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Bekijk GRAHAM BLUE STREAK COUPE and CURTISS AEROCAR LAND YACHT in het Louwman Museum

Graham Blue Streak Coupe and Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht

A rather unusual vehicle for daily use, but not to the American banker Hugh McDonald who used this luxurious combination in the early 1930s to be driven from his estate on Long Island to his office in New York.

The semi-trailer resembles an aeroplane and was built in accordance with aviation construction principles by the Curtiss Aeroplane Company in Florida. A lightweight, tubular metal frame is braced with wire cables. The Aerocar’s nose looks like a cockpit and is fitted with a compass, barometer, altimeter, speedometer and swivelling floodlights. The interior is furnished with lightweight wicker chairs and a desk. The galley features a refrigerator and there is also a lavatory with flushing toilet.

The yacht was towed by a Graham Blue Streak fitted with a four-litre engine. A spare wheel was placed in the space normally occupied by the ‘dickey seat’. The towing pin of the trailer fits in a socket in the hub and the tyre damped out the shocks while driving.

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Tin Can Tourists

The Original Vintage Trailer and Camper Club

curtiss aerocar land yacht

Manufacturer Information

A fifth-wheeler for a financier The fifth-wheeler floats between the world of the trailer caravan and that of the motorhome, not quite fitting into either. Whichever side of the divide you choose to classify this unusual outfit, however, it certainly deserves its place in the broader history of caravans. The makers were the Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht company, certainly related in some way to the Curtiss aircraft manufacturers whose founder Glenn Curtiss was a rival of the Wright brothers in the early days of aviation. The outfit was made for a New York financier Hugh McDonald to take him on his daily journey from Long Island to Wall Street. Providing the motive power was a 1932 Graham Blue Streak coupé with 8-cylinder 4022cc engine developing 90 bhp and giving the car a solo top speed of 85 mph. The Blue Streak introduced skirted front wings to the American market and was immortalized in model form by ‘Tootsie Toys’ – a Tootsie Blue Streak was the treasured possession of many a small boy across the USA in the 1930s.

The fifth-wheeler Land Yacht is constructed on aircraft principles with a frame of light metal tubing braced by wire cables. Up front McDonald had his mobile office with a desk and wicker chairs. At the rear was a galley and a lavatory. No doubt the Land Yacht’s crew included as well a the chauffeur an attendant in the caravan so that the Wall Street man could be provided with breakfast or light refreshments during his commuting journey. But, breakfast over, was it work while the wheels rolled or did McDonald find other diversions to take his mind off the dealings on Wall Street?

That ‘bridge’ at the front of the caravan over the hitch – which incidentally employed a tire to act as a shock absorber – was fitted out with the kind of instrumentation one would find on a flight deck. There was a compass, an altimeter, speedometer and a barometer – also those swiveling spotlights. Can we guess? It was McDonald the money man who toiled at the thirties forefather of the laptop on his way to the office. Going home it was ‘Captain’ Hugh, letting his hair down after a hard day worrying about the next dollar, who navigated his craft from the pilot’s seat way below the clouds.

You can find this Land Yacht and its Blue Streak buddy in in the Dutch National Motor Museum: Het National Automobiel Museum, Steurweg, 8, Raamsdonksveer.

Curtiss -Wright Aerocar – Florida – Packard’s took over Curtiss -Wright in 1956.

Attempts at roadable aircraft have been made since the advent of the airplane itself. Only fourteen years after the Wright brothers first flew, Glenn Curtiss tried to develop a flying automobile. His design was exhibited at the 1917 Pan-American Aeronautic Exposition in New York. This vehicle was abandoned after the flight characteristics were deemed unacceptable.

Curtiss created a lavish “motor bungalow” as early as 1919. In 1928, he revamped his design and called it the Aerocar. It looked, on the outside, like a fancy horse trailer. It featured four berths, a galley, running water and an “observatory cockpit with a glass roof,” according to Wheel Estate, and cost a whopping $2,500.

The Aerocar – sophisticated, streamlined, and lightweight – was the precursor of today’s travel-trailer. It was pneumatically hitched to the car with a flat rubber donut in a steel box, cushioning shock forward, back, up, down, and sideways. The Curtiss Aerocar Co. was a thriving business into the late 1930’s (old friend Hugh Robinson was its 1930’s president). In August, 1928, Curtiss pulled an Aerocar (above) Miami-New York, in 39 hours!

In 1898, John A. Schroeder, a young Swedish engineer emigrated to the United States and became involved in the birth of the American automobile industry as, first, the chief engineer for the Standard Roller Bearing company and later, the vice president of sales and engineering for the Elgin Motorcar Company and then, general manager of Wills-St.Claire, Inc., another early auto manufacturer. Being attracted to the infant activity of trailering, he built his first trailer in 1922 for personal use, and quickly became an enthusiastic promoter of the embryonic industry that was being poorly received by many Americans.

In 1928, Schroeder left the automobile industry behind and became the principal owner of the Detroit Aerocar Company, an early fifth-wheel manufacturing company licensed by Glenn Curtiss, inventor of the fifth-wheel hitch and owner of the Curtiss Aerocar Company headquartered in Florida. The two fifth-wheel manufacturers of the late twenties were among the very first companies in the nation whose production was entirely dedicated to the infant RV industry.

In 1935, Schroeder sold his interest in Detroit Aerocar, left trailer manufacturing behind and entered the supplier side of the exploding industry. He became the head of sales for the trailer division of the Liggett Spring and Axle Company (predecessor to today’s S.H. Liggett Co.). In this position he became one of the first outspoken proponents of industry quality and safety standards.

In 1938, he had written, referring to his acquisition of Detroit Aerocar ten years earlier, “After studying it from all angles, I determined that there was a great future for trailer coaches and that a new industry was making its debut. For several years many of my friends took great delight in kidding me about fooling away my time and money. They were thoroughly convinced that people would not drive on the roads with that thing dangling about back there. It has become a matter of pride with me to prove them wrong”.

Eaton Reo/Aerocar Rig

This ultra-streamline Reo tractor was specially built to tow a Curtiss Aerocar, on of the earliest production fifth-wheel trailers. Custom built for Dr. Hubert Eaton of the Forest Lawn Memorial Parks, its innovative cab-forward aluminum and leatherette body was constructed by Standard Carriage Works of Low Angeles, a coachbuilder that specialized in bodies for trucks and other commercial vehicles. It featured a large storage area, sleeping quarters for the driver, and a separate four-cylinder engine for auxiliary power. A Williams air-brake an dual rear-wheels accommodate the permanently attached 10,000 pound trailer. First equipped with a flat-12 White truck engine, the Reo tractor was fitted with a 300-horsepower Cummins 6-cylinder diesel in 1953 when the original engine wore out after more than 250,000 miles of use.

The luxurious and expensive Aerocar trailer was built by Curtiss of Coral Gables, Florida, a firm also known for motorcycles and pioneering aircraft. Nicknamed “Vagabond” by Dr. Eaton, it was outfitted for hunting excursions and to transport company executives on trips to inspect various real-estate holdings. Special features include a self-contained restroom and kitchen, comfortable seating for eight, cup holders, and an observation deck equipped with a speedometer, compass, and intercom for communication with the driver. Though currently set up for day travel, the interior can be modified to sleep up to six passengers. The dramatically styled rig was in regular use until retired by Forest Lawn Memorial Parks in 1991 – Peterson Automotive Museum

A trailer business of a different sort is largely monopolized by Aerocar Co. of Detroit and Curtiss Aerocar Co. of Coral Gables, Fla. These two completely separate concerns control patents originally obtained by Glenn Curtiss, specialize in custom-built trailers costing from $1,000 to $5,000. Known as the “Rolls-Royces of the industry,” Aerocars have been bought by W. K. Vanderbilt, Joseph E. Widener, Philip K. Wrigley, many another tycoon with an itching foot. U. S. Ambassador to Denmark Ruth Bryan Owen toured Europe in one. Oilman Henry L. Doherty owns two, also owns much Curtiss Aerocar Co. stock.

Read more:  http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,756317-2,00.html#ixzz0j1Nnu1fE

curtiss aerocar land yacht

A little googling turns up a page on coachbuilt.com on Standard Carriage Works of Los Angeles, which built the truck on the Chevrolet 1-ton chassis before sending the truck to Coral Gables, Florida, to pick up the Aerocar trailer:

The second (streamlined fifth-wheel tractor that Standard Carriage built in 1938) was built for pioneer balloonist and aviator Augustus Post, a close personal friend of Glen Curtiss, the designed and manufacturers of the Aerocar 5th wheel trailer. Built using a 1938 Chevrolet 1-ton truck cab and chassis, Standard Carriage Works constructed an attractive ash-framed body which included a large storage area behind the driver’s compartment. The rear sleeping quarters and 4-cylinder generator found on the Reo (the first streamlined fifth-wheel tractor built in 1938) were not included on the budget-priced Chevrolet tow vehicle.

The vehicle was later used by the Los Angeles Biltmore to transport hotel guests on weekend excursions. It was later acquired by the Santa Monica branch of Republic Van Lines after which it was purchased by Hollywood stuntman Robert Breeze (aka Wolf River Bob).

Curtiss also has a page on coachbuilt.com, but I’ve yet to come across an address for that cool building in the background of the Coral Gables photo.

Some owners

CURTISS AEROCAR – 1936 Travel Trailer

curtiss aerocar land yacht

This travel trailer was built in Michigan by the Aerocar Company of Detroit. These trailers were manufactured commercially at several locations in the U.S.A. at facilities that were licensed by the Aerocar Corporation.

This style of travel trailer was invented in about 1927 by Glenn Curtiss, a leading American aircraft designer. By using airplane principals he felt that he could build a trailer that was lightweight, but strong enough to travel over country roads.

The trailers’ long streamlined bodies had a framework made of vertical oak struts and horizontal longer that were connected by diagonally crossed nickel steel airplane truss wires. These wires had turnbuckles that were used to “tune” them to maximum tension thus giving rigidity to the structure. Because of this design, the trailers had no actual chassis.

The wheels on the trailers were placed at the extreme rear end and the front had a long, curved V-shaped prow with a hitch that rested in the rear deck of a coupe or roadster. The hitch utilized a “Glenn Curtiss Aero Coupler”, which consisted of an airplane tire and wheel mounted horizontally. This arrangement was an effective cushion against road shock.

The trailers were covered on the outside with fabric which was stretched tightly over tempered Masonite panels. All Curtiss Aerocar trailers were custom made, one at a time according to the customer’s specific requirements. This 22’ trailer was build for William Gray, a Canadian whose father, Robert Gray had pioneered the production of Gray-Dort automobiles in Chatham, Ontario.

In the late 1930’s, a model such as this would sell for about $5,000.00.

Owned and restored by: Ken and Lana Hindley Union, Ontario, Canada

http://www.hindleysgarage.com/

http://www.coachbuilt.com/bui/c/curtiss/curtiss.htm

HistoryNet

The most comprehensive and authoritative history site on the Internet.

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The Enduring Legacy of Aviation Pioneer Glenn Curtiss

One of aviation’s meccas is Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, site of the first successful powered, fixed-wing flights by the Wright brothers . And then there is Hammondsport, N.Y., where Glenn Curtiss, another of America’s aviation trailblazers, experimented. Interesting and well-kept museums are found at both locations. Increased public interest in Curtiss and his contributions to aviation have led to a new museum in Curtiss’ hometown that is growing rapidly in popularity.

The Wright brothers made bicycles. So did Glenn Hammond Curtiss, their chief competitor, who was born in Hammondsport, at the southern tip of Keuka Lake, on May 21, 1878. His first name is derived from “the Glen,” a picturesque cleft in the hills north of the village that his mother enjoyed very much; she added an n, probably to make the name more masculine. His middle name came from town founder Lazarus Hammond.

The Wrights continued in the bike business in Dayton, Ohio, while experimenting with their planes, but Curtiss started manufacturing motorcycles. The taciturn, unsmiling Curtiss was called “the fastest man on earth” when he was clocked at 136.6 mph during a motorcycle race at Ormond Beach, Fla., in 1904. Curtiss’ entrance into flying began that same year when Thomas Scott Baldwin , famous lighter-than-air devotee, asked Curtiss to make him a two-cylinder, air-cooled engine to power his airship. The first plane Curtiss had anything to do with was Red Wing, which Casey Baldwin lofted from the ice at Keuka Lake on March 12, 1908, before a small crowd. The flight was hailed by the local press as “the first public flight by an airplane in the United States.” The Wrights contended this was untrue, as they had been flying in plain view from a field beside the trolley line linking Dayton and Springfield, Ohio, since 1904. This statement was the beginning of a feud and eventual litigation between the Wrights and Curtiss.

That the Wrights made the first powered flights has generally been accepted, but the achievements of Curtiss spanned several decades and took the airplane from its wood, fabric and wire beginnings to the forerunners of modern transport aircraft. The new museum documents his life and unique accomplishments.

glenn-curtiss-1909

Curtiss made his first flight on his 30th birthday—May 21, 1908—in White Wing, a design of the Aerial Experiment Association , a group led by Alexander Graham Bell. White Wing was the first plane in America to be controlled by ailerons instead of the wing-warping used by the Wrights. It was also the first plane on wheels this side of the Atlantic.

The first plane Curtiss built and flew was June Bug. In 1908, Curtiss won the first leg of the three-legged Scientific American magazine competition for being first to fly in a straight line for more than a kilometer. He won the next leg of the competition in 1909, for establishing a distance record. He then won the Gordon Bennett Trophy, plus the $5,000 prize, in the world’s first international air meet at Reims, France, in 1909. When the New York World newspaper offered $10,000 for the first successful flight between Albany and New York City, Curtiss won the prize money and nationwide recognition. He also won the third leg of the competition and permanent possession of the Scientific American trophy in 1910.

One of the major contributions to flight progress during this period was the invention of ailerons, which was the basis for the litigious rift between the Wrights and Curtiss. But Curtiss had more significant “firsts.” He deserves credit for pioneering the design of the floatplane and the flying boat. It was a Curtiss plane flown by Eugene Ely, a company exhibition pilot, that made the first successful takeoff from a Navy ship in 1910. Another Curtiss plane, the NC-4 , made the first crossing of the Atlantic in 1919. Curtiss built the first U.S. Navy aircraft, called the Triad, and also trained the first two naval pilots. He received the Collier Trophy and the Aero Club Gold Medal for the greatest accomplishment in aviation during 1911.

The success of the first flights of many new aircraft in those beginning days is also associated with the OX series of engines that Curtiss designed. About 12,600 of the series were built—most were installed in British, Canadian and American aircraft during World War I. It is the last of the series, the OX-5, that is best known. There was such a surplus of engines after World War I that they were sold at bargain prices by the government to many postwar aircraft manufacturers. Among those using OX-5 engines were the Laird Swallow, Travel Air 2000, Waco 9 and 10, the American Eagle, and some models of the ubiquitous Curtiss JN-4 Jenny .

In addition to a Jenny, other major aircraft on view in the Curtiss museum include precise replicas of the June Bug and Curtiss Pusher, plus an original 1919 Curtiss Oriole and 1927 Curtiss Robin. A 1907 glider is on display, as are OX engines. Also on hand is an Ohm Special, a racing plane built in 1949 by Dick Ohm and Jamie Kraph; a 1929 Mercury Chic; and a 1931 Mercury S-1 Racer.

One of the “firsts” by Curtiss that is relatively unknown was his invention of the travel trailer. An avid outdoorsman, he developed a folding tent-type trailer in 1917. A very streamlined fifth-wheel trailer was developed from this in 1919, called the Aerocar. The Curtiss four-wheeled Aerocar Motor Bungalow, or Land Yacht, evolved, which was 19 feet long, 12 feet wide and more than 7 feet high. One of these, in excellent condition, is on view and represents the forerunner of today’s house trailers.

first-airplane-takeoff-warship

Some of the museum space is devoted to early Hammondsport history as it relates to the inventive times in which Curtiss lived. There are collections of china dolls, cameras, radios, woodworking tools and many other antiques from the turn of the century. For restless children, there is a half-scale model of a Curtiss Pusher that they can “fly” and sit in to have their pictures taken.

The village of Hammondsport, which today still boasts a population of only about 1,000, is about five miles northeast of Bath, N.Y., and just west of the two largest Finger Lakes—Seneca and Cayuga. The town site is where Keuka Lake meets what the original settlers called Pleasant Valley. Helping to keep things pleasant today are a dozen wineries and the Greyton H. Taylor Wine Museum.

