Glenn Curtiss - Speed Freak!!

"I hated to beaten!"

In 1909 Glenn Hammond Curtiss was unknown in Europe, but in the United States he carried impressive credentials. Curtiss had first achieved fame as a motorcyclist, winning a number of races and setting speed records. Turning his attention to aviation, he polished his reputation through well-publicized accomplishments as an engine builder, airplane manufacturer and pilot. By
1909 he had emerged as the leading challenger to the Wright brothers' dominance of aviation in the United States. In time, his name would rank second only to those of the Wrights in the ledger of American air pioneers.

Early Days Of Speed

Glenn Curtiss was just 31 in the summer of 1909, but he seemed older. Lanky and gaunt, with dark, bushy eyebrows and a perpetual frown, Curtiss had nothing of the suave, stylish manner of the gentlemen-sportsmen-aviators of Europe. He spoke little and, on the flying field and off, he was all business. He was considered a mild man by those who were close to him, but in competition he could be ferocious. "I hated to be beaten," he once said. An obsession with speed had driven him since boyhood. Raised in Hammondsport, a village in the scenic vineyard country of upstate New York, Curtiss dropped out of school at the age of 14 and began racing bicycles at county fairs. Then, like his eventual rivals the Wright brothers, he opened a bicycle repair shop. His urge to go faster led to an attempt, in 1901,to many a gasoline engine to a bicycle chassis. One of the first engines he used, a crude mail-order behemoth that weighed 180 pounds, was so overpowering, Curtiss said, "it almost tore itself loose from the frame." Abandoning this unhappy union, Curtiss decided to make his own
engines, and from there it was only a short step to motorcycle manufacture. Racing his own machines, Curtiss soon filled a room with trophies; in 1907, on the broad, hard strand at Ormond Beach, Florida, he drove an eight-cylinder stretched-out motorcycle to an unofficial world's land speed record of 136.3 miles per hour. Of his vision-blurring dash down the straightaway, Curtiss said only: "It satisfied my craving for speed."By this time, he had earned a reputation not only as a daredevil racer but also as the builder of one of the finest engines in the country. His motorcycle power plant--small, powerful, yet lightweight--was also ideal for aeronautical use, a fact not lost on a few aerial experimenters in the United States. Among them was Thomas Scott Baldwin, a veteran carnival balloonist and parachute jumper; Baldwin ordered a Curtiss
engine in 1903, slung it beneath his dirigible, the California Arrow, and in 1904 completed the first flight around a circular course made by any dirigible in the United States.

Alexander Graham Bell


By 1906 Curtiss was soliciting the Wright brothers for business writing, telegraphing and finally calling on them in Dayton. The Wrights professed no interest in his engine. They were steadfastly guarding their invention from prying eyes and, though polite, gave Curtiss short shrift. But other aviation enthusiasts, like Baldwin, sought Curtiss engines. The most significant of these was Alexander Graham Bell, who in 1876 had invented the telephone and had grown rich as a result. Bell brimmed over with scientific curiosity; he was building enormous kites fashioned from hundreds of peculiar tetrahedral, or pyramid-shaped, cells, a construction he thought would solve the problems of heavier than-air flight by providing inherent stability aloft. The kites led nowhere
aeronautically, but Bell was nonetheless impressed with the Curtiss engine that he planned to hitch to them

.

Aerial Experiment Association

In July of 1907, Bell invited Curtiss, as a mechanical expert, to join a group of young aerial experimenters who were gathered under his patronage at his summer home in Baddeck, Nova Scotia.
At the urging of Bell's wife, Mabel, the group formally registered itself in September as the Aerial Experiment Association, and Mrs. Bell, who had money of her own, put up $20,000 to finance it. Bell named himself chairman and Curtiss director of experiments. Others in the A.E.A. included two Canadian engineers recently graduated from Toronto University, John A. D. McCurdy and Frederick Walker "Casey" Baldwin (no relation to dirigible enthusiast Thomas Baldwin), and Lieutenant Thomas Selfridge, a United States Army officer intent on making a military career out of aeronautics. Selfridge had been assigned by the War Department, at Bell's request, to follow the experiments.
The A.E.A. started out working with a glider, but its declared aim was "to get into the air'' with a practical man-carrying airplane. Its problem was to do this without infringing the Wright patents on wing warping. ''Of course we could not use that," Curtiss wrote later, "but we believed there were other ways of controlling the plane." As A.E.A. secretary, Selfridge wrote to the Wrights for information on glider construction. The brothers replied affably enough. But they did not forget Selfridge's approach--later, when a long patent battle unfolded in the courts, they would claim Selfridge had tricked them by saying that the A.E.A. wanted the advice for experimental purposes only.
At the beginning of 1908 the A.E.A. moved its headquarters to Curtiss' home in Hammondsport, on the shores of Keuka Lake. There the pontifical Bell led late-night discussions on everything from aeronautical theory to the sex determination of sheep. Bell's Boys, as they were called, would rise at dawn to catch the early-morning calm they found ideal for flying, while Bell stayed abed until noon, assuring himself of undisturbed sleep by wrapping the telephone in towels.

