are lost in Mountain Mists and family legends. But it is a known fact that one inventor named Micajah Clark Dyer watched the birds fly and asked, “Why not man?” and proceeded to act on his dream to invent a machine that would defy gravity. It actually got off the ground in the late 1880's. Pine Top around 1890 might have been the Kitty Hawk of 1903 had times and circumstances been more conducive.

bullet Back to Top      bullet Home

January 2, 2001

Terms of Use

TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF USE
PLEASE READ THESE TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF USE
BEFORE USING THIS WEB SITE.


1. Use of this Web site is conditioned on the acceptance, without modification, of all terms and conditions of this agreement. By using any Micajah Clark Dyer site(s), namely micajahclarkdyer.blogspot.com, www.micajahclarkdyer.org and www.micajahclarkdyer.com, you represent that you have read and understand the terms and conditions and that you agree to be bound by these terms and conditions as set forth below.

2. MICAJAHCLARKDYER.ORG, MICAJAHCLARKDYER.COM, MICAJAHCLARKDYER.BLOGSPOT.COM, ALL ASSOCIATED RESEARCH PROJECTS, RELATED PROMOTIONS AND PRODUCTIONS, referred to hereafter as "MCD", reserves the right at its discretion to modify the terms and conditions under which the MCD site(s) is/are offered. Use of the MCD site(s) after the posting of any such modification constitutes your agreement to be bound by the terms and conditions as modified.

3. If you do not agree with the terms and conditions of the MCD site(s) and do not wish to be bound by them, please do not use the MCD site(s) or download any materials from the MCD site(s).

4. All material ("Materials") displayed or transmitted on the MCD site(s), including but not limited to text, photographs, images, illustrations, video clips, audio clips, and graphics are owned by MCD AND OR THE RESPECTIVE AUTHORS of such, and are protected by United States and international copyright, trademarks, service marks, and other proprietary rights, laws and treaties.

5. EXCEPT AS PROVIDED IN THIS AGREEMENT, YOU MAY NOT COPY, REPRODUCE, PUBLISH, TRANSMIT, TRANSFER, SELL, RENT, MODIFY, CREATE DERIVATIVE WORKS FROM, DISTRIBUTE, REPOST, PERFORM, DISPLAY, OR IN ANY WAY COMMERCIALLY EXPLOIT THE MATERIALS CARRIED ON THE MCD SITE(S), NOR MAY YOU INFRINGE UPON ANY OF THE COPYRIGHTS OR OTHER INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS CONTAINED IN THE MATERIALS, IN ANY FORM, THROUGH REPRESENTATION, RESEMBLANCE OR INTERPRETATION WHATSOEVER TO INCLUDE ALL FORMS OF COMMON, CREATIVE AND INNOVATIVE MEANS TO INCLUDE BUT NOT BE LIMITED TO: CONTENT, INFERENCES AND CONVEYANCES, WRITTEN MATERIALS, LOGOS, CLOTHING, SCREENPLAYS, MOTION PICTURES, MUSIC VIDEOS, PLAYS OR ANY TYPE OF COMMERCIAL, NON-COMMERCIAL, NON-PROFIT, EDUCATIONAL OR OTHER MEANS OF EXPRESSION REPRESENTATIVE THEREOF. YOU MAY NOT REMOVE OR ALTER, NOR CAUSE TO BE REMOVED OR ALTERED, ANY COPYRIGHT, TRADEMARK, OR OTHER PROPRIETARY NOTICES OR VISUAL MARKS AND LOGOS FROM THE MATERIALS. ANY OTHER USE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED BY U.S. AND INTERNATIONAL COPYRIGHT AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW.


6. You may make a single print copy of content on the MCD site(s) for personal, non-commercial use only, provided that you do not remove nor cause to be removed any copyright, trademarks, or other proprietary notices or visual marks or logos from the Material. You may not archive or retain any of the Materials accessed on this Web site without the express written permission of MCD. All requests for archiving, republication or retention of any part of the Materials must be in writing to MCD clearly stating the purpose and manner, legal assignee and proposed timeframe in which the Material will be used. Requests for permission to archive, retain, or republish any part of the Materials may be submitted to MCD Copyright, Turnage & Associates, Inc., Post Office Box 2943, Blairsville, Georgia 30514-2943.