Curtiss made his last flight as a pilot in May 1930, when he flew a Curtiss Condor over the Albany­/New York route. He died two months later and is buried in the Pleasant Valley Cemetery, near the scene of his first aviation triumphs.

It was not until 1928 that anyone suggested a museum be established to honor the area’s most famous resident. A local newspaper was first to suggest it; then, when Curtiss died in 1930, the idea again emerged, only to fade once more.

In 1958, local resident Otto Kohl began collecting Curtiss memorabilia. Kohl, who had been an employee of the Curtiss Aeroplane & Motor Co. in Hammondsport, began to look for a place to house the collection and was instrumental in establishing a museum in an old school building downtown. Although financial support was slow in coming, Curtiss memorabilia began to accumulate.

The Glenn H. Curtiss Museum was formally dedicated on May 18, 1963. A library and archives were established, and a request for donations of authentic Curtiss artifacts led to the acquisition of additional items for display.

flying-jenny

Before the national bicentennial celebration in 1976, the museum underwent many changes and improvements. Exhibits were cleaned and many items in the collection were restored. A replica of the 1908 June Bug was built by volunteers and flown. When the U.S. Navy celebrated the 75th anniversary of naval aviation in 1986, a half-scale model of the A-1 Triad was dedicated, and a full-size model of a Curtiss hydro-floatplane was flown from Keuka Lake. An original 1919 Curtiss Oriole and Curtiss motorcycles (manufactured under the name Hercules) were acquired, as well as many items of local history. It was clear that new quarters had to be found to house the growing collection.

Various plans were formulated for expansion of the museum between 1978 and 1991. In 1991, a former winery was purchased, and on July 4, 1992, the new Glenn H. Curtiss Museum was opened to the public. The new facility devotes 34,000 square feet to permanent exhibits, and 2,400 square feet to temporary exhibits. The building also contains a 100-seat theater, library, archives, photographic lab, catering kitchen, a restoration shop and gift shop—all on one floor.

A $1 million fund drive was launched and completed in 1993 to fund improvements and additional display space for the museum’s growing collection of memorabilia. The number of visitors continues to grow, and it can now be said that aviation buffs have a new mecca in Hammondsport that is certainly worth the trip. Elizabeth Dann, the museum’s director, says the ultimate goal is to create the finest possible repository of Curtiss artifacts and information, and to make that part of aviation history come alive. The museum staff is well on the way to achieving that goal.

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Aerocar, Curtiss Aerocar, Aerocar Trailer, Aerocar Corp., Opa-locka, Coral Gables, Miami, Florida, Aerocar Co. of Detroit, Aero-Car

1919-1921 Adams Trailer Corp., Garden City, Long Island, New York; 1920-1922, Grand Central Palace, New York; 1921-1922, Hammondsport, New York.

Aerocar Co. of America/Aerocar Corp., Wilmington, Delaware.; 1928-1942.

1929-1934, Curtiss Aerocar Company Inc., 1170 Sharazad Blvd., Opa Locka, Florida; 1934-1940; 300 Valencia Ave., Coral Gables, Florida; 1940-1942, 1200 Anastasia Ave., Coral Gables, Florida.

1929-1938; Aerocar Company of Detroit Inc., 1800 Buhl Bldg. (535 Griswold St.), Detroit, Michigan; 7425 Melville St., Detroit, Michigan; 4815 Cabot Ave., Detroit, Michigan (unrelated to the Aerocar Company, an early Detroit based manufacturer of automobiles circa 1906-1908.)

Glenn H. Curtiss (b.1878-d.1930) is best remembered today for his numerous accomplishments in the field of aviation, however he was a multifaceted inventor and engineer who had a hand in numerous transportation-related businesses. His prior success in the fields of self-powered 2-wheeled vehicles (bicycle & motorcycle) had a major influence on his aeronautical success, and after his early retirement he joined Carl G. Fisher in the development of South Florida real estate and manufacturing.

Although he was never directly involved in auto manufacturing, he held multiple automobile dealerships (Ford, Frayer-Miller and Orient Buckboard) in his hometown of Hammondsport during the early 20th Century. He experimented with a propeller-driven wind car in 1905 and in 1917 introduced the nation’s first flying automobile, the Curtiss Autoplane. He fitted several cars with his 90 h. p. Curtiss OX-5 V-8 engines and owned numerous custom-built automobiles for which he either designed or commissioned unusual streamlined features and coachwork.

Curtiss was also a proponent of motor travel, and developed one of the nation’s first travel trailers which was followed by his famous luxury fifth-wheel Aerocar trailers constructed along aeroframe principles. His final project was a modular fwd automobile constructed using a pneumatic suspension he had developed for use as a fifth-wheel trailer hitch.

Glenn Hammond Curtiss was born on May 21, 1878 in Hammondsport, Steuben County, New York to Frank Richmond Curtiss (b.1854 - in Stouffville, ON, Canada - d. Jan. 30, 1883) and Lua A. Andrews (b.1857-d.1935). Named after Lazarus Hammond, who first surveyed the community in 1829, Hammondsport was a small village located at the southern tip of Keuka Lake, one of the numerous small lakes that make up western New York’s Finger Lakes region.

Frank R. Curtiss was the village’s harnessmaker and his shop/home was located at the head of Shether St., Hammondsport’s main drag. Frank and Lua’s union was blessed by the birth of two children, Glenn Hammond (b.1878) and Rutha Luella (b. February 15, 1881-d. Mar. 2, 1960) Curtiss.

Tragedy stuck the household in 1882 when Frank passed away leaving Lua to raise young Glenn and his infant sister on their own. Rutha came down with meningitis in 1887, and although she eventually recovered, she was left without her hearing. In September of 1889 Lua   and Rutha Curtiss moved to Rochester, New York, so Rutha could attend the Western New York Institute for Deaf-Mutes, now known as the Rochester School for the Deaf*.   Glen remained in Hammondsport to finish his education, joining his family in Rochester after graduation from the 8 th grade.

(*Rutha attended the facility from September 1889 to June 1903, and returned as an instructor after graduation from college.)

Once in Rochester Glenn took a position with the Eastman Dry Plate and Film Co., the predecessor of Eastman Kodak, as a film stock stenciler and later on a camera assembler. As soon as he could afford a bicycle, he left his factory position to become a bicycle messenger with the Rochester office of Western Union.

His mother Lua ran a storefront school after graduating from the State Teacher’s College in Geneseo, Livingston County, New York and on April 1, 1895 married Rock Stream, N.Y. native J. Charles Adams. Adams was an old acquaintance of Lua’s and owned a substantial vineyard on the west side of Seneca Lake. The couple remained in Rochester for a short time, but the impending birth of G. Carl Adams, the half-brother of Glenn H. Curtiss, who was born in 1897, prompted the relocation of the family to Rock Stream where Glen was given a job at his stepfather’s vineyard/orchard.

Rock Stream was located just 18 miles east of his hometown of Hammondsport and his love of bicycling led him to join a Hammondsport Wheelman’s club. On March 7, 1898 Curtiss married Lena Neff, born at Prattsburg, Steuben County, New York on September 14, 1879, a daughter of Guy L. Neff, a prominent Steuben County lumberman. He listed photographer as his occupation on the marriage certificate, as he had recently taken a job with Saylor’s Studio in Hammondsport, the newlyweds having moved in with Curtiss’ paternal grandmother, Ruth Curtiss. He also worked as a part-time bicycle repairman for the local pharmacist, James H. Smellie, who was Hammondsport’s sole bicycle retailer.

In 1900 Smellie offered Curtiss an opportunity to take over his bicycle repair business and Glenn opened up a combination bicycle repair and harness goods shop on Pulteney St., Hammondsport using leftover inventory from his father’s old harness works.

Curtiss soon embarked upon the manufacture of his own assembled bicycles, using parts sourced from his suppliers, under the ‘Hercules’ trade name. Business and profits improved to the point where a satellite was established in nearby Bath, New York (and in 1902 - Corning, New York) and the business was renamed as Curtiss’ Bicycle Stores. Soon after James H. Smellie transferred his new bicycle business and inventory to Curtiss, making him the region’s main distributor of Cleveland, Columbia, National, Racycle and Stearns bicycles.

In May of 1901 Curtiss visited the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo where he became infatuated with the E.R. Thomas Auto-Bi motorcycle, and following his return home he set about building his own motorcycle using a mail-order E.R. Thomas raw block casting and a home-made carburetor.

During early 1902 he established a second satellite sales facility in Corning, New York, and announced that he would now be specializing in the sales and service of motorcycles.

Dissatisfied with the engines currently on the market, Curtiss embarked upon the design and manufacture of his own power-plant. He found a handful of willing investors and by the end of the year he had founded the G.H. Curtiss Manufacturing Company and began to manufacture his own line of motorcycles and motorcycle engines under the Hercules brand name.

His marriage to Lena was blessed with the birth of a son, Carlton, in March of 1901, but the infant suffered a congenital heart defect and survived only eleven months. Lena vowed to have no more children and engrossed herself in caring for Glenn’s blind and elderly grandmother. When Ruth Curtiss passed away in late 1903 Lena joined the workforce at G.H. Curtiss Mfg. Co., taking charge of the firm’s office and bookkeeping for the remainder of the decade. She eventually softened her position on the matter of children and in 1912 gave birth to a second, healthy child, Glenn H. Curtiss Jr.

In January 1903 Curtiss attended his first New York Automobile Show, after which he became an annual exhibitor, displaying the latest Curtiss motorcycles or engine. Curtiss became a well-known automobilist, and he served as Hammondsport’s Orient Buckboard, Frayer-Miller, and Ford Motor Co. distributor.

The Hercules was campaigned at various races throughout the Northeast and on May 30, 1903 he piloted a Hercules V-twin equipped motorcycle to victory in a ten-mile race, setting a one-mile speed record in the process. The well-publicized victory alerted a small California firm to the fact that Curtiss was using their registered trademark as his own, so Curtiss took the advice of his closest associates re-christening his motorcycles and their engines with his own surname.

The feat was followed by trips to Ormond Beach, Florida where he made successive attempts at breaking the World Land Speed record. The resulting publicity brought in orders for his motorcycle and he started offering the standalone powerplant to third parties, and in a few short years his V-Twin was the most popular engine in the country. A Curtis-powered balloon made an appearance at the 1904 World’s Fair in St. Louis and Curtiss became friend with its pilot, Thomas Scott Baldwin, who subsequently relocated his balloon and dirigible factory to Hammondsport.

A 1906 offer to supply the Wright Brothers with Curtiss engines was rebuffed by the fiercely independent brothers, but at the time held no great significance for Curtiss. He continued with the development of his V-twin engines and by 1906 had built his first V-8 engine, which consisted of 4 Curtiss V-Twins mounted back-to-back. The monstrous V-8 was fitted to a purpose-built Curtiss motorcycle frame and in January of 1907 its namesake piloted the world’s first V-8 equipped motorcycle to a speed of 136 m.p.h. at Ormond Beach, Florida, becoming the ‘Fastest Man On Earth’. He held the title until 1911 when Bob Burman beat his time in a 4-wheeled Benz, remarkably Curtiss’ two-wheel record stood until 1930.

In June of 1907 Curtiss flew over Hammondsport in a Curtiss-equipped Baldwin dirigible, and in October he joined the Aerial Experiment Association, a group founded by Alexander Graham Bell, and financed by Bells’ wife Mabel who – like Rutha Curtiss, Glenn’s sister - was deaf.

Curtiss continued to try and get the Wright Brothers interested in his power plants, but they continued to be uninterested. In 1908 the AEA began assembling some experimental craft in Hammondsport and on March 12, one of its members, ‘Casey’ Baldwin piloted the ‘Red Wing’ for 319 feet over the frozen surface of Keuka Lake. In May Curtiss piloted the ‘White Wing’ on a 1000 foot flight which historically was the first American aircraft to be equipped with a ailerons for navigation. On July 4, Curtiss flew the ‘June Bug’ for a distance of 5,090 feet, earning him the Scientific American Magazine trophy, which required an unassisted take-off and straight flight of at least one kilometer.

A float-equipped ‘June Bug’, re-christened the Loon, failed a November, 1908 water-launched flight test, but the AEA moved on to the next project, the ‘Silver Dart’ which during February of 1909 became the first airplane to fly in Canada.

Despite their many accomplishments, the AEA disbanded that March, bequeathing its designs and patents to Curtiss. Curtiss subsequently constructed his own aircraft, the ’Gold Bug’, which was sold to the New York Aero Club for $5,000 and renamed the Golden Flyer. The sale infuriated the Wright Brothers, who erroneously believed that they held the patent on all moveable wing surfaces. Although Curtiss’ ailerons were an entirely new development, The Wrights sued in August of 1909, launching one of the nastiest vehicle-based lawsuits in US history, second only to the Henry Ford vs. ALAM suit.

At that time Curtiss was at an airshow in Reims, France, where he piloted the ‘Reims Racer’ to a record speed of 47 m.p.h., earning himself the Gordon Bennett Cup, a trophy sponsored by the publisher of the New York Herald, James Gordon Bennett.

Curtiss spent the winter improving his engines, and on May, 29th, 1910, piloted the V-8 equipped ‘Hudson Flyer’ on a 151-mile flight from Albany to Governor’s Island in 2 hours, 51 minutes, at an average of 52 m.p.h., earning himself a $10,000 prize and permanent possession of the Scientific American trophy.

Curtiss continued to work on a plane that was capable of taking off from water, but in the meantime was satisfied to create one that was capable of taking off from a ship. In November, 1910 Eugene Ely successfully took off from a specially designed platform on the U.S. S. Birmingham and then flew his Curtiss to shore at Hampton Roads, Virginia. Ely made the all-important reverse trip in January, 1911, taking off from San Bruno, California’s Tanforan racetrack and landing his Curtiss on a specially-built platform on the U.S.S. Pennsylvania in San Francisco harbor. The two events marked the first time an aircraft had made a ship-borne take-off and a ship-borne landing.

In December, 1910 Curtiss had established the first U.S. Naval Aviation School at North Island, at the north end of the Coronado peninsula on San Diego Bay. Early in 1911 Curtiss followed up Ely’s success with his own first successful takeoff from water in the Curtiss A-1 hydroplane which was closely followed by the first successful hydroplane flight to a ship. That May the U.S. Navy ordered two Curtiss A-1 hydroplanes, making Curtiss the first supplier of Naval aircraft to the US Government.

In 1912, Lena and gave birth to a second child, Glenn Curtiss, Jr. and Glenn gave up competitive flying.

Up to this time, all of Curtiss’ aircraft had been pushers - aircraft whose propellers were mounted behind the wings, pushing it through the air. A 1913 visit to the Sopwith Aviation Co. in South West London, England changed his views on the subject. At that time Sopwith was manufacturing tractor airplanes and hydroplanes whose front-mounted propellers pulled the aircraft through the air.

The US Army had expressed an interest in tractor aircraft for its training program, so Curtiss commissioned Sopwith’s chief engineer, Benjamin D. Thomas, to design him a tractor-style aircraft that would be suitable for use as Army trainers. Two successive bi-planes, the Curtis JN-1 and JN- 2 were introduced in 1915 to limited success. A lighter and improved bi-plane design, the Curtiss JN-3, debuted in 1915 and by December of 1916 a much improved version, the JN-4 replaced it. The US Army Air Corps. and Royal Flying Corps. liked what they saw and after an extensive testing regimen placed a series of large orders for the JN-4 trainers, which were known as the Curtiss ‘Jenny’. The JN-4 was the most famous US-built plane of World War I and an estimate 95 % of all American pilots were trained on a Jenny. During the buildup to the War the Federal Government pressured the Wright Co./ Wright-Martin Co. - which was no longer controlled by the Wright Bros. as Wilber was dead and Orville had sold his interest in the firm in 1915 - to settle their long-running patent dispute with Curtiss in 1916.

