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Curtiss No. 1

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The Curtiss No. 1 also known as the Curtiss Gold Bug or Curtiss Golden Flyer was a 1900s American early experimental aircraft, the first independent aircraft designed and built by Glenn Curtiss .

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19-660: After his success with designing aircraft for the Aerial Experiment Association , Glenn Curtiss formed his own company, the Herring-Curtiss Company , in March 1909, in association with Augustus Herring . Earlier in the same month, the Aeronautical Society of New York had placed an order from Curtiss for a new aircraft. The Curtiss No. 1 was the first aircraft both designed and built by Curtiss. Curtiss flew

38-563: A flight carrying Selfridge) in the period from 1907 to 1912. Some of Bell's kites are on display at the Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site . The AEA's work progressed to heavier-than-air machines, applying their knowledge of kites to gliders. The AEA collaboration led to very public success. Casey Baldwin became the first Canadian and first British subject pilot on 12 March 1908 flight of Red Wing .   Its successor, White Wing , also of 1908,

57-642: A new aircraft, the Curtiss Reims Racer for the competition. Data from Aerofiles : Curtiss General characteristics Performance Aerial Experiment Association The Aerial Experiment Association ( AEA ) was a Canadian-American aeronautical research group formed on 30 September 1907, under the leadership of Dr. Alexander Graham Bell . The AEA produced several different aircraft in quick succession, with each member acting as principal designer for at least one. The group introduced key technical innovations, notably wingtip ailerons and

76-419: A passenger with Orville Wright on a demonstration flight for the U.S. Army, he became the first person killed in an aircraft accident. In 1898, Bell experimented with man-lifting tetrahedral kites and wings constructed of multiple compound tetrahedral kites covered in maroon silk. The tetrahedral wings were named Cygnet I , II and III , and were flown both uncrewed and crewed ( Cygnet I crashed during

95-513: A recognized expert on gasoline engines , was recruited as a member of the association, and his associate Augustus Post assisted as representative from the Aero Club of America. Curtiss had visited the Wright brothers to discuss aeronautical engineering and offered them use of a 50 hp engine. Wilbur cordially declined, saying that a motor of their own development met their power needs, unaware that

114-683: The Aero Club of America —called the Herring-Curtiss Company . This new development, plus the fact that it effectively displaced the AEA's headquarters at Curtiss' own facility in Hammondsport, resulted in the AEA's mandate expiring without further extension on March 31. Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site is a 10-hectare (25-acre) property in Baddeck , Cape Breton , Nova Scotia , Canada, overlooking

133-654: The Bras d'Or Lakes . The site is a unit of Parks Canada, the national park system, and includes the Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site, which contains the largest repository of artifacts and documents from Bell's years of experimental work in Baddeck. This site was designated a National Historic Site in 1952. The site features artifacts donated in 1955 from the Bell family's personal museum, located in

152-509: The invention of the telephone . The Alexander Graham Bell Historic Site was designed by Canadian government architect O. Howard Leicester, R.I.B.A. The architects for the Museum building were the Canadian architecture firm of Wood, Blachford, Ship (A. Campbell Wood, Hugh W. Blachford, Harold Ship). In addition to its displays, the museum features an observation deck on the roof of the building offering

171-467: The tricycle landing gear . According to Bell, the AEA was a "co-operative scientific association, not for gain but for the love of the art and doing what we can to help one another." Although the association had no significant commercial impact, one of its members, Glenn Curtiss , later established a commercial venture that would ultimately become the Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company . The AEA

190-521: The AEA was about to become a serious competitor in powered flight. Bell wrote to U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt to have an interested young officer who had volunteered his help, U.S. Army Lieutenant Thomas Selfridge , officially detailed to Baddeck. Selfridge was assigned to the Aeronautical Division, U.S. Signal Corps on 3 August 1907, two days after its formation, and was sent to Nova Scotia. A year later, on 17 September 1908, while riding as

209-559: The Kite House at Beinn Bhreagh . The site also features memorabilia associated with Bell's experiments, including: the original hull of a hydrofoil boat, the HD-4, that set a world marine speed record in Baddeck by reaching speeds of over 112 km/h (over 70 mph) in 1919; a full-scale replica of that boat, the AEA Silver Dart , which in 1909 J.A.D. MacCurdy piloted up into the air over

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228-619: The aircraft to win the Scientific American trophy (which he had won before in the AEA June Bug that he had designed). Encouraged by this success, Curtiss entered the aircraft into the first international air show to be held at Reims in France in August 1909. Before the international competition, the aircraft crashed and was badly damaged; Curtiss decided not to rebuild the aircraft and built

247-493: The ice of Baddeck Bay to become the first controlled heavier-than-air craft to be flown in the British Empire. Plus many other exhibits and documents from Bell's years of research activities on the transmission of speech and sound by wire and by light, as well as his experiments with kites, planes and high speed boats. The museum also features displays relating to Bell's work with in the field of deaf education and how it led to

266-504: The organization's secretary and Bell's cousin, Charles J. Bell, became the Association's legal trustee. In March 1909, strained relations arose between Curtiss and the Association's other members. A request for him to attend the association's meeting and resolve the issue went unanswered. It was also in March that Curtiss abruptly announced a new commercial venture—in partnership with Augustus Moore Herring and backed by wealthy members of

285-484: The three sat with Bell discussing the problems of aviation, Mabel Bell , Alexander's wife, suggested they create a formal research group to exploit their collective ideas. Being independently wealthy, she provided a total of US$ 35,000 (equivalent to $ 1,190,000 in 2023) to finance the Association, with $ 20,000 made available immediately by the sale of property. Curtiss, the American motorcycle designer and manufacturer and

304-483: Was disbanded on 31 March 1909. The AEA came into being when John Alexander Douglas McCurdy and his friend Frederick W. "Casey" Baldwin , two recent engineering graduates of the University of Toronto , decided to spend the summer in Baddeck, Nova Scotia . McCurdy had grown up there, and his father was the personal secretary of Bell. He had grown up close to the Bell family and was well received in their home. One day, as

323-544: Was done on seaplane carried out by Curtiss. In France Henri Fabre successfully flew the first powered seaplane in history, the Fabre Hydravion , in March 1910. Bell's organization was established with a fixed term mandate, which was extended to March 31, 1909, by joint agreement of all its members, with Mrs. Bell contributing an additional $ 10,000 of financing. After Lt. Selfridge's death in September 1908, McCurdy became

342-715: Was flown off the ice of Bras d'Or Lake near Baddeck by McCurdy, who had been one of its designers. On 10 March 1909, McCurdy set a record when he flew the Silver Dart on a circular course over a distance of more than 32 km (20 mi), a feat that the Wrights had already accomplished in 1905. The Association made the first passenger flight in Canada on 2 August, also in the Silver Dart . Much development also took place in Hammondsport, New York , where in 1908 pioneering experimentation

361-727: Was the first airplane to have Bell's ailerons . The following design, the June Bug , also of 1908 and piloted by Curtiss, won the Scientific American Trophy by making the first official one-kilometer flight in North America, although the Wrights had already accomplished this in 1904. Their fourth flying machine, the Silver Dart , also constructed in 1908, made the first controlled powered flight in Canada on 23 February 1909 when it

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