FOREWORD

In the following pages, Jim Ray, talented in his work of presentation and a conscientious student of aviation, presents a chain of highlights in the progress of American aëronautics. The work as a whole is directed toward a sound conception of the steps which have been taken in aircraft development. In so far as possible, without being exhaustive, Mr. Ray has portrayed the engineering advancement which underlies the structure of our swiftly developing air age. The reader who thoroughly digests the text and illustrations of this book will find that it is an orderly and faithful guide.

Gill Robb Wilson
Aviation Editor,
New York Herald Tribune
Director of Aviation
State of New Jersey

INTRODUCTION

It is difficult to believe that, just a little over thirty years ago, I was a high-school student watching the pilots at the Wright Brothers’ exhibition of the world’s first flying machine. That machine weighed about eight hundred pounds. Its engine developed thirty horsepower. It flew at the then astounding speed of forty-two miles an hour, which is equal to the landing speed of our slowest light plane today. High-school students now are accustomed to the sight of giant airplanes whose weight is measured in tons and whose horsepower mounts to the thousands.

December, 1945, marks the forty-second anniversary of the first flight of an airplane. The progress of aviation since that first flight still seems unbelievable, even to one who has followed its development closely. The purpose of this book is to trace the progress of aviation in America and to tell the story of the men and machines that have given this country supremacy in the air.

In telling the story of American aviation from Kitty Hawk to the present day, I have been able to touch only the high spots in its dramatic progress. Space limitations prevent me from giving personal credit to the hundreds of pioneer airmen, engineers, and mechanics who have contributed so greatly to the progress of American aviation. Lack of space also makes it impossible to give the complete story of the great Government research organization, the National Advisory Committee for Aëronautics, whose work has been most fruitful in the advancement of civil and military aëronautics in the United States.

As we look over the record of the astounding progress of American aviation in forty-two years, let us salute our military leaders who have visualized the need for air power; the men who have designed and built our great engines and airplanes, and the leaders of commercial aviation who have made air travel fast, safe, and economical.

Jim Ray

Ottsville, Pennsylvania,
1945

CONTENTS

[The Beginnings of American Aviation ][6]
[Aviation in America in Its Early Days ][9]
[America Becomes Air-Minded][24]
[The Army and Navy Spread Their Wings][28]
[United States Military and Naval Aviation, World War I][32]
[The First Transatlantic Flight][34]
[Men and Machines, World War I][36]
[The First Air Mail][38]
[Precision Bombing Is Born][40]
[The U. S. Navy’s First Aircraft Carrier][41]
[The First Flight Around the World][42]
[Air Progress][44]
[America’s First All-Metal Transport][46]
[Better Power for America’s Airplanes][49]
[Record-Making Fokker Tri-Motor Transport Plane][50]
[Air Transport Grows][52]
[Donald Douglas’ Dream Comes True][54]
[Safety in Flight][56]
[Luxury Airliners and Skysleepers Make Air Travel an Accepted Fact][58]
[Pan American Clippers Conquer Pacific Skies][60]
[Pan American Clipper Inaugurates America’s First Transatlantic Air Transport Service][62]
[Private Planes][64]
[Superchargers and Super-Airliners][65]
[Air Power for World War II][67]
[Naval Aviation, 1922-1935][68]
[Shipboard Fighters][69]
[Battleship of the Air][70]
[Naval Aviation Gets Ready][72]
[The U. S. Navy’s First Long-Range Flying Boats][74]
[Technical Progress in the U. S. Army Air Corps in the Thirties][76]
[Army Attack Aviation and Training][80]
[Superfighter][82]
[Man-Made Thunderbolts Rip Wide a Path to Victory][84]
[Superfortress][86]
[Naval Aviation in the Early Months of World War II][88]
[The U. S. Navy’s Deadliest Fighter Plane][90]
[Dive-Bomber][93]
[Our Flying Navy][94]
[Aërial Armada][96]
[Postwar Aviation][100]
[Index of Persons]: [A], [B], [C], [D], [E], [F], [G], [H], [I], [J], [K], [L], [M], [O], [P], [R], [S], [T], [V], [W].[103]

THE BEGINNINGS OF AMERICAN AVIATION