The settlement coincided with the formation of the Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Corp., which took over a portion of the Curtiss’ existing Garden City, Long Island research facility in order to commence production of small numbers of OX-5 engines and JN-4 trainers and Curtiss hydroplanes for the military. The ramp up to war greatly increased the demand for Curtiss’ aircraft and engines, and although some manufacturing took place in Curtiss’ old Hammondsport factory, Curtiss relocated their main manufacturing operations to Buffalo, New York where available manufacturing capacity far outstripped the local demand. The additional space came in handy when Curtiss was awarded a contract to produce 3,000 Spad single seat fighters (and a few Bristol F.2 fighters) in late 1917. Unfortunately suitable American-made power plants were not forthcoming and both contracts were abruptly cancelled in early 1918.

Although he maintained his principle residence in Garden City, Long Island, Curtiss kept a house in Hammondsport and leased another one in Buffalo, where he became acquainted with the craftsmen at Brunn & Company, Buffalo’s premiere custom automobile body builder.

Between 1916 and 1918 Brunn constructed four custom bodies for Curtiss on Marmon 34, Pierce-Arrow 66 and Cadillac Type 53 ‘special’ chassis. Herman C. Brunn, the son of the firm’s founder, Hermann A. Brunn, recalled his father’s work for Curtiss in the March-April issue of Antique Automobile, in an article entitled ‘Four Custom Bodied Cars Designed for Glenn Hammond Curtiss’ a few paragraphs of which are excerpted below:

“…Mr. Curtiss became one of the firm’s most valued and loyal customers. His choice of chassis ranged from the Pierce Arrow 66, Marmon 34 and Cadillac. He haunted the factory whenever one of his bodies was being built and was on a first name basis with many of the employees. He even contributed some early aerodynamic design features to two bodies built on the Pierce-Arrow 66 chassis. As well as being a considerate and astute man, he was a workman himself and a stimulating person to have around. “The last of the cars was a 1916 town car built for Mrs. Curtiss on a 145” wheelbase Cadillac chassis. Mr. Curtiss wrote my father (Hermann A. Brunn) a letter in 1923, the last paragraph of which reads as follows: ‘It may interest you to know that the suburban town car built on the 145” wheelbase Cadillac is still doing service in almost daily runs to town, and although it is now seven years old, it is as good looking as any car that tolls the streets of New York.’ “The design of this body on the Pierce-Arrow 66 chassis occupied quite a bit of Mr. Curtiss’ thinking. Note the cute angle of the ‘V’ windshield and the extreme round line of the rear of the roof. The car made heads turn as it rolled down the streets, and at least once, drew some more serious attention to itself. Mr. Curtiss told my father the story of how in mid-1917, after the United States had entered World War I, he had the car at his home in Florida. He had been driving the vehicle, which was painted a medium shade of gray, near his home – when he was visited by the local police. It seems they had received several calls from nervous people who had caught a glimpse of the car in the night. They wondered if it was a military vehicle landed by the Germans on a secluded Florida beach with some sinister purpose in mind! The projectile-shaped Westinghouse air-springs attached to the front and rear springs probably contributed to the military vehicle image. “This bulky looking two-door sedan, built in the early teens, had no running boards, but a step which folded down when the door opened. Again note the Westinghouse air-springs, which were advertised as ‘making the best car better.’ They were a profitable accessory for Brunn & Co. in those days, but passed from the picture with the advent of hydraulic shock absorbers and better chassis spring suspension. “This luxurious center door sedan on the Marmon 34 chassis was one of Mr. Curtiss’ favorites, and he even allowed himself to be photographed standing beside the car. “The last of the Brunn-bodied Curtiss cars was this town car built in 1916 after the family had moved from Buffalo to Garden City, L.I. There were a number of special features that helped disguise the fact that it was a 145” wheelbase Cadillac chassis. The radiator shell and headlamps of German Silver were exact duplicates of those on the Rolls-Royce. The small plaque on the face of the shell was engraved with the owner’s initial instead of the usual world famous R-R. Brunn built quite a few of these Rolls radiator jobs during the teens. No complaints ever came from England, probably because they were engaged in a war for survival and too busy to bother about a small coachbuilder on a side street in Buffalo, N.Y.”

A picture of the Brunn-bodied two-door Pierce-Arrow 66 with whitewalls and disc wheel covers appeared in the January 1919 issue of The American Blacksmith and is believed to have been constructed during 1918, and not during or prior to 1916 as stated by Herman C. Brunn in the previous quotation.

Richard B. Wilder, a former Long Island neighbor of Curtiss’ wrote a follow-up letter to Brunn’s piece that was published in Vol. 41, No. 2, (March-April 1977 issue) of Antique Automobile:

“Glenn Curtiss Cars “Thank you for the article by Hermann C. Brunn on the four cars made for Glenn Curtiss. When I was a child, the Curtisses were neighbors of ours in Garden City and I remember the cars very well. “The town car was very elegant and was upholstered in damask satin and with gold hardware. The Curtiss head gardener always placed three pink carnations in the Tiffany glass flower holder every morning. In 1926 the car was traded in on a Pierce-Arrow. “The big sedan was used primarily to take the children to school, as it was designed to hold nine passengers. Glenn Jr., was a contemporary of mine and many rides I had in that car. “Mr. Curtiss was a delightful man and very popular with the young fry, particularly as he seemed to have an endless supply of quarters and fifty cent pieces which he tossed into the swimming pool for us to dive for. “Mr. Curtiss loved cars and there were always more cars than their five-car garage would hold. There was a Packard twin-six torpedo body car of about 1920, which was quite comparable to the Cadillac if the early forties. Other cars included a six-wheel Chrysler, Cadillacs, Franklins, etc. Mr. Curtiss manufactured the first camp trailer. “Richard B. Wilder, ‘Twin Brooks’, Kent, Connecticut 06757.”

Prior to the start of the War Curtiss’ products were largely assembled by hand, but the massive contracts forced Curtiss to look outside the firm for expertise in mass production. A necessary recapitalization attracted a group of investors associated with John North Willys, who subsequently elected the auto magnate as president of the firm, at which time Curtiss assumed the position of Chairman.

It’s unclear if Curtiss was forced out, or left of his own accord, however he appeared to relish his new-found freedom and began spending more time working on pet projects and began to look for additional business opportunities outside of the transportation industry.

One of his pet projects was the development of a flying automobile, or more precisely the Curtiss Model 11 Autoplane, which was introduced at the Pan-American Aeronautical Exposition which was held at Grand Central Palace from February 8-15, 1917.

Designed for airspeed of 65 m.p.h. and a road speed of 45 m.p.h. the Autoplane featured a leather-trimmed heated cabin with provisions for two passengers behind the single pilot’s seat. Its fully enclosed aluminum body was equipped with celluloid windows and travelled along the road using its four-blade pusher propeller at the rear of the roof. The propeller was connected to the front-mounted 100-h.p. Curtiss OXX V8 via a complex driveshaft, belt and pulley arrangement.

Two small permanently mounted canard wings were affixed to the extreme front of the body and when outfitted for the air it included two removable wire-braced booms spaced 9 feet apart to clear the propeller and a set of removable Curtiss Model L tri-plane wings which gave the 27 foot long vehicle a 40 foot 6 inch wingspan, both the wings and tail detached as a single, albeit cumbersome, unit. The Autoplane is reported to have made only a few short straight-ahead hops before development was abandoned due to the ensuing European conflict.

In mid-1918 a new slate was elected to the board of the Curtiss Aeroplane & Motors Corp. at the firm’s annual board of directors meeting, the May the May 23, 1918 issue of The Automobile/Automotive Industries reporting:

“Curtiss Elects Officers “BUFFALO, N. Y., May 22 — Following are the officers and directors elected at the annual meeting of the Curtiss Aeroplane & Motors Corp. held recently: “Glenn H. Curtiss, chairman of the board of directors; John North Willys, president; James E. Kepperley, vice president and general manager; C. M. Keys, vice-president; E. C. Morse, vicepresident; W. W. Moss, vice-president and comptroller; B. A. Guy, secretary and assistant general manager; J. F. Prince, treasurer; H. M. Root, assistant comptroller; J. J. Donahue, assistant treasurer; J. F. Weber, assistant secretary. “The board of directors consists of Glenn H. Curtiss, C. H. Conners, Harry Evers, B. A. Guy, C. M. Keys, James E. Kepperley, W. A. Morgan, W. W. Moss, F. H. Russell, J. Allan Smith, G. C. Taylor, J. N. Willys, Rodman Wanamaker, W. B. Stratton and J. A. D. McCurdy.”

Although many believe that Charles Lindbergh was the first person to cross the Atlantic in an airplane, the truth is that he was the first person to fly across the Atlantic solo. On May 8, 1919, a group of Naval aviators piloting 3 Curtiss flying boats left the continental United States en route to Europe. On May 27th the sole remaining Curtiss arrived in Lisbon, Portugal, marking the first successful crossing of the Atlantic by aircraft.

Despite his laundry list of achievements, Curtiss had tired of the business of Aviation and in 1920 sold his controlling interest in the corporation that bore his name and retired, although he served as a part-time consultant to the firm for another decade.

Even though production of the Curtiss OX-5 extended well beyond the Armistice, surplus and slightly used OX-5s were easy to come by immediately after the War and although Curtiss himself wasn’t directly involved in the project, Curtiss Aeroplane & Motor Corp.’s vice-president C. Roy Keys installed a 90 h.p. Curtiss OX-5 V8 in a 1910 Winton in order to promote the sale of surplus Curtiss V8s for automobile use. A picture of the car accompanied the following ad which ran in the November 1921 issues of Aviation and Aerial Age Weekly:

“AVIATION FANS “Build yourself a $10,000.00 automobile chassis with an old high-grade chassis and an overhauled OX-5, and have the satisfaction of driving a personally engineered custom automobile. “Very light and easily made modifications only are necessary ordinarily on the motor and chassis. “The above photograph shows a Winton, year 1910, chassis with OX-5 motor and special body. Weight fully loaded 3,600 lbs., maximum speed 100 m.p.h. Four speed chassis, 18.3 miles per gallon of commercial gasoline by actual continuous check at 30 miles per hour in high gear without slipping clutch, acceleration standing start to 45 miles per hour in 10 seconds. In three days' city-driving ran 145.2 miles on 9 ¼ gallons of commercial gasoline. “Send self-addressed and 4-cent stamped large envelope for general data on above and Marmon installation, or one dollar for detail instructions with photographs and OX5 booklet. “Curtiss Aeroplane & Motor Corporation, GARDEN CITY, LONG ISLAND”

An August 1974 letter from former Curtiss Vice-President Ray C. Keys to the Curtiss Museum provides further details on the Winton pictured in the advertisement:

“Picture #1 shows the Winton chassis which had many novel features but you would be principally interested in what the motor was like. I made 8 pistons with narrow ring grooves of auto type so as not to oil up idling speeds and high induction vacuum. I cut off the crankshaft at the hub and I had the 1910 square (dodge) black- (not the auto Dodge people) for the universal drive to the clutch which was a separate multi plate wet clutch. “The chassis had a lot of features about which you would not be too interested. It was right hand drive with very heavy bronze lever controls and a final drive ratio of 1.99 to 1 as I remember it. Lawrence Marmon was probably about 4 to 1, hence I got good gas mileage. In fact it had a 40 gallon gas tank with 3 gallon reserve and I used to fill up in Buffalo and drive to N.Y.C. and back and not open the gas tank. “Picture #1 was taken just after I put the thing together in an auto shop in Yonkers in 1921. I think, and built the body of aluminum sheets – maybe the first such in the country. We had, at Garden City, some women to weld aluminum for gasoline tanks replacing soldered ***?*** plate and a couple of them did that work. Notice the fenders are of sheet steel and the body itself sections are flat. We could not bend aluminum, and then put the heat of welding on it or it would warp. It was a handsome body pictured in a feature article in Vanity Fair Magazine, I designed it under an architect’s glass, which diminishes your image instead of magnifying it. “Picture #1 was taken in front of the Garden City Curtiss Engineering Corporation office where Mr. Curtiss had the most desirable office and mine as factory manager was next to it. I was later V. President gas mgt. of the Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Co. Inc. after we – the Keys Group – bought out Mr. Willys Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Corporation. “Picture #1 was taken when there was only a prime coat of paint on the vehicle and the wheels still. I think they called ‘quick detachable’ tires and the spare tires were carried as just outer casings with inner tubes and at the time, I had spring loaded front bumper (as of 1972 or so) and the spare tires were all of the rear bumpers. Also a Boyce ‘moto-meter’ thermometer in the radiator cap in vogue on current autos. Windshield was ½” thick plate glass (no laminate available in U.S. at that time.) which swiveled and I hoped would protect us in a roll-over some. It had a tilt-down steering wheel by Cadillac to give room to get out (1970 or so).”

In addition to the decade-old Winton, a picture exists of the OX-5 equipped 1917 Marmon ‘34’ cloverleaf roadster that was mentioned in the November 1921 issue of Aviation and Aerial Age Weekly and engineer Benjamin F. Gregory installed an OX-5 in an early front-wheel-drive racecar.

A small New York City automobile manufacturer named the Prado Motor Corp. produced as many as 10 OX-5 powered luxury cars during 1921 and 1922 and the Dallas, Texas-based Wharton Motors Co., constructed at least one OX-5 prototype.

For a while, at least, Curtiss thought about building cars himself and asked designer Miles Harold Carpenter, who had been building the Phianna luxury car with OX-5 power in Queens, New York, to organize a new Curtiss Motor Car Company. Carpenter prepared a number of drawings of proposed body designs for the vehicle, and a few prototypes are thought to have been built using OX-5 equipped Phianna chassis, but the recession of 1920-21 left the production Curtiss automobile stillborn.

Automotive historian Frank N. Potter explained this phase of the Curtiss story in ‘Darling of the Titans,’ published by The Upper Hudson Valley Automobilist in June 1962:

"Shortly after World War I, Miles Harold Carpenter, designer and manufacturer of the luxurious Phianna motor car, was also designing and building custom cars for Glenn Curtiss and his friends, and equipping them with modified Curtiss OX-5 airplane engines. These were long-wheelbase, very fast passenger cars. Carpenter designed the bodies in Curtiss's private den on Stewart Avenue in Garden City. The styles were very much ahead of the times and quite startling, even in an era when rakish cars were not uncommon. "Curtiss asked Carpenter to build a plant and arranged with a banker, C.M. Keys, to finance the Curtiss Motor Car Company. The Curtiss cars were to use Phianna chassis equipped with OX-5 powerplants modified by Charles Kirkham, their original designer and chief engineer for Curtiss. Kirkham had designed and built all the Curtiss planes and engines up to the end of World War I. Neither Curtiss nor the Phianna cars survived the Depression of 1921."

In a subsequent letter to the AUHV’s editor, Keith Marvin, Potter theorized on the fate of the handful of Curtiss OX-5 equipped Phiannas:

"I do not know if any of the Carpenter-Curtiss cars still exist; I assume not. The last I saw any of them was around 1930, in New Rochelle, New York, where Carpenter had stored some partially completed cars and material when he moved everything out of Kirkham's shop in Garden City and closed up his Phianna operation. Some mechanics were working on this material, under Carpenter's direction, as well as helping him customize expensive cars for his wealthy friends. "I recall seeing a Phianna chassis incorporating an OX-5 engine at this New Rochelle location. It was being fitted with a closed body from a Rolls-Royce. I doubt that this job was ever completed, inasmuch as Carpenter was then very busy with a small-car operation being set up in Canada, and all the New Rochelle material may have been sold for junk."

It is unknown if Glenn H. Curtiss had any direct involvement with the manufacture of the Curtiss-equipped Phiannas, although he was certainly aware of the project. Regardless the remaining surplus OX-5s were gradually disposed of, some as low as $50.

One of Curtiss’ first retirement projects was the building of a camping trailer for his periodic hunting and fishing trips into New York State’s Adirondack, Berkshire and Catskill mountains. Articles in the February 7, 1920, issue of Scientific American and the April 1920 issue of Popular Mechanics reveal Curtiss’ ‘compact hotel on wheels,’ was towed behind an automobile and offered him significantly more comfort than a tent. The light-weight 20 foot long trailer was constructed using ‘aircraft materials’ and its beaklike prow attached to the tow vehicle using a fifth-wheel hitch enabling it to be safely towed at speeds approaching 60 mph.

The interior of the rigid-roofed trailer included a folding table, storage compartments and a toilet. Exterior lockers held such useful items as a camping kitchen, spade, axe and miscellaneous hunting and fishing gear. The trailer could sleep six, four in hinged screened-in beds that hung from the rigid exterior walls and two inside.