7. MCD grants, for non-commercial, non-profit, educational and personal use only, a non-exclusive, royalty-free license to display on your website (either directly or via a link to our site) the name, URL address and description of our website, namely www.micajahclarkdyer.org and the name “Micajah Clark Dyer”. Any such display or use indicates your agreement to comply with all of the Terms of Use. MCD's copyright notice shall remain on all content at all times. Both you and end-users may download and reprint a single copy of web content for personal, non-profit, non-commercial uses only. Any other use is strictly prohibited without MCD’s prior and express written permission. These Terms of Use may be terminated by MCD immediately upon violation by you, or at MCD discretion without cause. Upon termination for any reason, any content and/or links to any portion of the MCD website(s), related research, promotions and developments of any kind, will be removed within three business days from any website under your control, and all copies of materials promptly destroyed. These terms of use may not be amended or modified except through a written document signed by both parties.

8. You acquire no rights or license whatsoever in the Materials other than the limited rights to use the MCD site(s) in accordance with these terms and conditions. Any of the Materials accessed or downloaded from this site must be accessed or downloaded in accordance with the terms and conditions of use specified in this agreement. MCD reserves any rights not expressly granted under these terms and conditions of use.

9. MCD reserves the right to modify, update, suspend, discontinue, or restrict the use of or access to the MCD site(s) or any portion of said site(s), at any time and without notice or liability.

10. ALTHOUGH ALL INFORMATION AND MATERIALS CARRIED ON THIS WEB SITE IS BELIEVED TO BE RELIABLE, MCD MAKES NO REPRESENTATION, NEITHER EXPRESSLY NOR IMPLIED, AS TO THE ACCURACY, COMPLETENESS, TIMELINESS OR RELIABILITY OF THE MATERIALS OR ANY INFORMATION ON THIS WEB SITE. BY USING THIS WEB SITE OR BY RELYING ON ANY OF THE MATERIALS OR INFORMATION CARRIED ON THIS WEB SITE YOU ASSUME ALL THE RISK AND RESPONSIBILITY ARISING OUT OF USE OR RELIANCE ON THIS WEB SITE. MCD EXPRESSLY DISCLAIMS ANY WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR AGAINST INFRINGEMENT. MCD SHALL NOT BE LIABLE TO YOU OR ANYONE ELSE FOR ANY LOSS OR DAMAGES WHATSOEVER, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, SPECIAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, INCIDENTAL, PUNITIVE, OR OTHER DAMAGES, ARISING OUT OF THE USE OF OR INABILITY TO USE THIS WEB SITE OR ANY MATERIALS CARRIED ON THIS WEB SITE.

11. The MCD site(s) may from time to time contain links or pointers to Internet sites maintained by third parties. MCD does not operate or control in any way any information, products or services on these third-party sites and MCD expressly disclaims any responsibility for such third-party sites, which are provided for your convenience on an "as is" basis without warranties of any kind, express or implied. All rights to content on those links may also be protected by law and should not be used other than for educational, non-profit purposes in accordance with the policies set forth on those sites without prior written permission from the same.

12. This agreement will be governed and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Georgia without regard to its conflicts of law provisions. You agree to submit to the personal jurisdiction of the superior courts located in Union County, and the U.S. District Court, Northern District of Georgia, Gainesville Division, in the State of Georgia, and agree any cause of action which arise from use of this Web site or from interpretation of these terms and conditions must be filed in the superior courts located in Union County, State of Georgia. If any provision of this agreement shall be unlawful, void, or for any reason unenforceable, then that provision shall be deemed severable from this agreement and shall not affect the validity and enforceability of any remaining provisions. Any remaining provisions shall be given effect to the fullest extent possible.

13. All communication sent to the MCD site(s), related research projects and productions by any conveyance(post, electronic or video mail, parcel-post, commercial or private shipper, facsimile, etc.) becomes the property of MCD. MCD reserves the right, but shall not be obligated to, publish any email message received, in whole or in part, or make such other use as MCD in its sole discretion sees fit.