The Red Wing


On March 12, 1908, the A.E.A.'s first airplane, a curve-winged bi-plane christened Red Wing, was tested before a well-bundled audience on frozen Keuka Lake. "It sped over the ice like a scared rabbit for two or three hundred feet," Curtiss wrote, "and then, much to our joy, it jumped into the air." After a 319-foot hop at an altitude of six to eight feet, the plane crash-landed on one wing. "it had taken just seven weeks to build the machine and get it ready for the trial; it had taken just about 20 seconds to smash it," Curtiss recalled. "But a great thing had been accomplished. We had achieved the first public flight of a heavier·-than-air machine in America."
Curtiss' claim was outrageous; the Wrights had accomplished much more, much earlier and before reliable witnesses. The A. E. A. had, however, thrust itself into the limelight, and not without some justification for its subsequent planes demonstrated the group's steadily improving talent for aircraft design.

The White Wing


The A.E.A.'s next model, called White Wing, had wing-tip ailerons to control roll and a new wheeled landing gear instead of skids; it managed five respectable hops. On May 21, at the Stony Brook Farm race track outside Hammondsport, Curtiss flew the White Wing 1,017 feet, landing without damage in a plowed field. Immediately a rumor spread--fueled by publication in the prestigious magazine Scientific American--that the A.E.A. was going into manufacturing, offering planes for $5,000 each, delivery within 60 days. "They have got good cheek!" Orville Wright observed contemptuously when he read the story.
But for all Orville's pique, the A.E.A. was already threatening the Wrights' position.

The June Bug

A new plane, the June Bug, the first to be designed by Curtiss, was completed in less than a month, tested and entered in the Scientific American's $2,500 silver-trophy competition for the first public flight in the United States over a one-kilometer straightaway course.
The A. E. A.'s unexpected entry put the Scientific American in a quandary. The most popular scientific journal in the country, it had been painfully slow in the past to acknowledge the achievements of the Wright brothers. To make amends for this awkward lapse, the magazine's publisher, Charles A. Munn, had established the prize in 1907 as a virtual gift to the Wrights, anticipating that they would step forward and claim it easily. Characteristically, the Wrights showed no interest.
When the A.E.A. put in its bid, Munn wrote to Orville, urging him to enter. Orville turned him down, partly because of Munn's own rule that the takeoff of any contending plane be unassisted. The Wrights were still using a catapult launching system; while they could have adapted a plane for wheeled takeoff, Orville wrote to Munn that they were too busy to make such a modification. The United States Army had expressed interest in buying their invention and Orville was preparing a plane for trials--a venture that had clear precedence over vying for prizes. Wilbur was in France, readying a Wright machine for the demonstrations later that summer that would so impress the Europeans. So the field was open to Curtiss and the A.E.A.; publisher Munn found himself in the awkward position of accepting their lone entry. Curtiss, with his entrepreneur's eye for publicity, set the Fourth of July holiday of 1908 as the trial date and invited members of the three-year old Aero Club of America to Hammondsport to watch.
From New York and Washington they came, together with reporters and photographers, to join the crowd of locals who thronged the Stony Brook Farm race track and the surrounding hillsides. The Wrights' flights had been haphazardly witnessed. But these spectators at Stony Brook were the first large gathering of Americans summoned expressly to see a manned airplane fly.


The "Competition?"

Coatless, with his sleeves rolled up, Curtiss climbed into theJune Bug and fitted his shoulders into the yoke by which he would control the ailerons. He yelled for the men holding the plane to let go, headed down the track and took off. The flag marking one kilometer "was quickly reached and passed," he wrote later, "and still I kept the aeroplane up, flying as far as the open fields would permit, and finally coming down safely in a meadow, fully a mile from the starting place." Curtiss added that he "might have gone a great deal farther, as the motor was working beautifully and I had the machine under perfect control, but to have prolonged the flight would have meant a turn in the air or passing over a number of large trees."
Like so many of the early European aviators, Curtiss was obviously having problems with anything but straight flight. Yet the Scientific American trophy had been won and an ecstatic victory cable went off to Bell at his summer home in Canada. Even though it was a Sunday, Bell wired his attorneys in Washington: Get up to Hammondsport to examine the June Bug for patentable features. Pending their arrival, Bell ordered the plane grounded. IMPORTANT TO KEEP MACHINE UNINJURED UNTIL THEN, he cabled.