Curtiss enjoyed his trailer so much that he established a small trailer manufacturing outfit to manufacturer them installing his half-brother, G. Carl Adams (1897- 1963) to head the operation which was headquartered in Garden City, Long Island although the trailers were actually manufactured in his hometown of Hammondsport.

George Carl Adams was born on January 24, 1897 to J. Charles Adams (b.1852), and Lua A. (Andrews) Curtiss (b.1857). As previously stated Glenn Curtiss’ biological father had passed away in 1883, and on April 1, 1895 his mother married Rock Stream, N.Y. native J. Charles Adams in Rochester, N.Y. Adams was an old acquaintance of Lua’s and owned a substantial vineyard on the west side of Seneca Lake approximately 7 miles north of Watkins Glen, New York. The couple remained in Rochester for a short time, but the impending birth of G. Carl Adams prompted the relocation of the family to Rock Stream where 19-yo Glenn was given a job at his stepfather’s vineyard/orchard.

While George Carl was still an infant, his stepbrother moved back to Hammondsport, which was located only 18 miles to the west, to live with his paternal grandmother. George Carl was raised on his father’s estate but his father’s alcoholism led to a split with his mother and George Carl accompanied her to Buffalo in 1907 to go live with her sister. George Carl attended the Buffalo schools, and made frequent trips to Hammondsport with his mother to visit his increasingly successful half-brother, Glenn.

Shortly after Glenn moved to San Diego, California to open his North Island flying school (1911-1913) his mother and stepbrother left Buffalo to come and live with him, a habit that would continue for the rest of his career. In 1912 he built a home for them in nearby Coronado that overlooked the Pacific, but three years later they returned to Buffalo where Glenn was busy establishing a new factory. When Glenn moved into a new home at 76 Lincoln Parkway, Buffalo, he rented a separate home for his mother at 426 Connecticut. St. Ironically George Carl Adams would start and complete his secondary education in the Buffalo public schools.

George Carl Adams adored his much older half-brother and upon graduation from high school, went to work for him - eventually becoming his most trusted business partner. After Glen relocated his household to Garden City, Long Island, George Carl made frequent trips between Long Island, Buffalo and Hammondsport tending to pressing business issues, and shortly after his brother ‘retired’ from the airplane business, Glenn installed him as president of a start-up firm formed to manufacture a line of travel trailers based on his recently-constructed travel-trailer.

A complete line of trailers was advertised; 5 camping and 10 commercial, all of which were built using a standard rectangular single axle bed and integral triangular prow whose single spike dropped into a receiver located at the rear of the tow vehicle.

The top-of-the-line Motor Bungalo Deluxe, which retailed at $1,200, had a rigid top and sides and measured 12 ft. 6 in. long, 5 ft. 8 in. wide and 6 ft. 4 in. tall. Next in line was the significantly shorter Motor Bungalo Junior a four model line of traditional folding canvas-topped camp trailers that were priced from $485 to $655.

The commercial trailers all shared the same unique 5-sided trailer bed as the Bungalo Jr., but were equipped with far less equipment. The basic open-bed Model A, priced at $195, could be outfitted with numerous options such as a basic rack; a flared rack; a deluxe cattle rack; a double deck; an express top with rigid roof and ’Tufhyde’ (nitirite-coated fabric) sides; and a standard top with rigid roof and rigid sides. Other commercial units included the $215 dumping trailer and the top-of-the-line $370 trailer with solid delivery body.

A Deluxe Motor Bungalow was featured in the June 1921 issue of Popular Science:

“Hitch a Bungalo to Your Car “’Stop at the Glenmore!’ At regular intervals you see this sign as you tour through the country; you decided to stop there. But when you arrive, weary and worn, you find that the Glenmore is in the heart of the city on a noisy main street, or else that it is full. “Glenn H. Curtiss and his brother-in-law, G. Carl Adams, have solved this problem by inventing a bungalow on wheels that is attached to the automobile, trailer fashion. It is well-equipped, and yet not heavy enough to cause excessive strain. When you wish to sleep, eat, or rest, you stop the car in some convenient place and move into the bungalow. There you will find a kitchen, pantry, a bathroom, clothes and bedding lockers, a table, chairs and berths that will accommodate six people. The bungalow even has electric lights and running water. The windows are all properly screened and they are also provided with water-proof curtains. “The bungalo is coupled to the automobile by a bar.”

A display ad in the June 25, 1921 of the Trenton Evening Times:

"Make Your Vacation Worth While. Take One of Our Motor Bungalows Behind Your Car to the Mountains or Seashore. Come and visit our Camp at River Road and Trenton Junction Road (near Riverside Inn). "Adams Trailer Corporation Garden City, Long Island, N.Y."

An early brochure for Adams's Motor Bungalo, bearing the slogan ‘Gypsie Life Modernized,’ included a drawing of a rigid, enclosed trailer and photographs of Curtiss' personal trailer. The brochure identified Adams as a ‘designer and builder of custom-built bodies,’ stating that the Motor Bungalo’s dimensions were 12 ft. 6 in. long, 5 ft. 8 in. wide and 6 ft. 4 in. tall. The Motor Bungalo, as drawn, looked much like Curtiss's trailer, from its V- shaped front end to its outwardly folding beds. Inside the Motor Bungalo, the brochure promised, one would find felt mattresses, clothes closets, tan curtain partitions, and bed curtains made of Pantasote, a nitrite coated leather substitute. The exterior would be bronze green, the interior dark oak.

The sales and export office were located in Manhattan, at Grand Central Palace with early trailers built at the Curtiss Engineering Corp. complex in Garden City, Long Island. Construction was soon transferred to Hammondsport, the September 1, 1921 issue of the Democrat & Chronicle (Rochester, NY) announced that Adams was relocating its machinery to the plant of Keuka Industries:

“NEW INDUSTRY AT HAMMONDSPORT “Hammondsport, Aug. 31 - The machinery and material of the Adams Trailer Corporation of Garden City, L. I., has been moved to this place and installed at the plant of Keuka Industries, Inc., where the trailers and camp cars will be manufactured hereafter. The local company started making trailers this week. The trailer company reported that they are behind on orders now and that many persons who are traveling to southern states are buying camp cars and trailers.”

F. E. Brimmer’s ‘Autocamping’ (pub. 1923) included a thorough review of the Deluxe and Junior versions:

“We have found the Adams Motorbungalo a deluxe camping trailer outfit, with: two double spring beds and mattresses; a complete kitchenette including ice box refrigerator, folding kitchen table, shelf, holders for utensils and dishes, water tank, gasoline stove, and plenty of room to carry all bulk food; roomy wardrobe with hanger rod; screened and curtained windows to the number of five; and an absolutely water-tight roof. Speaking of the roof, this is a frame of light wood over which is placed 10-ounce heavy oil duck, and topped with Fabrikoid, much like the automobile tops of the best cars. From each side of the top extend leatherette curtains, or flies, this giving double protection of canvas and leatherette over your head. “The beds counterbalance with the roof of this outfit, so that when opening the double spring beds their weight lifts up the roof; and vice versa, when shutting up this camp the weight of the roof in settling down helps close the beds. Although there are small adjustable braces that may be let down at each corner of the extended camp, still this is not necessary under ordinary conditions, so substantial is this outfit. It is braced in place securely by a foot extending down from the draw-pull and by the rear step. This camp can be unhitched and completely set up in five minutes anywhere. It is automatic simplicity itself. Just step inside, push out on the upright beds, and as they easily swing to horizontal your camp is automatically made entire. “The 3-foot-square door that opens the kitchenette and wardrobe, slips off its hinges and becomes a camp table of regular height. The kitchenette may be opened from inside or out, whether you are trailing this outfit on the road and need to put in provisions, or have it erected in camp. Over the kitchenette and wardrobe there is a triangular-shaped shelf three feet on a side. The sides of this trailer are steel and the bottom is matched wood. The rear door has two panels, a screened window, and may be locked from inside or out. “The hitch of the Motorbungalo is instantaneous ball and socket of the best type. Wheels are 30 x 3 ½ inches, the bearings are roller type, and there are excellent steel springs. This outfit attaches to the frame of your car, being secured by a rear bumper bolted by two braces to your car frame. The body is 84 inches wide and the sides 13 inches. The complete camp erected makes a shelter 9x12 feet. The complete bungalow weighs about 850 pounds. “When on the road this outfit rides almost as high as the top of your automobile, but the front end is V-shaped and hence does not necessarily give more wind resistance than a trailer packing down lower. It is a camp that you may depend upon as dust-proof, bug-proof, and dry. Recently the author and his family, including the two small children, slept in this outfit during a period of rainy weather that lasted over a month and all but took the joy out of autocamping. However, day and night, we ate, lived, and slept in a bone-dry place inside this outfit. “The Motorbungalo Junior is a lighter model made by the Adams firm, folding down flat and compact, but having only a canvas roofing over your head, as do all other standard trailers. It has the kitchenette, wardrobe space, screened windows, and two comfortable double spring beds. There is a curtain arrangement so that you can divide camp into two bedchambers if you like. The basic trailer is the same as for the regular Motorbungalo, which was originally designed by Glenn H. Curtiss and is today manufactured in the original airplane factories of the inventor. Both styles of Motorbungalo trailers may be stripped of their camping outfits and used as a commercial trailer the year round when you don't want to camp. The body has a drop tail gate.”

Adams Trailer Corp. offered at least 15 models: the top-of-the-line Motor Bungalo, at $1200; four ‘Camp Trailers’, ranging from $485 to $655; and ten ‘commercial trailers’ starting at $215 (with ‘dumping attachment’) and rising to $370 (with ‘solid delivery body’).

40 dealers, distributors and agencies offered Adams Trailers in Connecticut, Florida, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Ontario and Quebec.

The January 1922 issue of American Exporter announced the debut of a third model, the ‘ Highway Coach’:

“TRAILER IDEA IN A MOTOR BUS “Acting upon the principle that ‘it is easier to pull a load than to carry it,’ Glenn H. Curtiss, pioneer aviator and airplane manufacturer, in conjunction with G. Carl Adams, president of the Adams Trailer Corporation, has constructed a novel and practical motor bus on a standard Dodge chassis. The new vehicle called the ‘Highway Coach’ can carry 26 people comfortably at very nearly the speed of the regular Dodge car. The chassis was shortened 12 inches but the brake, clutch levers, steering column and controls were lengthened. In spite of its unusual length this bus can be turned without backing in a 50 foot circle and with one backing in an ordinary street.”

Aside from the single prototype, which appeared in numerous magazine and newspapers, series manufacture of the ‘Highway Coach’ is doubted. Just as Curtiss was awarded a patent on his ‘Camp Car’ (US Pat. No. 1437172 – CAMP TRAILER - Filed Apr 28, 1921 – Issue Nov 28, 1922) production of the Adams Trailer was halted due to the post-war depression.

At the end of the year George Carl Adams and his wife Dorothy relocated to southern Florida to assist his half-brother in various real estate ventures. G. Carl Adams was an executive in the Florida Ranch and Dairy Corp., president of the Opa-locka Co., vice-president of Glenn H. Curtiss Properties, Inc. and president of the Everglades Construction Co. the contractor that constructed all the roads and sidewalks in Country Club Estates, Hialeah and Opa-locka. From 1930-1942 he served as mayor of Country Club Estates during which time the community was renamed Miami Springs.

Of a reported 100 built, a single, unrestored, Adams Motor Bungalo survives today in a drive shed on the grounds of the Backus Heritage Conservation Area near Port Rowan, Ontario, Canada. Unfortunately the estate is controlled by the Long Point Region Conservation Authority who currently has no plans on restoring nor donating it to the Curtiss Museum, which sadly does not have a Motor Bungalo in its collection.

Carl Graham Fisher, b.1874-d.1939, (of Prest-O-Lite automobile headlamp fortune) had befriended Curtiss before the start of the War, encouraging him to get involved in the burgeoning Southern Florida real estate market. Starting in 1917 Curtiss and his immediate family wintered in various Miami locations, and he soon discovered that the favorable Miami climate enabled year-round activity. Mayor Sewall encouraged him to become a permanent resident and in In 1918 Curtiss purchased a large plot of land there using some of it to establish a Marine Corp.’s Naval Air base, and the remainder for future land development.

During the next few years he partnered with South Florida land developer James H. Bright (b. 1866-d.1959) in a 120,000 acre plot northwest of Miami that would become the suburbs of Hialeah, Miami Springs, and Opa-Locka. Known collectively as the Curtis-Bright cities, many of the municipalities’ original architecture had a strong Moorish influence – based on Curtiss’ infatuation with the stories of the Arabian Nights*. As Curtiss became interested in developing his real estate and aviation interests in Florida, he invited his family members and long-time colleagues to join him.

*According to Opa-Locka historian Frank S. Fitzgerald-Bush (b.1925-d.1998) the Moorish theme was suggested by his mother Irene Q. Bush, the wife of Curtiss’ electrical contractor, Frank S. Bush (b.1894-d.1973), who upon viewing the building site exclaimed, “Oh, Glenn, it’s like a dream from the Arabian Nights”.

(l to r Lena Curtiss-Wheeler, H. Sayre Wheeler, Dottie Adams, G. Carl Adams at Glenn Jr.'s wedding, Oct. 1932)

Although property development now took up most of his time, Curtiss worked on numerous side projects in his home office, a number of which were automobile-related. One had to do with a novel pneumatic trailer coupling constructed using a rubber tire. The project hoped to eliminate various rideability and maneuverability problems experienced while towing trailers, in particular the dangerous tendency to sway sideways and roll over at increased speeds.

Attached to the underside of the forwardmost point of the trailer was a massive vertically oriented steel pin that dropped into a similarly sized hole located in the center of a steel rim mounted in a Goodyear airplane tire. The tire was encased in an enclosure mounted in the rear deck of the tow vehicle. The horizontal thrust (motion) of the trailer was absorbed by the tire, the vertical absorbed by a group of rubber discs located inside the enclosure – in much the same fashion that the needle contained in the tone arm of a phonograph rides in the grooves of a vinyl record. The hitch and hitch receptacle were christened the Curtiss Aerocoupler, and it proved instrumental in the success of the Curtiss Aerocar, a luxury coach designed to be towed behind an Aerocoupler-equipped automobile.

The coupler was fist utilized in a novel 3-axle automobile whose design followed that of the 1922 Highway Coach mentioned above. The vehicle’s rear-most axle supported the compartment that held the driver and his passengers (or cargo). The power unit (engine, drivetrain, drive wheels were housed in a separate structure which rode upon two front axles (the front-most axle handled the steering, the next transmitted power to the ground), in a manner similar to the Christie and Knox mechanical mules that appeared in the early Twentieth century - the two units being connected via the aforementioned Aerocoupler.

As stated previously, Richard B. Wilder, a Long Island neighbor of Curtiss’, recalled seeing a 6-wheeled Chrysler at the Curtiss’ mansion during the late 1920s that bears a passing resemblance to the drawing in the patent application. Unfortunately I could not locate any photos or descriptions of the vehicle. US Pat. No.1880842 – AUTOMOTIVE VEHICLE – Filed Aug. 8, 1925 – Issued Oct. 4, 1932

In 1927 Curtiss began development on a luxury trailer that incorporated the following: independent suspension for the passengers, three axles, streamlined shape, and speed. It also was designed to overcome deficiencies in the motor bungalow's rideability and maneuverability, including the tendency to sway sideways and roll at highway speeds.

The trailer (which was essentially an improved version of the vehicle patented in 1925 - US Pat. No.1880842 - which itself was an improvement of the Highway Coach of 1922) had a lightweight aero-derived streamlined body constructed using nitrite-coated fabric (likely Fabrikoid) laid over masonite panels that were affixed to a grid of vertical oak struts and longerons connected by diagonally crossed nickel steel truss wires and turnbuckles that when properly ‘tuned’ provided a significantly rigid structure. A single axle was affixed at the rear of the trailer, the front being constructed with a long curved V-shaped prow that mated to a Curtiss Aerocoupler installed in the rear deck of a coupe or roadster just ahead of its rear axle.

Although the wood-framed airplane was already thought to be obsolete, Curtiss felt its wood and wire truss construction was strong enough for terrestrial use (at the time a vehicle’s crash-worthiness was never mentioned publicly and rarely in private). The trailer’s body, just like that of the Curtiss ‘Jenny’ could be easily rebuilt using readily available products, its shape returned to normal by simply twisting a turnbuckle. Curtiss even boasted that the trailer body was ‘unusually safe’ because it would not collapse or break up if overturned.

