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Glenn Curtiss(Redirected from Glenn H. Curtiss)
BirthHe was born in 1878 in Hammondsport, New York to Frank Richmond Curtiss and Lua Andrews. MarriageCurtiss married Lena Pearl Neff, daughter of Guy L. Neff, in Hammondsport on on March 7, 1898. Early careerAs a bicycle racer, Western Union bicycle messenger and bicycle shop owner Curtiss, as the internal combusion engine became available, became interested in motorcycles. He began manufacturing motor-bicycles with his own single cylinder internal combustion engines, the first with a tomato can for a carburetor. In 1903 he set a world speed record by averaging 64 mph (103 km/h) for one mile (1.6 km). In 1907 he set a new record of 136.27 mph (219.31 km/h), with his 40-hp V8 powered motorcyle of his own design. At this time he was America's No. 1 maker of high-performance motorcycles. Wright brothersIn August 1906, while with Tom Baldwin and his airship in Dayton, Curtiss visited the Wright brothers (after they'd help corrall their airship) and discussed aeronautical motors and their propellers, a subject of mutual interest. Because Curtiss made America's finest lightweight motors, Alexander Graham Bell persuaded him to join his Aerial Experiment Association in 1907 to build aircraft, succeeding with America's first public and official airplane flight on July 4, 1908. CompetitionIn August 1909, Curtiss competed in the world's first air meet, the Grande Semaine d'Aviation flying contest at Reims, France, organised by the Aero-Club de France. The Wrights, selling their machines in Berlin at the time, did not compete, but nevertheless sued Curtiss, alleging their patent was being infringed. He continued, completing a 10 km course at 46.5 mph (75 km/h) in just under 16 minutes, 6 seconds faster than runner-up Louis Bleriot and won the Gordon Bennett Cup. For this he became, after Bleriot, the No. 2 pilot in Europe (Wrights Nos. 14 and 15). The other Pulitzer prizeOn May 29, 1910, Curtiss flew from Albany, New York, along the Hudson River, to New York City, to win a $10,000 prize backed by publisher Joseph Pulitzer. He covered 137 miles (220 km) in 153 minutes, averaging nearly 55 mph (89 km/h), then flew over Manhattan Island, and circled the Statue of Liberty. Curtiss received the first U.S. pilot's license in 1911, the Wrights were Nos. 4 and 5. Patent disputeThe patent dispute with the Wright brothers continued for several years until it was resolved during WW1, just after Wright ceased making airplanes due to their "killer" reputation (the last Wright was a single copy, made in 1916). World War IWith the involvement of the US in World War I in 1917, the U.S. government gave a contract to Curtiss to build airplanes for the US Army. DeathHe died in 1930 in Buffalo, New York, from complications after appendix surgery, and was buried in Pleasant Valley Cemetery in Hammondsport, New York. Timeline
Selected coverage in Time magazine
External linksThe contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License.
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