 

Trouble With the Wrights


The June Bug's success had an instant effect on the Wrights as well. Within the week, from France, Wilbur instructed Orville to warn Curtiss against patent infringement; on July 20, Orville wrote to Curtiss, reminding him of Selfridge's earlier request for information: "We did not intend, of course, to give permission to use the patented features of our machine for exhibitions or in a commercial way. ... If it is your desire to enter the exhibition business we would be glad to take up the matter of a license to operate under our patents for that purpose." Curtiss deflected the Wrights' letter with a qualified assurance that he
was not intending to go into the exhibition business.

Army Trials

Tension continued between the Wrights and the A.E.A., however, and increased when both Curtiss and Self ridge appeared at Fort Myer, Virginia, where Army acceptance trials were scheduled in September for the Wrights' new passenger-carrying military airplane.
Lieutenant Selfridge, in fact, was to be a member of the aeronautical board appraising the Wright machine. Orville was plainly unhappy at his presence. Though Self ridge was a warm, outgoing man, with the look of a large, friendly puppy, he was still considered one of the enemy. "I will be glad to have Selfridge out of the way. I don't trust him an inch," Orville wrote to his brother in France. "He plans to meet me often at dinners, etc., where he can try to pump me. He has a good education, and a clear mind. I understand that he does a good deal of knocking behind my back."
Nor was Orville pleased to find Curtiss around the test field, even though the New Yorker had been summoned there only to help his old friend Thomas Baldwin solve mechanical problems on a Curtiss- powered military dirigible. It was in this atmosphere of suspicion that tests of the Wright plane commenced on September 3.
All went well at first. Plane and pilot performed superbly in several duration flights, astounding the Army brass with their effortless soaring
above the Fort Myer parade ground.

Tragedy!!

Finally, in the late afternoon of September 17, 1908, with 2,000 spectators crowding the field, Orville took Selfridge up as part of a series of tests to demonstrate that the plane was capable of carrying two persons who together weighed at least 350 pounds. For the occasion Orville had mounted two longer, more powerful propellers in an effort to gain additional speed. Eagerly, Selfridge climbed onto the cushioned seat on the wing, at Orville's right. Neither man wore a seat belt--no aviator, anywhere in the world, yet had. Orville made three laps of the field at about 150 feet. "Selfridge sat, arms folded, as cool as the daring aviator beside him," noted a photographer named W. S. Clime, who was watching from the ground. On the fourth lap, Orville heard a light tapping to his rear and glanced backward, toward the sound. Nothing seemed wrong. But within seconds came what Orville later described as "two big thumps, which gave the machine a terrible shaking." Suddenly the plane veered to the right. No
question now, they were in serious trouble. Orville cut the power and struggled to control the aircraft. "The machine would not respond to the steering and lateral baIancing levers, which produced a most peculiar feeling of helplessness,"
Orville would recall. "Yet I continued to push the levers, when the machine suddenly turned to the left. I reversed the levers to stop the turning and to bring the wings on a level. Quick as a flash, the machine turned down in front and started straight for the ground. Our course for 50 feet was within a very few degrees of the perpendicular. Lieutenant Selfridge up to this time had not uttered a word, though he turned once or twice to look into my face, evidently to see what I thought of the situation. But when the machine turned headfirst for the ground he exclaimed 'Oh! Oh!' in an almost inaudible voice."
On the ground almost directly beneath them, the crowd watched in alarm as the crippled plane lurched out of control. One of the new propellers had cracked lengthwise and lost its thrust; the other had run wild and fouled a rear guy wire.
"There was a crack like a pistol shot coming from above," said the photographer Clime. "I saw a piece of a propeller blade twirling off to the southward. I stood riveted to the spot with my eyes on the machine. For a brief period it kept on its course, then swerved to the left and with a swoop backward, but in an almost perpendicular manner, it fell for half
the distance to the ground. Then, suddenly righting itself, it regained for
an instant its normal position only to pitch forward and strike on the
parallel planes in front."
The crash raised an immense cloud of dust that momentarily hid the fallen aircraft from view. Clime sprinted to the wreck, arriving just behind two mounted soldiers. They found Orville dangling from the guy wires. "His feet were barely touching the ground, and his hands were hanging limp; blood was streaming down his face and trickling in a tiny stream from his chin, but he was conscious and feebly said, 'help me.' "
Amid more broken wires, struts and torn canvas lay Selfridge. "He had apparently struck the ground with the back of his head and base of the spine," Clime said. "His knees were slightly drawn up. His face and clothing were covered with blood. He was unconscious and if he spoke at all I did not hear him."
Selfridge died that night, the first person ever to be killed in an airplane. The impact of the American officer's death was felt around the world. In Paris, Gabriel Voisin wrote of.''the wings that fly, the wings that kill." Orville Wright came home to Dayton in a wheel chair six weeks later.

 Curtiss Gallery

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