The stunning prototype was completed in the spring of 1928, and Curtiss showed it off to his numerous friends and business associates, filing for a patent on both the trailer and its coupling on June 8, 1928. US Pat. No. 1880844 – ROAD VEHICLE BODY STRUCTURE – Filed Jun 8, 1928 was issued on Oct. 4, 1932 & US Pat. No. 1916967 – FLEXIBLE COUPLING FOR VEHICULAR STRUCTURES – Filed Jun 8, 1928 was issued on July 4, 1933. Although the patent specified a frame constructed of wood and piano wire, it included a drawing depicting an underlying structure built from small-diameter welded steel tubing.

Curtiss’ friend, Carl G. Fisher (the same Fisher who developed the Indianapolis Motor Speedway) was especially enthusiastic, urging him to consider manufacturing the vehicle on a large scale. In an April 1928 letter to Roy Chapin, chairman of the Hudson Motor Car Co., Fisher wrote:

"Glenn Curtiss has the greatest trailer that was ever made in America…. Glenn built this trailer for advertising purposes; he never had any idea at all, I don't believe, that anybody wanted to buy one. His principal idea was to build a light sign board that he could drag…. among the farmers and sell them farm land…. I told Glenn I wanted to buy four of them at once and he asked me what I wanted with them. He seemed very much surprised to think anybody wanted to buy one of these trailers. I am trying my very best to get Glenn stirred up to the enormous possibilities of this trailer for touring and for light delivery work.... The trailer has no chassis; it is made of wood and airplane wire, and the Universal joint is an airplane wheel with a rubber tire on it."

Curtiss wanted to manufacture the trailer in Florida, but Fisher and Chapin recommended he license the design to an automobile or body manufacturer in order to take advantage of their existing sales and marketing departments. During the summer representatives of Hudson (including Chapin) and Briggs Mfg. examined Curtiss' trailer.

Curtiss, Carl G. Fisher and Hudson consulting engineer and vice-president Howard Coffin went so far as to form a shell corporation, the Aerocar Company of America (later the Aerocar Corp.) in order to promote the vehicle. The firm’s investors included Walter O. Briggs (Briggs Mfg.), Roy Chapin, Howard Coffin (Hudson), Glenn H. Curtiss, Carl G. Fisher, Clement M. Keys (Curtiss Aeroplane & Motor), James Wilson (Murray Corp.) and Chester W. Cuthell (Curtiss’ corporate attorney).

The June 22, 1928 issue of the Everglades News announced the formation of the firm:

"New Plant To Use Glades Product "Glenn H. Curtiss Joins in Project for Aerocar Manufacture at Opa-Locka "Opa-Locka has been selected as the site for the first plant of the Aerocar Corporation, manufacturers of a new type vehicle to be attached to roadsters and coupes, Glenn H. Curtiss, inventor and designer, announced yesterday. "Formation of the company controlling the manufacture for national distribution is in process, Mr. Curtiss said, and officers will include a number of influential business men of the north. "Five designs, fully protected by patents held by Mr. Curtiss, have been selected and construction started on them. One has been completed and another will be finished within a few days. "The fifth wheel, or connection between the Aerocar and automobile, is one of the features of the new vehicle. The connection is a wheel of aeroplane design and the car is of light aeroplane fuselage construction, minimizing weight, eliminating vibration and assuring speed and comfort. "Celotex is used as a covering and the entire exterior is protected by Rub-Ros, a new paint filler of rubber and rosin, alos a local product. This application protects the aerocar from the elements. "The five types to be built include the commercial car, designed for low cost trasnportation of bulky material; a school bus, a safe, economical vehicle which will not skid and is considered the safest type vehicle for this purpose availialbe; a camp car, which is roomoy and detachable, and considered ideal for Florida, and a private road car."

The Corporation financed the construction of a second prototype and during the late summer of 1928 the two Aerocars made a series of promotional tours of the Eastern US. One trailer - towed by a Hudson coupe – made a 39 hour trip from Miami to Manhattan, averaging 36 m.p.h. while the second traveled from Miami to Detroit at an average speed of 42 m.p.h.

Carl G. Fisher wrote enthusiastic letters to Walter P. Chrysler and Alvan Macauley trying to get them interested in the project, and Frank A. Seiberling, president of the Seiberling Rubber Co. (Barberton, Ohio), took a demonstration ride and offered to make an improved coupler at no cost, hoping to get the contract over Goodyear, his arch-enemy.

Briggs Mfg., Lang Body Co., Mengel Body Co., and Weymann-American Body Co. all expressed an interest in manufacturing the trailer while Hudson, Stutz and Graham-Paige expressed an interest in producing the specially-equipped tow cars.

Carl G. Fisher commissioned one Aerocar with a custom-built Stutz Coupe for his private use, and Hudson displayed an Aerocar/Hudson in its Manhattan factory showroom during September, 1929. Fisher used his Aerocar (outfitted with wicker chairs, a gasoline stove, radio, lavatory, folding table etc.) to transport a group of friends from Indianapolis to the Chicago Auto Show in January 1929.

In the end only two firms would manufacture the Aerocar trailer; the Briggs-controlled Aerocar Co. of Detroit, Michigan and the Curtiss Aerocar Co. of Opa-Locka, Florida. Although the vehicles were constructed using blueprints furnished by the Aerocar Co. of America/ Aerocar Corp. each firm was corporately unrelated to the other and there were numerous differences between Aerocars built in Florida and Aerocars built in Detroit. Carl G. Fisher thought that the Detroit Aerocars were ugly and cheaply built, and he recommended that his friends only purchased trailers built in Florida.

The Aerocar Co. of Detroit, was formed in mid-March, 1929 and capitalized at $20,000. Its incorporators included Walter O. Briggs, B. F. Everett, Roy H. Curtiss, Thomas B. Moore and George Krapfel, and its first corporate office is listed as 1800 Buhl Bldg., Detroit (18th floor of the early Detroit skyscraper located at 535 Griswold St.).

Walter O. Briggs installed his longtime friend and business associate Byron F. (Barney) Everitt (b.1872-d.1940) as president and general manager and leased a small factory at 7425 Melville St., Detroit. As orders increased the Aerocar operation relocated to Everitt’s former Rickenbacker factory at 4815 Cabot Ave., Detroit.

In July 1930 Detroit Aerocar announced the introduction of the model A-16 Aerocar camping trailer, a significantly shorter (by 5 feet) trailer which measured 16 feet long by 6 feet 4 inches wide and had 6 feet of headroom. Four passengers could sleep on divans placed along the rear and sides and on cushions that filled the center of the seating arrangement at night. Accessories included an ice box and cooking utensils.

By that time John A. Schroeder, another well-known Detroit auto executive, had acquired an interest in the firm and succeeded Everitt as general manager. In 1938, he had written, referring to his acquisition of Detroit Aerocar ten years earlier, “After studying it from all angles, I determined that there was a great future for trailer coaches and that a new industry was making its debut. For several years many of my friends took great delight in kidding me about fooling away my time and money. They were thoroughly convinced that people would not drive on the roads with that thing dangling about back there. It has become a matter of pride with me to prove them wrong”.

Schroeder sold his interest in Detroit Aerocar in 1935, becoming head of sales for the trailer division of the Liggett Spring and Axle Company (aka S.H. Liggett Co.). Well-known aircraft engineer Ora Galen Blocher (b.1903-d-2001) served as the firm’s chief engineer from 1934-1938.

Although the Florida firm turned out work of a higher quality, and in higher numbers, the Detroit firm garnered more publicity especially with commercial users. The following news item appeared in the September 4, 1937 Deseret News (Utah):

“State Mobile Dental Unit Nears Completion “Ogden Dentist Named To Supervise Project Designed To Aid Utah Rural Areas. “A traveling dental unit, instituted to provide dental facilities for persons in rural areas, shortly will be put into service in Utah. “Conceived by the Utah State Dental Association, as a result of surveys which showed four counties in Utah that have no dentist and many other sections where children are so distantly situated that they have never had an opportunity for dental care, the Mobile Dental Unit will be in charge of Dr. Norman F. Gerris, formerly of Ogden. He will devote his entire time to the project. “The State Dental Association recommended establishment of the unit to the State Planning Board, which in turn referred it to the division of dental health, State Board of Health. Dr. R. C. Dalgleish, director of the division, perfected plans this summer for service. “Constructed by the Aerocar Company of Detroit, the unit is 21 feet 10 inches long. It contains a chair, instrument cabinet, instruments of latest design, adequate laboratory, supply and linen cabinets, a modern trident unit, sterilizer, modern lighting equipment and running water. “Only those children who have been referred by public welfare workers or local licensed dentists will be accepted for treatment. Indigent children will have preference. The plan contemplates that the localities served must assume some financial responsibility for the service. In remote areas where children are able to pay for service but who cannot afford to travel great distances, the plan provides that they stand the cost incident to such trips and pay for dental services. “The initial demonstration will be in Wayne County, where children are 50 miles from a dentist.”

The Florida Aerocar operation commenced operations in 1929 with the establishment of the Curtiss Aerocar Company of Florida. Glenn H. Curtiss was directly involved in the Florida firm which produced ‘Curtiss Aerocars’, which were generally preferred over the Michigan organization’s ‘Aerocars’.

The firm was headed by H. Sayre Wheeler, the son of Monroe Wheeler, Glenn H. Curtiss' personal attorney and business associate. Hugh A. Robinson served as its chief engineer and a new factory was constructed in Opa-Locka, Florida, a Curtiss-Bright development located southwest of Miami.

Designed according to a romantic Arabian Nights theme, with exotic, pseudo-Moorish architecture, Opa-locka was conceived as an exceptionally attractive community that would provide farmland and industrial employment for its middle-class residents. The streets were given fanciful, thematic names such as Sharazad, MiBaba, Sesame, Sinbad, Caliph and Aladdin. Curtiss took great interest and pleasure in making the community aesthetically pleasing and in executing the details of its development.

Hugh A. Robinson piloted an Aerocar on a Florida to Detroit promotional run in late 1928, the November 21, 1928 Daily New Standard, Uniontown, Pennsylvania reporting:

“The unusual vehicle attached to the four-speed Graham-Paige is an Aerocar, a trailer of airplane type construction. It was driven from Florida to Detroit by Hugh A. Robinson, of the Curtiss Aerocar Corporation, at an average speed of 42 miles per hour for the entire trip. The car is attached to the Graham-Paige by a pneumatic coupling designed by Glenn Curtiss, pioneer aviator and airplane manufacturer. Because of the light weight of the trailer, its minimum of unsprung weight, and long wheelbase, the Aerocar is said to be very easy riding, while high speeds may be safely maintained.”

The trip was also mentioned in the February 1929 issue of Popular Mechanics:

“Combined Bus and Trailer Develops High Speed. “For comfortable cross-country touring a combination motor coach and trailer has been designed by Glenn Curtiss, pioneer aviator. He has incorporated lines of aircraft it its form and has reduced the weight below that of other vehicles of this size and capacity. The long wheelbase affords ease in riding, and the coach develops high speed. On a recent run from Florida to Detroit, it averaged more than forty miles per hour.”

A follow-up article in the September 1929 issue of Popular Mechanics claimed the air signature of the trailer increased the speed of the automobile:

“Streamline Trailer Increases Speed of Auto “Believing that the speed of automobiles may be increased by streamlining, Glenn H. Curtiss, airplane manufacturer, has experimented with a luxurious trailer which he calls an ‘aerocar’ because its lines follow those of the airplane. Attaching the trailer to a roadster capable of making seventy-five miles an hour in tests, Mr. Curtiss said that the roadster with the added 1,500-pound trailer increased its speed to eighty-three miles per hour. This increase he attributed to the streamline effect which obliterated the suction, or vacuum, that following in the roadster’s wake and tending to hold it back. When automobiles begin following airplane styles, he predicted, travel will be speeded up 100 per cent. Friction and head resistance are all that prevent a car traveling at far greater speeds, said Mr. Curtiss, adding that at high speed eighty per cent of the engine’s power is used to overcome head resistance. The Aerocar, light in weight, has only two wheels and provides seventy-five square feet of floor space. 'We have been grossly extravagant in motor-car design,' said the airplane maker. 'With a cumbersome motor, over a ton of steel and array of nickel trimmings, wheels, oversize fenders, lights and fittings, it still costs more to travel a mile than it did with a four-horse team and coach a century ago.' Compared with the horse-and-buggy age, he said, the automobile has gained only in power and reliability. (Caption)“Three views of streamline trailer which Glenn H. Curtiss, its maker, claims actually added to speed of roadster to which it was attached by cutting down the air suction.”

Aerocar’s outfitted for intermodal passenger transport appeared shortly thereafter, the December, 1929 issue of Modern Mechanix reporting:

“Glenn Curtiss Designs Fast Aero Car for Air-Rail Services “GLENN CURTISS, pioneer pilot and seaplane builder, is the designer of the new aero car which he introduced in Florida. A fleet of these aero cars has been placed in service by the Transcontinental Air Transport at their various fields and terminals for the air-rail service between New York and Los Angeles. The cars are especially adapted to the coupe by a swivel arrangement over the rear axle of the coupe giving the passengers a three-point suspension body to ride in. There are no front wheels on the trailer which is luxuriously fitted. The transfer unit is adapted for speedy transfer of passengers from landing fields to railway depots and vice versa. These aero cars form an integral part of the T.A.T, fast air-rail service from coast to coast taking the passengers by rail at night and by airplane in the daytime.”

In the early days of Curtiss Aerocar, there was a loose, reciprocal arrangement between the trailer company and Hudson automobiles. Early Curtiss Aerocar sales literature recommended Hudson, Essex or Ford roadsters and coupes as tow cars, and some trailer buyers ordered Hudson tow cars through Curtiss Aerocar. Early Curtiss Aerocar trailers were displayed at the Hill Motor Car Company, a Hudson and Essex distributor located at 155 West Flagler Street in Miami.

On July 5, 1929 the decades-long rivalry between Curtiss and Wright was put to bed with the merger of the two companies’ 12 affiliated operations into the $75 million Curtiss-Wright Corp., a firm which remains in business today. It’s unknown how Orville Wright and Curtiss felt about the merger, and even though neither party was financially interested in the deal, it’s hard to imagine that they had set aside their differences of two and a half decades previous.

With the production of the Curtiss Aerocar in good hands Glenn H. Curtiss turned his attention to a new project, a lightweight automobile constructed using aviation technology. He called two of his most trusted former mechanics, Henry Kleckler and Damon Merrill, out of semi-retirement, and the trio went to work in a portion of the old Hammondsport aircraft factory.

Streamlining was paramount. All excess unsprung weight* and drag was discarded, with power supplied by the smallest and lightest engine available. The front-mounted power compartment mated to the passenger compartment via three cushioned coupling devices arranged in a triangular pattern, a system that promised a ride unaffected by the road surface or vibration of the engine and suspension unit. The rubber cushioned couplers were modeled upon the same principles Curtiss had used in his Aerocoupler fifth wheel.

(*Unsprung weight refers to wheels, tires, axles, wheel bearings, brakes and other components directly connected to them - rather than supported by the suspension. The mass of the body and other components supported by the suspension is the sprung mass.)

The aerodynamic and super-light front-wheel-drive vehicle that resulted can be seen in the two views on the right of this page. Curtiss* applied for 2 patents related to the vehicle: US Pat. No. 1948744 – MOTOR VEHICLE – Filed July 9, 1929 – Issued Feb. 27, 1934 and US Pat. No. D1948745 – MOTOR VEHICLE – Filed July 3, 1930 – Issued Feb. 27, 1934.

(*A related patent was filed posthumously by his widow, which addressed an improved version of the front-wheel-drive power unit and integral cushioned couplers.)

While traveling from Hammondsport to the Federal Courthouse in Rochester, New York, Curtiss suffered an acute attack of appendicitis and after being taken to the hospital in Bath, New York was transferred to Buffalo General Hospital where he underwent an emergency appendectomy on July 11, 1930. Although the operation proved successful and Curtiss was on track for a full recovery, he was found dead on the floor of his hospital room on the morning of July 23rd, 1930, the victim of a pulmonary embolism. His body was returned to Hammondsport and buried in the family plot at Pleasant Valley Cemetery on July 25, 1930.

