On this day in history, Dec. 17, 1903, Wright brothers accomplish first flight in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina

The world's first flight officially took off from North Carolina’s Outer Banks on this day in history, Dec. 17, 1903.

The Wright brothers were allegedly the first to successfully fly a powered and controlled airplane in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, after years of experimenting with the concept of flight.

Brothers Wilbur and Orville Wright began testing out flying in 1899, while Samuel Langley of the Smithsonian did the same, according to the National Park Service (NPS).

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Langley’s attempts were underwritten by the War Department yet were unsuccessful, since his efforts relied on the brute power of the machines to keep suspended in air.

But the Wrights’ vision that humans would have to oversee operating the planes themselves solved the issue, NPS recorded.

The duo developed a concept called "wing warping," according to History.com. 

That concept emulated the angle of bird wings.

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Wilbur Wright famously said, "It is possible to fly without motors, but not without knowledge and skill."

The brothers took more than 1,000 glides from the top of Big Kill Devil Hill, which made the Wrights the first true pilots, NPS said.

As their flying skills and mastery of the air were crucial for their invention to function, the brothers soon solved the problem of a sustained lift through more experimentation.

Now that they were able to control the aircraft while in flight, the brothers felt ready to take it to the skies.

The next obstacle was figuring out how to power the plane, according to NPS.

While gasoline engine technology had recently advanced during this time, the Wrights designed their own engine that was lightweight and suitable for their flyer.

Although it was less powerful than Langley’s engine, the Wright brothers understood that little power was needed as long as the lifting surfaces and propellers were efficient.

Since propellers were also unavailable at that time, the brothers designed their own airplane propeller using air tunnel data.

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NPS considered this "one of their most original and purely scientific achievements."

The duo returned to their camp in Kill Devil Hills where they mounted their engine on the new 40-foot, 605-pound plane with double tails and elevators.

The first attempt to fly on Dec. 14, 1903, was a failure — resulting in Wilbur Wright nose-diving into the sand after climbing too steeply on takeoff.

After three days of making repairs to the aircraft, the brothers were ready for attempt no. 2 on Dec. 17.

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Wilbur Wright won the opportunity to fly first in a coin toss — so it was little brother Orville Wright’s turn to give it a go.

Even though the 27mph winds weren’t ideal, the pair signaled the volunteers from a nearby lifesaving station that they were about to try again.

Orville Wright hopped in and tested the controls, including the cradle that he swung with his hips, which warped the wings and turned the machine, and a lever that controlled gas flow.

Orville Wright knew it would take "all his finesse" to handle the new, improved and altogether heavy machinery, the NPS noted.

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Orville Wright released the restraining wire at 10:35 a.m. as he moved down the rail and left the ground.

Lifesaving station employee John Daniels snapped the iconic photo of the Wright plane taking off on a preset camera.

Wilbur Wright is seen running alongside as his brother takes the first flight.

With a lot of attention on the controls, Orville Wright kept the plane in flight until it hit the sand 120 feet away from the rail.

The brothers took turns flying the plane three more times that same day to get used to the controls.

Each time they took off, their distance would increase little by little, until Wilbur Wright finally reached 852 feet in 59 seconds on his last attempt.

The Wrights’ machine had successfully flown, but it would never fly again, according to NPS.

After Wilbur's final flight, the plane caught a gust of wind, rolled over and suffered irreparable damage.

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But the brothers still triumphed the win and sent their father, Bishop Milton Wright, a telegram reporting their historic achievement.

Two years later, according to History.com, the Wright brothers built and flew the first fully practical airplane.

Deion Sanders responds to criticism of leaving Jackson State for Colorado

Deion Sanders will coach Jackson State on Saturday in the Celebration Bowl, his final game as the Tigers' head coach before he moves on to the University of Colorado.

Coach Prime's move has been criticized as much, and maybe more, than it has been celebrated.

Sanders, a Pro Football Hall of Famer, has heard all the noise since he made his departure official.

But he set the record straight during a press conference Friday in Atlanta.

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Sanders noted that he never claimed he would stay at Jackson State forever.

"Never once did I say they’re gonna put a tombstone with my name on it at Jackson State. So I wasn't gonna die here. Y'all know that," he said.

But Sanders also had to make it known that he accomplished everything he said he would when he took his first college head coaching gig. Sanders made headlines in recent years for helping revitalize a much smaller football program at the historically Black college.

"Everything I said I would do, I did. Everything I said I wanted to happen, I tried my darnedest to make it happen. We've exceeded, I think, expectations, in some realm," Sanders said,

"But when I don’t fit into someone else’s plan and purpose, now there's ridicule. But you forgot about my plan, and God’s purpose. That’s where the dysfunction comes. …

"At what point do we keep dominating, that you don’t get mad at us for dominating? Because it’s a level of dominance when you start to turn. And I felt that we start to get tension from our own people, because you’re dominant. … But it comes a time that that's not what it’s all about for me. I’m a winner. I’ve always won. I’m gonna win…

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"I'm a football coach and a darn good one. Name one thing in football that we haven’t accomplished that I said we would. But it's bigger than that. And until we address these underlying issues that nobody wants to talk about, ain’t nothing gon' change. 

"I'm a change agent. … When we leave, you're gonna find out what all we did. Because they don't really talk about the positivity ‘til we go. You'll find out what all we did for Jackson State and all we wanted to do for Jackson State. I just pray to God that in all our getting, get some understanding on change and where change really starts. It does not start in the football department."

So, despite whatever criticism he has received, Sanders seems at peace with what he did for Jackson State and historically Black universities.

With Jackson State, Sanders has gone 27-5, and his team is 12-0 for a second consecutive season.

The Colorado program has fallen on hard times, and it fired head coach Karl Dorrell after an 0-5 start to the season.

The Buffs ended their 2022 campaign 1-8 in the Pac-12 and were blown out by Utah in their final game, 63-21.