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Timeline |
1878 - 1930
Glenn Curtiss was born in a town named after an ancestor, Hammondsport, New-York, on May 21, 1878. He was raised by his mother after his father's death when he was four. After his graduation, he started his first job as a camera assembler for the Eastman Kodak company of Rochester. In 1906, his passion for motorcycle racing led him to open a cycle shop that would help him finance his hobby.
Curtiss soon started developing engines on his own and on January 23, 1907, he set a motorcycle speed record of 136 mph with a 40 hp V-8 that would later become the famous OX aircraft engine. The first flying application of Curtiss engine designs took place on an airship, the California Arrow of Thomas Scott Baldwin. Soon after that, the famous Alexander Graham Bell invited Curtiss to join the AEA (Aerial Experimental Association). This association led to many important design improvements like the wing ailerons and tricycle landing gear. Unfortunately, some of the patents will soon become the source of exhausting lawsuits, a major problem that Curtiss will have to face during most of his career.
In 1908, Curtiss became Director of Experiments for AEA and on the 4th of July, he wins the Scientific American Trophy for a first flight on a one kilometre distance with the Curtiss-powered June Bug. Renamed the Loon, this aircraft later became the first hydroplane after two canoes were mounted to ensure floatation. Though it never flew, the Loon was to be the first of a long series of Curtiss naval aircraft.
In 1909, Curtiss left AEA and in partnership with Augustus Herring, he created America's first manufacturing company in Hammondsport. He won the Gordon Bennett Cup in Reims that same year with the Golden Flier.
The first public flying school was opened by Curtiss in 1910. Instruction was simplified by some of his inventions, notably a dual control system and the use of ailerons.
The hydroplane of 1911 led to a contract with the Navy for building flying boats and for flight training of Navy pilots. The first take-off and landing from USS Pennsylvania by Eugene Ely was also conducted at that time.
Experience in flying boats let to the 1914 America. Built in the perspective of Atlantic crossing, the project was cancelled at the outbreak of WW1.
The first transatlantic crossing by a sea plane finally took place in May 1919 when one of three Curtiss NC-4 finally reached Plymouth, England after a one mouth journey. Powered by four OX-5 engines, this machine was flown via the Azores and Lisbon by commander A.C. Read and a crew of five.
In 1918, as a result of many problems inside the company, Curtiss and Herring's association was finally forced to bankruptcy. The company was sold to financiers of the automobile industry for whom Curtiss remained a technical consultant. Curtiss later moved to Florida where he started in the real estate business.
Glenn Curtiss died in 1930 from complications after an appendicitis operation, but the Curtiss company continued building airplanes until the end of WW2.
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