Among the hundreds of messages of condolence and sympathy received by his widow was a telegram from Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh and Mrs. Anne Morrow Lindbergh which stated: “We deeply appreciate the loss in the death of Mr. Curtiss.” Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd, who had recently returned from his first Antarctic expedition wrote: “My deepest sympathy, in which all member of my expedition join. Mr. Curtiss was my friend and we all realize the great loss that every aviator has suffered in his death.”

The July 24-26, 1930 issues of the New York Times included tributes and condolences from such notables as: Frank B. Rentschler, President of the Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce and United Aircraft & Aviation; C.M. Keyes, president of the Curtiss-Wright Corp.; J.T. Trippe, president, Pan-American Airways; Rear Admiral W.A. Moffett, Chief of Naval Aeronautics; E. Trubee Davison, Assistant Secretary of War for Air; Major Gen. James E. Fechet, Chief of the Army Air Corps.; Lieutenant James H. Doolittle; Doyle E. Carlton, Gov. of Florida; Ernst Brandenburg, director of the aviation dept. of the German Ministry of Transport; and three of Europe’s aviation pioneers, Louis Blériot, Otto Rohrback and Claude Dornier.

Following his unofficial ‘retirement’ in 1920 Curtiss had made a point of placing capable individuals in charge of his numerous business holdings and the development of his Florida properties and corporations (including the Curtiss Aerocar Co.) continued uninterrupted for the next decade.

Shortly after his passing Lena Curtiss applied for 4 automotive-related patents in Glenn’s name:

US1946194 – TRAILER COUPLER (Fifth-Wheel Coupler) – Filed Nov. 23, 1929 – Issued Feb. 6, 1934 UD1948745 – MOTOR VEHICLE (Fifth-Wheel Trailer) – Filed July 3, 1930 – Issued Feb. 27, 1934 USD85816 – TRAILER VEHICLE – (Fifth-Wheel Trailer) – Filed Jan. 8, 1931 – Issued Dec. 22, 1931 US1980613 – MOTOR VEHICLE (Integral Tractor-Trailer) – Filed April 1, 1931 – Issued Nov. 13, 1934

Patents in Curtiss’ name (4 filed posthumously by his executor/widow Lena Curtiss):

US1437172 – CAMP TRAILER - Filed Apr 28, 1921 – Issued Nov 28, 1922 US1880842 – AUTOMOTIVE VEHICLE – Filed Aug. 8, 1925 – Issued Oct. 4, 1932 US1880844 – ROAD VEHICLE BODY STRUCTURE – Filed Jun 8, 1928 – Issued Oct. 4, 1932 US1948744 – MOTOR VEHICLE – Filed July 9, 1929 – Issued Feb. 27, 1934 US1916967 – FLEXIBLE COUPLING FOR VEHICULAR STRUCTURES – Filed Jun 8, 1928 – Issued July 4, 1933 USD85816 – TRAILER VEHICLE – (Fifth-Wheel Trailer) – Filed Jan. 8, 1931 – Issued Dec. 22, 1931

Two years after Glenn’s passing, Lena Curtiss married H. Sayre Wheeler, the President of the Curtiss Aerocar Co. Although he was 12 years her junior, Wheeler was the son of Steuben County, New York, jurist Judge Monroe Wheeler, and had been a longtime Curtiss executive and friend of the family.

The August 4, 1931 Indiana Evening Gazette reported on the nuptials as follows:

“Curtiss' Widow Weds Wheeler “ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Aug. 4. — (UP). - Mrs. Lena P. Curtiss, widow of Glen H. Curtiss, aviation pioneer, was married yesterday to H. Sayre Wheeler, president of the Curtiss Aero-Car Company of Miami Springs Florida, Mrs. Curtiss is 51, and Wheeler an associate of the late manufacturer, is 39. “Plans for the wedding were kept secret and only a dozen close friends witnessed the ceremony. Mrs. Curtiss was attended by Mrs. Florence Illig of Miami Springs and Wheeler by his brother Ramsey, of Buffalo, N. Y. “The bride was given in marriage by Harry Genung of Auburn, N. Y., manager of the Curtiss estates. Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler will have a honeymoon motor trip through the Adirondacks and Canada. They will live in Miami Springs.”

The couple became well known for their entertainments at the Miami Springs mansion of Dar-Err-Aha, including evenings for enlisted men during the war years. Glenn Junior remembered that they would arrive at the doorstep wide-eyed and certain that they could not be in the right place. Lena would drag them inside to enjoy performers (including a very young Desi Arnez) whom she had imported from the hotels in Miami Beach.

Although the manufacture of Detroit-built Aerocars ended in 1938, Florida-built trailers continued to be built until the start of the Second World War, although in very small numbers. In 1934 the Curtiss Aerocar company forsook Curtiss' Opa-locka, and moved to larger facilities located at 300 Valencia Avenue in Coral Gables, an adjacent Miami suburb.

Shortly after purchasing the Miami-Biltmore Hotel, Col. Henry L. Doherty, the owner of the Florida Year-Round Club and Roney Plaza Hotels made a major investment in the firm at which time he started purchasing Aerocars for use in ferrying his guests from place to place.

An article in the July 29, 1934 New York Times, introduced the firm's latest model:

"A Houseboat of the Highway "The elaborate trailer pictured above is the new model recently introduced by the Curtiss Aerocar Company. This type of trailer was originally developed by the late Glenn Curtiss, and, following his death in 1930, HEnry L Doherty became associated with the company formed top manufacture it. Improvement and standardization of the vehicle have proceeded since then. "The new Aerocar, which is now availialbe in eight models, has an inside width of 6 feet 2 uibcghes and is equipped with four Pullman type berths, cooking galley, ice box, water supply, closet space, food storage facilities, fans and heaters. There is also a telephone connection between the occupants of the trailer and the driver of the towing automobile, which may be any standard roadster or coupe. A patented Aerocoupler, it is said, securely attahces the trailer to the towing automobile. "Among the mopdels offered by the company are club and observation car types and a commercial model seating forty passengers. The New York offices of the company are located at 535 Fifthe Avenue and the manufacturing plant is at Coral Gables, Florida."

By 1940 decreased sales forced a relocation of the firm from Valencia Ave. to smaller quarter located in the  Miami-Biltmore garage. The move coincided with the retirement of H. Sayre Wheeler and the appointment of Harry C. Genung, Curtiss Aerocar's longtime manager, as President.

Business users of the Aerocar merchandisers included the Jarman Shoe Co., Nashville, Tenn., mfrs. of the ‘Friendly Five’ line of men's shoes; the Dunn & McCarthy Shoe Corp. of Auburn, NY, mfrs. of the ‘Enna Jettick’ line of women’s shoes (4 Aerocars); Fostoria Glass Co. of Moundsville, West Virginia; the Ranney Refrigerator Co. of Greenville MI., mfrs. of ‘Norge’ refrigerators; Eclipse Lawn Mower Co. of Prophetstown, Illinois; Servel Mfg. Co. of Evansville, Ill., mfrs. of gas and kerosene refrigerators; Singer Sewing Machine Co.; Toledo Scale; E.J. Martin's Sons of Rockville, Conn., mfrs. of Kingfisher Line & Tackle; Madam White Co. of Minneapolis, Minn. (cosmetics – lead vehicle of the ‘Madam White Caravan of Beauty’); Stanley Works of New Britain, Conn., mfr. of Stanley Tools; Victor Radios (mfr. by RCA) and General Electric appliances.

The Dunn & McCarthy Shoe Corp. of Auburn and Binghamton, New York, manufacturer of the Enna Jettick line of women’s shoes, utilized a fleet of 4 Aerocars which were outfitted with a full complement of the shoemaker’s designs, the September 9, 1931 Weekly Enterprise, (Acton Mass.) reporting:

“The ENNA JETTICK Aerocar shown above is the latest in Enna Jettick Service and will be in Marlboro, at the Charles Bigelow Shoe Store, Main street, this afternoon, from 2 to 4 p. m. It is one of a fleet of cars now touring the United States. It brings the Enna Jettick salesman to the door of his dealer in a luxuriously appointed sample room. It is built by Glenn Curtiss. The Aerocar is furnished in modernistic wicker and plush furniture, a radio, a telephone, barometer and ship's clock. The Aerocar weighs only 1200 lbs.”

In addition to sales trips, the Enna Jettick Aerocar served as a support vehicle for the firm’s Goodyear Blimp (formerly the NC13A Neponset - rechristened NC18A Enna Jettick in 1931), which was used on 1931-32 cross-country promotional tour. The airship’s ground crew traveled in the Aerocar and an accompanying truck which served as the blimp’s mobile mooring mast.

Text from a period Enna Jettick display ad follows:

“The Enna Jettick Aerocar “The Enna Jettick Aerocar shown on the other side is the latest in Enna Jettick service. It is one of a fleet of cars now touring the United States It is capable of taking the road at automobile speed and of bringing the Enna Jettick salesman to the door of his dealer in a luxuriously equipped sample room. Built by Glenn Curtiss, its lines are those of an airplane body, and it is mounted to ride with utmost smoothness. Attached by an ingenious bird's beak coupling to a coupe which furnishes motive power. Modernistic wicker and plush furniture, a radio, a telephone, barometer and a ship's clock make up its furnishings. At the rear is a room for carrying the shoe samples. The Aerocar weighs only 1200 pounds. “ENNA JETTICK SHOES Auburn, N. Y.”

The November 16, 1932 issue of the Schenectady Gazette pictured An Aerocar outfitted with General Electric’s new line of home appliances:

(Caption) “One of a fleet of G.E. Electric kitchens used in demonstrating to housewives the advantages of the modern, completely electrified kitchen developed by the General Electric Company. The display unit was designed and is being built by the Aerocar Company of Detroit. The prime mover is a specially built Reo-Aerocar developed to meet Aerocar’s requirements by the joint effort of Reo and Aerocar engineers. Aerodynamic lines introduced by Reo two years ago blend into the air-stream design of the Aerocar. “Aerocars for G.E. Kitchens: Reo Power Plant Developed for New Type Commercial Unit. “Reo Motor Car Company has developed for Aerocar Company of Detroit a new commercial motive power unit suited to Aerocar’s needs and to be designated as the Reo-Aerocar. Contract has been placed for a large number of these units for delivery on weekly schedules for the next four months. The outside appearance of the new job, developed by Reo and Aerocar engineers, is that of a standard coupe with aerodynamic lines. These blend into those of the Aerocar in the complete commercial unit. “Regarding the development of the new standard prime mover unit for Aerocar, W.J. Parrish, president of the company said: ‘In developing and marketing high grade sales coaches of a large size we have found most standard high speed truck units satisfactory from the performance standpoint. But dissatisfaction of a certain class of buyers with the appearance of these power units made increasingly apparent the need of creating a new design. Rather than engineer and develop such a unit we prepared specifications that could be met, if he felt disposed, by any manufacturers producing bother passenger and commercial vehicles. After inviting numerous motor car companies to bid, we have awarded a contract to Reo Motor Car Company for our requirements for the rest of 1932.’ “Among Aerocar’s recent commercial sales is a national fleet to demonstrate to the American housewife from coast to coast the advantages of the new G.E. electric kitchen developed to lighten her work and make it more pleasant. These demonstrating kitchens were designed and built by Aerocar exclusively for the General Electric Company and are furnished to General Electric distributors, complete with motive power units. Such kitchens are either in service at, or en route overland to, San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego, Cal., Houston, Texas, Newark, N.J., and New York City. The equipment in the kitchen includes the electric refrigerator, electric dishwasher, electric mixer, Hotpoint electric range, electric washing machine, electric ironer, standard cabinets, and a long list of other time and labor saving electric appliances. “These special Reo-Aerocar coupes are powered by Reo’s standard six-cylinder gold crown engine.”

The Activated Alum Corp. of Baltimore, MD., outfitted one Aerocar for use as a mobile laboratory and the Aetna Casualty and Surety Co.’s Aerocar, dubbed the ‘Safety Special’, toured the country with a safe driving demonstration. Oil companies were also enthusiastic user of the Aerocar; Pure Oil used an Aerocars as a mobile display unit and sound truck and Cities Service outfitted their Aerocar as a portable theater. Other users included Standard Oil of Ohio and the Gilmore Oil Co. (Socony-Vacuum).

The Plymouth Division of Chrysler Corp. spent a reported $20,000 on an Aerocar that featured a 20’ by 4’ faithful replica of the Plymouth assembly line built inside. The 1937 Plymouth-towed rig toured the country to show the public how its cars were made and included a moving assembly line complete with animated scale workers that appeared to move under their own power. The trailer housed a generator that supplies current for the ingenious system of electric motors that operated the scale factory,’ as well as a public address system and facilities for showing moving pictures.

When outfitted as a passenger ferry, the Aerocar was especially popular with known users including Pan American Airways (4 12-seat Aerocars); Norfolk & Western Railway; Transcontinental Air Transport; Warm Springs Institute, Warm Springs, GA; Virginia Hot Springs Co.; and the Florida Year Round Club (12 18-passenger Aerocars).

Georgia Warm Springs Foundation transported infantile paralysis patients in wheelchairs in an Aerocar equipped with wide doors and a retractable loading ramp.

Col. Henry L. Doherty used a dozen 18-passenger Aerocars to carry members of his Florida All Year Round Club and guests of the Roney Plaza and Miami-Biltmore Hotels between the Miami-Biltmore Country Club and the Cabana Sun Club. At least one of his Aerocars was a double-decker sightseeing rig, whose second-level passengers rode exposed to the elements.

An Aerocar outfitted as a bus was introduced to the trade in the ‘Motors and Motor Men’ column of the October 9, 1932 New York Times:

“A new type of auto-bus, named the Aerocar, has been developed by the Curtiss Aerocar Company of Opalocka, Fla., it is announced. A model was shown in New York last week. The Aerocar, which accommodates seventeen passengers, differs in design from other types of road vehicle in that instead of being rectangular in suspension, with a point of support at all four corners, it is triangular, thus permitting the use of three-point suspension. The bus is intended to be drawn by a roadster or coupe. With which it is connected by an air-cushion steel coupler set. Communication with the driver is effect by telephone.”

Ambulance users included Miami Undertaker W.L. Philbrick, the U.S. Public Health Service, and the Georgia State Department of Health. Foster Bros. stables of Owens Mills, MD. used a 4-stall horsebox; celebrity animal trainer Carl Spitz' used one as a portable kennel for his Hollywood Motion Picture Dog Review; Grolier Inc. the publisher of the 'Encyclopedia of Knowledge' outfitted an Aerocar as a combination reading room/bookmobile, and the City of Miami was an enthusiastic user of Aerotruck refuse haulers.

According to Keith Marvin the Florida factory constructed Aerocar no. 122 during June of 1929. If the first trailer built was given serial no. 001, a total production of 122 trailers by that early date seems plausible however it’s unlikely (though possible) that 122 trailers had been completed as only 2 prototypes existed at the start of the year.

Early catalogs listed 9 distinct models: Ambulance, Commercial (open bed aka ‘Aerotruck’), Horsebox (2 versions – 1 with 4 stalls), Observation Coach (2 versions); Passenger Transport (aka bus); and Streamlined Club Car – most of which were constructed on the standard 6’ 2” wide and 19’ 4” long Model 61 chassis.

By the mid-30s Florida-built Aerocars were available in six distinct lines: the first three were passenger transporters, offering from 17 to 22 passengers, the remaining were, the standard (aka budget) series 161, the deluxe series 61, and the super-deluxe Model JC-100, which for all intents and purposes was a permanent mobile home with 2 bedrooms, a kitchen and a hot-water shower and marine (aka flushing) toilet-equipped bathroom.

Most of the surviving Aerocars are outfitted as personal luxury travel coaches, and an article in the July 29, 1934 issue of the New York Times describes it as:

“A Houseboat of the Highway: “The elaborate trailer pictured above is a new model recently introduced by the Curtiss Aerocar Company, This type of trailer was originally developed by the late Glenn Curtiss, and, following his death in 1930, Henry L. Doherty became associated with the company formed to manufacture it. Improvement and standardization of the vehicle have proceeded since then. “The new Aerocar, which is now available in eight models, has an inside width of 6 feet 2 inches and is equipped with four Pullman type berths, cooking galley, ice box, water supply, closet space, food storage facilities, fans and heaters. There is also a telephone connection between occupants of the trailer and the driver of the towing automobile, which may be any standard roadster or coupe. A patented Aerocoupler, it is said, securely attaches the trailer to the towing vehicle. “Among the models offered by the company are club and observation car types and a commercial model seating forty passengers. The New York offices of the company are at 535 Fifth Ave and the manufacturing plant is located at Coral Gables, Florida.”