14. This constitutes the entire agreement between the parties concerning the terms and conditions of use of the MCD web site(s). Other Copyright and intellectual property rights laws apply to the research and development related to Micajah Clark Dyer, his life and inventions outside the MCD site(s) and these Terms and Conditions of Use, but shall not preclude these terms where applicable.

bullet Back to Top    bullet Close This Window      bullet Home

January 1, 2001

NEWS

Terms of Use
Source credit for all news articles on this site are posted in reverse chronological order on this page. If you have a link or information about a news article referencing Micajah Clark Dyer, please use the "Post a Comment" feature at the bottom of the page to submit it for consideration.

bullet Latest News   bullet Archives   bullet Earliest Articles






LATEST NEWS

bullet Channel profiles Dyer flying legend
The Times - March 21, 2007
Hometown Headlines section, Gainesville, GA
Read it on Clark's site



bullet Back to Top





NEWS ARCHIVES

bullet Union County Pioneer Aviator Nominated for Hall of Fame
The Mountain Chronicle - November 01, 2006
Living section by Sylvia Dyer Turnage, Blairsville, GA
Read it on Clark's site

bullet Pioneer Aviator Waits 132 Years for Honor
400 Edition - September/October, 2006
Mountain Lore and Legends section by Sylvia Dyer Turnage, Dahlonega, GA
Read it on Clark's site

bullet Paris proclaimed Sept. 1, 2006 as Micajah Clark Dyer Day
North Georgia News - August 23, 2006
Page 4A by Janice Boling, Blairsville, GA
Read it on Clark's site

bullet Aviator flies to fame
The Times - August 12, 2006
Front Page Local News by Rick Lavender, Gainesville, GA
Read it on Clark's site

bullet One man's 'Apparatus for navigating the air'
The Times - August 06, 2006
Front Page Local News by Rick Lavender, Gainesville, GA
Read it on Clark's site

bullet Blairsville family reflects on ancestor's legend of flight
The Associated Press - August 06, 2006
(syndicated from The Times Local News by Rick Lavender, Gainesville, GA
Read it on Clark's site

bullet Post-reunion reflections
Union Sentinel - July 20, 2006
Front page by Ethelene Dyer Jones, Blairsville, GA
Read it on Clark's site

bullet Relatives honor a 'genius'
Union Sentinel - July 20, 2006
Front page by Joan Crothers, Blairsville, GA
Read it on Clark's site

bullet Reunion, anyone?
Union Sentinel - July 13, 2006
Front page by Ethelene Dyer Jones, Blairsville, GA

bullet Organizers of Blairsville Family Reunion Seek Relatives in Forsyth County
CummingHome.com - July 13, 2006 Cumming, GA

bullet Dyer-Souther Reunion
Union Sentinel - July 13, 2006
Community section, Blairsville, GA

bullet Gov. honors Dyer, H.R. 413 recognizes inventor of flying machine
Union Sentinel - June 15, 2006
Front page, Blairsville, GA
Read it on Clark's site

bullet Highlights of Aviation History
Union Sentinel - May 18, 2006
Front page by Ethelene Dyer Jones, Blairsville, GA

bullet Legislation would honor local 19th century aviator
Union Sentinel - February 9, 2006
Opinion section by Rep. Charles Jenkins, Blairsville, GA

bullet Patriarch of Union County Townsends,
Eli, son of Edward

Union Sentinel - August 25, 2005
Front page by Ethelene Dyer Jones, Blairsville, GA

bullet Did Clark Dyer beat Wright Brothers into the air?
White County News Telegraph - July 06, 2005
Opinions section by Phil Hudgins, Cleveland, GA

bullet Did Clark Dyer beat the Wrights into the air?
The Highlander - June 28, 2005
by Phil Hudgins, Highlands, NC

bullet Was Dyer First in Flight?
Richmond County Daily Journal - June 28, 2005
by Phil Hudgins, Rockingham, NC

bullet Back to Top






EARLIEST KNOWN ARTICLES


bullet Machine for Navigating the Air
Gainesville Eagle - July 31, 1875
(now The Times)Gainesville, GA
Newspaper clipping image link provided by Greene County, Arkansas

bullet The Latest Flying Machine
St. Louis Globe-Democrat - July 16, 1875
page 2, St. Louis, MO

NOTE(S):
-There are currently no web links directly to an image of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat article - please use the Post a Comment feature below if you find one.
- Using the article information above, you can purchase a copy of the Globe-Democrat article from the St. Louis Public Library. They will provide a photo copy from their "morgue" and bill you for the charges.


bullet Back to Top       bullet Home