The idea for the present-day Dayton Aviation Heritage National Historical Park was first conceived by
Jerry Sharkey. Much of the Dayton neighborhood where Orville and Wilbur Wright had lived and worked had already been destroyed by the 1970s. Neglect, riots during the 1960s, and a highway project through the city had leveled much of the neighborhood. Decades earlier,
Henry Ford had also relocated one of the Wrights' bicycle shops from Dayton to its present location in
Greenfield Village, Michigan, for display. Sharkey's quest to preserve the Wright brothers' legacy began when he purchased their last surviving bicycle shop in Dayton for just $10,000, which saved the building from demolition. He also founded the Aviation Trail Inc., a
nonprofit group dedicated to the creation of a potential national park or historic district encompassing the Wright brothers' buildings. Sharkey enlisted the help of local political and media figures to lobby for the creation of the park. Notable figures who supported its creation included the descendants of the Wright brothers, aviation historian
Tom Crouch, U.S. District Judge Walter H. Rice, then-
U.S. Rep. Dave Hobson,
Dayton Daily News publisher Brad Tillson, and Michael Gessel, an aide to former U.S. Rep.
Tony P. Hall. The group lobbied federal officials and the National Park Service to incorporate the landmarks related to the Wright brothers, which are scattered throughout the city, into a new historic trail. The
U.S. Congress passed legislation to establish the new park. In 1992, President
George H. W. Bush signed the bill which created the Dayton Aviation Heritage National Historical Park into law. In addition to the Wright brothers' sites, the new park also preserved
the home of
Paul Laurence Dunbar, an acclaimed
African-American poet and friend of the Wright brothers. Jerry Sharkey donated the Wright brothers' bicycle shop, which he had saved from demolition, to the National Park Service as part of the agreement to create the park. A new
visitor center was constructed in 2003 in time for the
centennial of the Wright brothers'
first flight. Jerry Sharkey, who had first conceived of the future historic park, died in April 2014. ==Biographical backgrounds==