Private Flordia-built Curtiss Aerocar owners included such notables as: Carl G. Fisher (real estate dev.); Augustus Post (aviator); Hugh McDonald (NYC investor); William K. Vanderbilt II (sportsman, philanthropist); Henry L. Doherty (oilman); Howard E. Coffin (vice-pres. of Hudson); John J. Mitchell (financier); Joseph E. Widener (horseman, art collector); W.T. Sampson Smith (Cooperstown, NY yachtsman and aviator); Dr. Hubert L. Eaton (owner Forest Lawn); Philip K. Wrigley (chewing gum magnate); Gerardo Machado y Morales (former President of Cuba); and Ruth Bryan Owen (U.S. Ambassador to Denmark – who used hers to sightsee in Europe).

Owners of Detroit-built Aerocars included: Lewis D. Crusoe, (Fisher Body & G.M.); F.L. Roberts, (Ford Benzol of Detroit); William M. Gray (Colonial Traders, Chatham, Ont. Canada); Donald S. Gilmore, (Upjohn Co.); Allen Johnson (Grand Rapids -based theater chain); Dewey D. Battles (Grand Rapids Gravel); J.J. Mitchell (Chicago banker); Paul Butler (Butler Paper, Chicago); and George A. Hughes (Edison Electric Appliance, Chicago).

The firm’s "pièce de résistance" was the Curtiss Aerocar Model 161-BPC which featured a "ship's bridge" – a clerestory-windowed raised cockpit over the prow from which the occupants could enjoy a panoramic view of the countryside. Later versions appeared with a Pleasantaire air-conditioning option which was powered by a generator mounted at the rear of the tow vehicle, the October 27, 1937 issue of the New York Times reporting:

“AIR-CONDITIONING UNIT INSTALLED IN TRAILER; Device Exhibited Here Cools and Washes 300 Cubic Feet of Atmosphere a Minute. “For the first time in the history of the Automobile Show trailers equipped with a complete, portable air-conditioning unit will be shown at Grand Central Palace. The Curtiss Aerocar Company, Coral Gables, Fla., is said to be the first trailer company to install Pleasantaire units in its models, one of which will be on exhibit at the show. It is expected that several other trailer manufacturers also will display trailers equipped with Pleasantaire units. “The Curtiss Aerocar is equipped with practically all the comforts of home. One of the outstanding items of equipment in this particular model is the Pleasantaire one-third-ton capacity, double cylinder, compressor air-conditioning unit. Both the air-conditioner unit and the electrical refrigerator may be operated while on the highway by means of an 850 watt capacity, 110 volt motor-driven generator installed on the power unit. “The unit cools, dehumidifies, odorizes, washes and quietly circulates over 300 cubic feet of air per minute - and keeps any space 2,00 cubic feet or less completely comfortable in the hottest, summer weather. Not a fan or blower in any sense of the word, it completes its task by electric refrigeration. The unit has been very successfully introduced into homes, hotels, hospitals, offices and now trailers. The complete air-conditioner sells for $199.50. “Among other features of the Curtiss Aerocar are bottled gas tanks which supply fuel for stove and circulating hot water in the galley and the gas grate forward, a 200-watt capacity motor-driven 6-volt generator, 160 ampere hours storage battery, combinations 6 and 110-volt lighting fixtures, thirty-gallon capacity water supply delivered to galley, adjustable waterproof screened roof ventilators, telephone installation for communication between Aerocar and power unit, six 6-colt electric fans, windshield wipers in observation cockpit, Azrock asphalt base imitations tile floor laid over heavy felt, shatterproof glass, roll shades with side guides, roll screens at all adjustable windows, double insulation in floors, side walls and ceiling, side an rear entrance doors, wheel carrier with extra wheel and tire, turn signal lights, and vacuum brakes.”

Prices for a 1937 Series 161 with no interior (bare walls) started at $1,985; when equipped with a kitchen and sleeping for four, the price rose to $2,840. The exterior finish below the windows could be made of metal and painted to match the purchaser's tow car at extra cost, although it’s unknown how many were constructed with the option. According to Autobody magazine one 1937 Model 161-BPC equipped with an observation deck and Pleasantaire air-conditioning cost its owner a whopping $8,500.

According to Keith Marvin, the Florida factory constructed Aerocar no. 122 during June of 1929. The 1937 Curtiss-Aerocar Model 161-E in the Curtiss Museum has a serial number of 251 and other surviving builder's plates bear serial numbers ranging from 209 to 273 which confirms that total production of the Florida-built Aerocars was likely between 250 and 300 units, providing they started with 001 and were consecutively numbered.

New Yorker Magazine’s cartoonist Carl Rose contributed an entertaining cartoon entitled ‘A Caravan of California Millionaires, Fleeing Eastward from the State Income Tax, Encamps for the Night in Hostile Wisconsin Territory’ in its March 7, 1936 issue (reprinted in the May 9, 1938 issue of Life Magazine) that depicts a number of Aerocar-equipped Californian tourists drawn into a circle for protection from less-fortunate native Wisconsonites.

By the late-30s used Aerocars could be had for a song, the manufacturer even offering deals such as the one found in a 1939 issue of Automobile and Trailer Travel Magazine:

“Curtiss Aerocar Bargains “Two new Curtiss Aerocars that have been used for display and demonstration purposes only, now priced below cost of manufacture: “Model 100-JU Formerly $3000 Now $1650; Model 163-H Formerly $3500 Now $2650; Further information upon request. Curtiss Aerocar Company, Inc. CORAL GABLES. FLORIDA.”

Although the basic design of the Aerocar originated with Glenn H. Curtiss, most of its improvements were the responsibility of Aerocar’s in-house designer Harold H. Robinson, whose 23 Aerocar-related patents follow:

US1960196 - GUSSET PLATE CONNECTION FOR TRUSS - Filed Apr 2, 1932 - Issued May 22, 1934 USD90084 - DESIGN FOR A COMBINED TANK TRAILER AND TRACTOR - Filed Aug 13, 1932 - Issued Jun 6, 1933 US1960754 - SELF CONNECTING COUPLING DEVICE FOR TRACTORS AND TRAILERS - Filed Apr 2, 1932 - Issued May 29, 1934 US1926177 - COUPLING MECHANISM FOB TRACTORS AND TRAILERS - Filed Apr 2, 1932 - Issued Sep 12, 1933 USD87241 - MOTOR VEHICLE - Filed Apr 2, 1932 - Issued Jun 21, 1932 USD90169 - DESIGN FOR A TRAILER - Filed Mar 2, 1933 - Issued Jun 20, 1933 US2061673 - TRAILER VEHICLE - Filed Sep 11, 1933 - Issued Nov 24, 1936 US2036607 - TANK TRAILER - Filed Jul 11, 1933 - Issued Apr 7, 1936 US2002832 - GUARD SYSTEM FOR TRACTOR TRAILER COMBINATIONS - Filed May 22, 1933 - Issued May 28, 1935 US1941323 - TRAILER NOSE CONSTRUCTION - Filed Apr 1, 1933 - Issued Dec 26, 1933 US1958114 - JACK - Filed Mar 27, 1933 - Issued May 8, 1934 US2006409 - PNEUMATIC SUPPORT FOR VEHICLE FRAMES AND THE LIKE - Filed Sep 11, 1933 - Issued Jul 2, 1935 US2010323 - TRAILER BODY CONSTRUCTION - Filed Mar 2, 1933 - Issued Aug 6, 1935 US2002833 - ALARM SYSTEM FOR TRACTOR TRAILER COMBINATIONS - Filed May 22, 1933 - Issued May 28, 1935 US1958114 - JACK - Filed Mar 27, 1933 - Issued May 8, 1934 USD90925 - DESIGN FOR A COMBINATION TRACTOR AND TRAILER - Filed Mar 27, 1933 - Issued Oct 24, 1933 USD91965 - DESIGN FOR AN OPEN TRAILER - Filed Mar 27, 1933 - Issued Apr 10, 1934 US1982072 - COUPLING FOR TRACTOR TRAILER COMBINATIONS - Filed Jan 5, 1933 - Issued Nov 27, 1934 USD94096 - DESIGN FOR COMBINATION TRACTOR AND TRAILER - Filed Mar 16, 1934 - Issued Dec 18, 1934 USD92559 - DESIGN FOR A TRAILER - Filed Feb 28, 1934 - Issued Jun 19, 1934 US2039452 - TANK TRAILER - Filed Jun 18, 1934 - Issued May 5, 1936 US2045166 - SEMITRAILER BOOT CONSTRUCTION - Filed Apr 26, 1934 - Issued Jun 23, 1936 US1982052 SEMITRAILER - Filed Aug 7, 1933 - Issued Nov 27, 1934. His father, Hugh A. Robinson Sr., shared the credit for one of the patents (1,982,072 coupling) as did Daniel E. Hennessy (1,982,052 semi-trailer) and William J. Parrish (2,045,166 semi-trailer).

Of the estimated 300 Aerocar trailers thought to have been constructed by the Michigan and Florida factories, twelve are known to remain. Most feature standard wood and wire-frame construction with nitrite-coated Masonite exterior panels, although antique motorcycle and trailer collector Vince Martinico of Auburn, California currently owns an unrestored cupola-equipped, steel-paneled survivor (steel paneling was a factory option).

One 1937 Aerocar is on permanent display at the Glenn H. Curtiss Museum in Hammondsport, New York while a second resides in the collection of the Peterson Museum in Los Angeles, California.

The Peterson Museum’s Aerocar was originally constructed for Dr. Hubert Eaton, the owner of Los Angeles’ Forrest Lawn Memorial Park and its exhibit featured the following description:

“Eaton Reo/Aerocar Rig “This ultra-streamline Reo tractor was specially built to tow a Curtiss Aerocar, on one of the earliest production fifth-wheel trailers. Custom built for Dr. Hubert Eaton of the Forest Lawn Memorial Parks, its innovative cab-forward aluminum and leatherette body was constructed by Standard Carriage Works of Low Angeles, a coachbuilder that specialized in bodies for trucks and other commercial vehicles. It featured a large storage area, sleeping quarters for the driver, and a separate four-cylinder engine for auxiliary power. A Williams air-brake and dual rear-wheels accommodate the permanently attached 10,000 pound trailer. First equipped with a flat-12 White truck engine, the Reo tractor was fitted with a 300-horsepower Cummins 6-cylinder diesel in 1953 when the original engine wore out after more than 250,000 miles of use. “The luxurious and expensive Aerocar trailer was built by Curtiss of Coral Gables, Florida, a firm also known for motorcycles and pioneering aircraft. Nicknamed ‘Vagabond’ by Dr. Eaton, it was outfitted for hunting excursions and to transport company executives on trips to inspect various real-estate holdings. Special features include a self-contained restroom and kitchen, comfortable seating for eight, cup holders, and an observation deck equipped with a speedometer, compass, and intercom for communication with the driver. Though currently set up for day travel, the interior can be modified to sleep up to six passengers. The dramatically styled rig was in regular use until retired by Forest Lawn Memorial Parks in 1991.”

Another Aerocar currently resides at the Louwman Museum/Dutch National Motor Museum in Raamsdonksveer, the Netherlands (Het National Automobiel Museum, Steurweg, 8, Raamsdonksveer, NL).

Its Aerocar was built for New York financier Hugh McDonald to take him on his daily journey from Long Island to Wall Street. Providing the motive power was a 1932 Graham Blue Streak coupé with 8-cylinder 4022cc engine developing 90 bhp and giving the car a solo top speed of 85 mph.

The 'bridge' at the front of the caravan over the hitch is fitted out with the kind of instrumentation one would find on a flight deck and includes a compass, altimeter, speedometer and barometer. Behind it rests a mobile office and the rear contains a galley and lavatory.

Aerocars occasionally show up at collector car auctions and St Louis-based collector car dealer Mark Hyman offered an unrestored Aerocar for sale as recently as 2013. Hyman’s Aerocar was originally purchased by pioneering aviator, balloon racer, auto racer, and Broadway actor, Augustus Post. Next, it was owned by the Los Angeles Biltmore, then Jack Smith, owner of Santa Monica’s Republic Van Lines, and finally Hollywood stuntman Robert Breeze, who went by the moniker ‘Wolf River Bob’. Its streamlined fifth-wheel tow rig was produced by Standard Carriage Works of Los Angeles on a 1-ton 1938 Chevrolet HC-1 cab and chassis, with the ash-framed rear bodywork incorporating a storage compartment.

A detailed description of Post’s vehicle from Hyman follows:

“Post commissioned the special tow vehicle from the Standard Coach Works in Los Angeles designed to complement the style and aerodynamics of the Curtiss Aerocar trailer. Surviving photos of the Chevrolet show it under construction employing traditional wood-framed, metal covered techniques. The tow vehicle was driven across country to Coral Gables where it was mated up with its custom-designed travel Aerocar. “Aircraft-style construction, fittings and equipment are used throughout both the Chevrolet tow vehicle and the Curtiss Aerocar both finished in red with silver painted composite roof. The four-door Chevrolet has a bench style front seat with two cloth upholstered reclining aircraft-style seats in the rear and is very comfortably trimmed and finished including wood window surrounds, rollup windows and a pull-down rear window shade. The fifth wheel mount located over the rear axle is based on an aircraft tire, wheel and axle, a system patented by Glenn Curtiss. The 207 cubic inch overhead valve inline six-cylinder engine has an Ellis intake manifold, split exhaust manifold and dual exhausts. A 4-speed transmission, 12 volt electrical system, hydraulic brakes and two 20-gallon gas tanks complete its equipment. The Aerocar has its own vacuum-operated braking system. “It is equipped with a telephone-style system to communicate with the tow vehicle. The Aerocar is divided into two rooms. The front compartment has a rear-facing settee, two comfortable aircraft-style seats, pull down Pullman-style bunks, cabinets, clock, altimeter, folding table and chairs that convert into more beds, chest of drawers and even a closet. To the rear the other compartment has a full kitchen with an icebox, 3-burner stove, sink, water holding tank in a stainless steel enclosure. A separate bathroom has a toilet, shower and lavatory. The Aerocar is equipped with its own pair of 20-gallon water storage tanks with pressure pump and a butane tank for the stove mounted outside the back just above the rear-mounted spare. It is wired for external AC power. The windows have pull-down shades and wood surrounds.”

Stephen Butcher, a partner in Funky Junk Farms, a film prop rental house located in Altadena & Fillmore, California owns a second unrestored 1934 Aerocar with a COE Dodge tractor.

A restored 22' 1936 Detroit-built Aerocar, originally constructed for William Gray, the son of Canadian automobile executive Robert Gray - founder of Gray-Dort - is privately owned by Ken and Lana Hindley of Union, Ontario, Canada.

Glenn H. Curtiss’ widow, Lena Pearl Neff Curtiss Wheeler died in 1951 and was buried next to Glenn under a stone marked ‘Lena Curtiss Wheeler.’ G. Carl and Dorothy Adams had no children, and after the death of his sister-in-law Lena, longtime Curtiss family friend, bookkeeper and secretary Florence Illig came to live with the Adamses, and inherited their estate.

Glenn and Lena’s surviving son, Glenn H. Curtiss Jr., became a successful South Florida Volkswagen distributor, passing away in 1972.

©2013 Mark Theobald for coachbuilt.com with special thanks to Keith Marvin and the Glenn H. Curtiss Museum, Hammondsport, New York.

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Category : Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht in the Louwman Museum

Media in category "curtiss aerocar land yacht in the louwman museum".

The following 9 files are in this category, out of 9 total.

curtiss aerocar land yacht

  • Vehicles in the Louwman Museum
  • Travel trailers
  • Semi-trailer caravans

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The Curtiss' Museums

Curtiss "America" flying boat

The Curtiss "America" flying boat The twin-engine "America" weighed 1 3/4 tons, had a 72-foot wingspan, and took off and landed on water. Its top cruising speed: A mere 65 mph. It was created by the Wright brothers' bitter rival, Glenn H. Curtiss, with one mission in mind: to leap the Atlantic. It was edging toward attempting the first transoceanic crossing in 1914 when World War I intervened. Curtiss, who would eventually rack up 500 inventions, built hundreds of flying boats. Many of them were used for military patrols during World War I, when his business shifted into high gear.

