Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Corporation
Dates
- Existence: 1916 - 1929
Historical Note: Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Corporation
The Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company was an aviation company established by Glenn H. Curtiss in 1916 but had roots in earlier companies created by Curtiss.
Glenn Hammond Curtiss was an aviation pioneer who had worked with Alexander Graham Bell and the Aerial Experiment Association in 1907-1909. While working with that group, he designed and built the "June Bug" biplane. When the association split up, he realized he had an aptitude for aircraft design and started the Herring-Curtiss Company with Augustus Moore Herring on March 20, 1909. A year later that company was bankrupt and Curtiss formed the Curtiss Aeroplane Company. It was based out of Hammondsport, New York.
In 1916 Curtiss Aeroplane Company merged with Curtiss’s motorcycle manufacturing business, Curtiss Motor Company to form the Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company. Curtiss Aeroplane and Motors Ltd was its Canadian subsidiary under the direction of J.A.D. McCurdy. Burgess Company of Marblehead, Massachusetts also became a subsidiary in 1914, continuing to produce aircraft under the Burgess name.
With the beginning of World War I and an increase in military orders, the company moved its headquarters and facilities to Buffalo, New York. Additional production and flight training facilities were set up in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The Curtiss Company was especially important to the U.S. Navy as a designer and manufacturer of “flying boats” and seaplanes. The first large order was for the Model F flying boat. Around the same time, they also developed the JN-4 biplane for the Army, which was also subsequently ordered in large quantities by the U.S. military and its allies. The company had 18,000 employees in Buffalo and 3,000 at its Hammondsport facility and by the end of the war the company was the largest aviation manufacturing company in the country. Because of the “patent wars” with Wright Company (and its successors, Wright-Martin and Wright Aeronautical) which had curtailed aircraft production in the U.S., the company was required by the government to participate in a patent pool in order to allow for increased production necessary during the war years.
In 1920, Glenn Curtiss retired to Florida continuing as a director for the company. Clement Keys gained control of the company at that time. After the war and into the 1920s the company tried to develop a commercial market but met with little success. However, Curtiss seaplanes performed successfully in several races: they won the Schneider Cup in 1923 and 1925 and a Pulitzer Trophy race in 1925. During the Great Depression the Curtiss Robin, a light transport plane, became a successful model with 769 being built, keeping the company afloat. Though military contracts were not once they had been, the company also developed new fighter planes and new engines.
In 1929, the Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company merged with the Wright Aeronautical Corporation to form the Curtiss-Wright Corporation.
Places
- Buffalo (N.Y.) (Residence)
- Hammondsport (N.Y.) (Residence)
- New York (State) (Residence)
Found in 12 Collections and/or Records:
Curtiss-Wright Corporation Records
Curtiss, 1912-1960, undated
Aircraft Identification Posters Collection
The Aircraft Identification Posters Collection is an artificial collection comprised of visual materials ranging from 1916-1946 designed to help individuals on the ground identify aircraft during wartime.
Blueprints and Technical Drawings Collection
The Blueprints and Technical Drawings Collection is an artificial collection comprised of drawings related to assorted aircraft (commercial, personal, and military), helicopters, rockets, as well as related engines, accessories, parts and buildings, ranging from 1878-2000s.
Bernard Bourrand Sketchbook
Peter M. Bowers Photograph Collection and Papers
Peter M. Bowers (1918-2003) was an aeronautical engineer at The Boeing Company for 36 years but was more noted as an aviation historian who wrote several dozen books and close to 900 articles on aircraft. This collection is notable for the approximately 150,000 photographic images he amassed during his career, as well as his writing and research files. The materials span the early 1900s to 2003.
The James H. Dilonardo Collection
James H. Dilonardo was a local aviation enthusiast strongly tied to Boeing Field and The Museum of Flight. His collection consits of photographs, textual materials, sound recordings, and film largely related to aviation in Seattle, Washington and the Pacific Northwest.
Early Aviation Photograph Collection
The Early Aviation Photograph Collection is a collection of unknown origins consisting of 328 prints and 299 negatives, all black-and-white, primarily depicting aircraft from the first half of the 20th century. Some airships, airports, pilots, and other subjects are also represented in the images.
William Firth Photograph Collection
Peter A. Klover World War I Collection
Contact us with a research request
curator@museumofflight.org