While reading Jay Spenser’s highly recommended “The Airplane: How Ideas Gave Us Wings,” I learned that motorcycle and aviation pioneer Glenn Curtiss was the first seaplane pilot and considered the father of Naval Aviation! Of course, having recently earned my Airplane Single Engine Sea (seaplane) rating, I was thrilled to learn this!
Curtiss was the first pilot to fly off the water on January 26th, 1911 (Rosebury, 1972), the first to fly an amphibious craft, and was instrumental in the development of seaplanes.



In addition to being the first person to fly an airplane on floats, he partnered in 1912 with John Cyril Porte who recommended incorporating a “step,” a notch on floats that allows the back of the float to rise out of the water which eliminates the “suction” of the water, allowing for a shorter takeoff slide.
In 1912 Curtiss trialed a new design, The Flying Fish, which incorporated a boat hull as the pontoon, thus the first flying boat.



Naval Aviation
Curtiss aircraft were the first to fly off, and then later onto Naval ships, which is why he is considered the US “Father of Naval Aviation.”




The Curtiss Pusher was also the first airplane to fly over the Continental Divide, piloted by Cromwell Dixon in 1911 near Helena, Montana!
Note: All black and white photos in this post are in the public domain due to copyright expiration.
Wild to see the og aircraft carrier flights!