Glenn Curtiss home in Miami Springs, FL

Glenn Curtiss home in Miami Springs, FL The Glenn Curtiss House, at 500 Deer Run in Miami Springs, Florida, is one block off Curtiss Parkway. It is currently not open to the public while it is being restored to serve as a museum honoring the life of Glenn Curtiss. The museum plans to open in 2005 or 2006. The Glenn Curtiss House is one of the largest and most architecturally distinguished of the Pueblo Revival residences associated with Curtiss' Miami Springs development.

Map showing Curtiss Parkway in Miami Springs, FL

Curtiss Parkway in Miami Springs, FL Museum of the history of Miami Springs, Hialeah and Opa-Locka(The Curtiss Bright Cities). Also includes early airline history of Miami and the story of early aircraft inventor and engineer Glenn Hammond Curtiss. Curtiss has many inventions to his credit and is known as the "father of naval aviation". When Curtiss left the aircraft industry and became a land developer, building the cities of Opa-locka, Miami Springs and Hialeah, he was estimated to be worth $35 million dollars.

FelixStowe F-5-L

The Felixstowe F series flying boats were a joint British and American development during the First World War. They were an outgrowth of a prewar projet led by Glenn Curtiss to build a flying boat capable of a transatlantic flight.

CLICK HERE to see this page at the Smithsonian

1932 Graham Blue Streak Coupe and Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht

Blue Streak Coupe and Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht image

The descriptions of the Classic Cars in the Directory were partly generated or supplemented with the help of artificial intelligence (AI). The content may occasionally not always be entirely accurate or factually correct despite careful checking.

The Graham Blue Streak Coupe of 1932 is a classic American car that represents a unique blend of style, innovation, and engineering. This two-door hardtop coupe is powered by a 217-cubic inch inline six-cylinder engine that delivers 75 horsepower and 135 pound-feet of torque. The engine is paired with a three-speed manual transmission that features synchromesh gears.

The Blue Streak Coupe's body is made of handcrafted steel and features a distinctive Art Deco design with a sloping hood, rounded fenders, and a streamlined roofline. The car's chassis is also an important feature, as it features a "double-drop" design that lowers the center of gravity, improves handling, and provides a comfortable ride.

Inside, the Blue Streak Coupe is a study in elegance and craftsmanship. The car's interior is upholstered in high-quality materials and features a spacious cabin with seating for five. The car's dashboard is clean and uncluttered, with easy-to-read gauges and controls that are well placed for easy access.

The Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht of 1932 is a unique and impressive machine that combines the best of both worlds: a vintage car with the luxury and convenience of a modern motorhome. This one-of-a-kind vehicle was designed and built by the famous motorcycle and aviation pioneer Glenn Curtiss, who wanted to create a vehicle that would allow people to travel in comfort and style.

The Aerocar Land Yacht is powered by a 100-horsepower, eight-cylinder engine that delivers plenty of power and torque. The car's chassis is made of steel and features a rugged construction that can handle the rigors of long-distance travel. The car's suspension is also an important feature, as it provides a smooth and comfortable ride even on rough roads.

The interior of the Aerocar Land Yacht is like no other. The car features a spacious cabin with seating for up to six people. The cabin is fully appointed with all the comforts of home, including a full kitchen, a bathroom with a shower, and a large bedroom with a comfortable bed. The car also features a retractable roof that provides plenty of natural light and ventilation.

One of the most impressive features of the Aerocar Land Yacht is its innovative design. The car features a detachable motorhome body that can be easily removed and replaced with a sleek coupe body. This unique design allows the Aerocar Land Yacht to transform from a luxury motorhome into a classic car with the flip of a switch.

Overall, both of these vehicles are true works of art and engineering. They represent an era of automotive design and innovation that is both timeless and inspiring. Whether you prefer the classic style and performance of the Blue Streak Coupe or the luxury and versatility of the Aerocar Land Yacht, these cars are sure to turn heads and spark the imagination of all who see them.

  • Introduction of the Graham Blue Streak Coupe at the New York Auto Show in January 1932.
  • Utilization of the 6-cylinder Graham-Paige engine, producing 90 horsepower.
  • Body design by Amos Northup, featuring a sloping hood, dynamic grille, and aerodynamic curves.
  • Adoption of the patented "Graham Safety Chassis" for improved handling and stability.
  • Addition of hydraulic brakes, an industry first for a car of this price range.
  • Release of the Supercharged Blue Streak model in June 1932, boosting horsepower to 115 and top speed to over 100 mph.
  • Recognition as a major success for the Graham-Paige company, with over 10,000 units sold by the end of the model year.

Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht (1932):

  • Collaboration of aviation pioneer Glenn Curtiss and automobile designer Alexis de Sakhnoffsky to create the Aerocar Land Yacht.
  • Utilization of an 8-cylinder Curtiss Aero engine, producing 175 horsepower and capable of reaching speeds of 90 mph.
  • Streamlined aluminum body reminiscent of an airplane, featuring smooth curves and polished surfaces.
  • Interior equipped with a bedroom, dining room, and small kitchen for extended travel and living on the road.
  • Addition of advanced features such as an air conditioning system, electric generator, and retractable awning.
  • Recognition as a concept vehicle ahead of its time, inspiring future ideas for "housecars" and RVs.
  • Unveiling at the New York Auto Show in November 1932, generating significant public interest and admiration for its luxurious and innovative design.
  • Produced by Graham-Paige Motors Corporation from 1932-1935
  • Designed by Ray Dietrich, head of the Graham-Paige design team
  • Featured a sleek, aerodynamic body with curved lines and a low roofline
  • Equipped with a 3.3L straight-six engine that produced 75 horsepower
  • Had a top speed of approximately 85 miles per hour
  • Featured hydraulic brakes, which were uncommon at the time
  • Offered a comfortable ride with a spacious interior and adjustable seats
  • Considered a significant design achievement of the era
  • Approximately 7,000 Blue Streak Coupes were produced

Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht 1932:

  • Produced by Curtiss Aerocar Company from 1932-1936
  • Designed by aviation pioneer Glenn Curtiss, who applied his knowledge of aerodynamics to the automobile industry
  • Featured a unique streamlined body and a front-wheel drive system
  • Equipped with a 4.4L V8 engine that produced 80 horsepower
  • Had a top speed of approximately 90 miles per hour
  • Offered a luxurious interior with custom-designed upholstery and a fold-out bed
  • Featured a host of advanced features such as a hydraulic jack, built-in tools, and a flashlight
  • Designed to be a versatile vehicle that could be used for both land and sea travel
  • Approximately 12 Aerocar Land Yachts were produced, making them extremely rare and valuable today.

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curtiss aerocar land yacht

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η ιστορία του απίθανου,   curtiss aerocar land yacht  .

Ο  όρος "σπίτι-δουλειά-σπίτι" στις αρχές του 1930 ήταν κάτι αρκετά κουραστικό ίσως ακόμα και επικίνδυνο για κάποιους ανθρώπους, ωστόσο η παραγγελία του Αμερικανού τραπεζίτη Hugh McDonald έρχεται να δώσει μια άλλη διάσταση σ' αυτόν τον μονότονο για τους "κοινούς θνητούς" όρο!

Ένα μάλλον ασυνήθιστο όχημα για καθημερινή χρήση, αλλά όχι για τον Αμερικανό τραπεζίτη Hugh McDonald που χρησιμοποίησε αυτόν τον πολυτελή συνδυασμό στις αρχές της δεκαετίας των 30s και πιο συγκεκριμένα το 1932 για να πηγαίνει από το κτήμα του στο Long Island στο γραφείο του στη Νέα Υόρκη.

Το ημιρυμουλκούμενο Curtiss μοιάζει με αεροπλάνο και κατασκευάστηκε σύμφωνα με τις αρχές κατασκευής αεροσκαφών από την Curtiss Aircraft Company στη Φλόριντα. Μια πολύ ελαφριά κατασκευή πάνω σε σωληνωτό μεταλλικό πλαίσιο ενισχυμένο με συρμάτινα καλώδια.

Η πλώρη του Aerocar μοιάζει με πιλοτήριο και είναι εξοπλισμένη με πυξίδα, βαρόμετρο, υψομετρητή, ταχύμετρο και περιστρεφόμενους προβολείς. Το εσωτερικό είναι επιπλωμένο με ελαφριές καρέκλες και γραφείο. Έχει πλήρη κουζίνα, διαθέτει ψυγείο και υπάρχει επίσης κανονική τουαλέτα καταιονισμού!

Το γιοτ ρυμουλκήθηκε από ένα Graham Blue Streak 8 με κινητήρα τεσσάρων λίτρων, ένα φανταστικό Αμερικάνικο αυτοκίνητο που την περίοδο της κατάθλιψης για την αμερικανική αυτοκινητοβιομηχανία ήταν σαν "μάνα εξ' ουρανού" ένα αυτοκίνητο με τέτοια εμφάνιση, που χρησίμευε ως πρότυπο για το μέλλον, στέλνοντας τις ανταγωνιστικές αυτοκινητοβιομηχανίες σε υπερωρίες και περιπλάνηση για να καλύψουν τη διαφορά, αλλά αυτά θα τα πούμε σε ένα άλλο documentation αφιερωμένο σ' αυτό το αυτοκίνητο.

Επιστρέφοντας  στο εξωπραγματικό Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht να μη ξεχάσω να προσθέσω ότι ένας εφεδρικός τροχός (ρεζέρβα) τοποθετήθηκε πίσω στον χώρο που κανονικά καταλαμβάνεται από το κάθισμα "dickey". Ο πείρος ρυμούλκησης του ρυμουλκούμενου κουμπώνει σε μια υποδοχή στην πλήμνη και έχει σύστημα απόσβεσης κραδασμών κατά την οδήγηση.

O V8 των 90hp του Graham μπορούσε να αναπτύξει ταχύτητα κοντά στα 140kph, με έναν υπολογισμό του ελάχιστου extra βάρους του Aerocar το εξάτροχο γιοτ ταξίδευε άνετα με περίπου 120kph, αν σας φαίνονται λίγα αυτά τα χιλιόμετρα γυρίστε το χρόνο πίσω στο 1932 και φανταστείτε να λέγατε εκείνη την εποχή ότι είδατε στον δρόμο ένα γιοτ με 6 τροχούς να τρέχει με 120kph πως θα σας κοιτούσαν οι γύρω σας!

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Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht with Auburn

By Dave Mellor NJ September 8, 2011 in General Discussion

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Dave mellor nj.

This is another picture from "The Old Motor". It's appealing in many ways. One is the Auburn coupe which seems to be one of the rare ones where they took a finished cabriolet and reverse engineered a closed roof onto it. That to me is like buying a candy bar only to eat the peanuts out of it.

The trailer is an Aerocar Land Yacht made by Glen Curtiss of "Jenny" fame. Note how much front load there is but it hardly bears down at all on the coupe thanks to the lightweight, aircraft-inspired construction. Compare this to that S-10 pickup under the fifth-wheel trailer posted a few days ago.

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1937hd45

There is a unit very much like this in the Petersen Collection in LA.

There was one of these at Harrahs when I went there in 1978. Maybe that is the one now in Petersen's? From memory it was hooked up to something quite rare from 1932 - Graham 8 maybe?

Rusty_OToole

Rusty_OToole

How about this one, now restored, that has spent its life in Canada, with connection to the Gray Dort car company?

Hindley's Garage - Antique Trucks, Cars & Trailer Restoration

Originally towed by a 1936 Plymouth, the owner had a custom built tow car constructed on a 1938 International truck chassis. This custom tow car is still with the trailer.

earl e rizer

How about this one, now restored, that has spent its life in Canada, with connection to the Gray Dort car company? Hindley's Garage - Antique Trucks, Cars & Trailer Restoration Originally towed by a 1936 Plymouth, the owner had a custom built tow car constructed on a 1938 International truck chassis. This custom tow car is still with the trailer.

I have seen this a few times at Ken Hindley's place ( he is restoring on a Pierce Arrow for a friend of mine)

It really is a beautiful combo, that he drives every summer.

Guest Dave Boyer

Guest Dave Boyer

I see that all the time, at the bigger shows around here. They drive it a lot.

Guest T-Head

Guest T-Head

Follow this link to theoldmotor.com curtis | Search Results | The Old Motor to see a larger photo and detail enlargements.

  • 2 years later...

Hi,I'm Bernard from North of France.I'm a modeler kit and I'm interested building in 1/25 a trailer like the Curtiss model.I found some pics on restored model but cannot find data like lenght,width,height,also I would like a pic of the chassis.Any help would be very appreciated.

Thanks,Bernard

Hi,I'm Bernard from North of France.I'm a modeler kit and I'm interested building in 1/25 a trailer like the Curtiss model.I found some pics on restored model but cannot find data like lenght,width,height,also I would like a pic of the chassis.Any help would be very appreciated. Thanks,Bernard

Complete plans for a 23 foot long version of this trailer were published in a magazine in the 1930s. You can buy them from this source:

http://howtobuildplans.com/?wpsc_product_category=old-vintage-camper-trailer-plans

(the second set of plans)

I have seen the same magazine article and plans on another web site, for free. The site has about a dozen different plans from the twenties to the fifties.

If you do a web site for Vintage travel trailer plans, or similar, you may turn them up. Or spend $1.99 at the linked site.

The plans I saw give all details of construction, dimensions, and materials. Including the unique rubber mounted hitch.

Later.......

Here is the site I was looking for, with the Free plans. The ones for the Curtis style trailer are on the right hand side, 10 down from the top.

There are lots of plans here for trailers of the 1920s to 1950s, enough to make your own model caravan camp ground!

http://www.mikenchell.com/VintagePlans/vintageplans.html

The trailer did not have a chassis as such. The body was constructed on aircraft principles, of 2"X2" spruce wood braced by diagonal wires. The body of the trailer functioned as the chassis.

Dimensions are given as 23 feet long overall, 19 feet of usable floor space inside. Six feet one inch inside width, 6 feet inside height. Weight, 3000 to 3800 pounds depending on equipment. Cost of materials $700 to $900.

I estimate overall height, 7' 8". Overall width, 6' 8". Overall length, 23'.

The trailer at the top of this page, appears very similar but shorter, probably about 20 feet. Construction details given in the plans, agree with details I have seen of the Curtis trailer. This indicates that the designer was familiar with the Curtis, and may have worked for the company.

This type of trailer was the most sophisticated on the market, and the most expensive. A real millionaire's land yacht.

It's definitely that I wanted to find.Plans are they the same on the two sites?

An other question,what was the paint scheme,color chart of that trailers of the period?

Marvelous,Rusty_OToole,thanks so much for your help.

I think they are the same but have no way of knowing for sure. The guy selling plans, seems to have got them off the net. The picture on his ad, is from the free plans I linked.

The trailer at the top of this page, appears to be painted the same color scheme as the car. Any color auto enamel could be used to paint a trailer. The Curtis trailers were all built to order, with interior fittings, upholstery, exterior finish etc to the customer's taste.

The article linked, shows a color picture. This is an artist's impression and does not mean the trailer was really that color.

The article also states, that the trailer was covered with Dupont Fabrikoid. This was a material used for car bodies of the Weymann type. It came from the factory in colors, and needed no paint. The Fabrikoid cars I have read about, were usually dark colors like maroon, black, dark green, dark blue or gray.

The roof was covered with the material used on auto tops of the period. It resembles the vinyl tops some cars had in the seventies. Some trailers had roofs of canvas, made smooth and water proof with 2 coats of white lead paint.

Most trailers of that period were covered with Masonite, a hard smooth artificial board. It could be painted with auto enamel and was quite durable. Painted Masonite looks the same as painted sheet metal.

A more expensive option was Fabrikoid or imitation leather which was made by several companies.

Your model could have a smooth painted finish or an imitation leather covering, and be authentic to the period. Aluminum trailers were just coming in then. They were seldom seen until the late forties and early fifties.

Another style of Curtis trailer, the Enna Jettick streamlined model!

http://thevintagetraveler.wordpress.com/2013/07/28/the-enna-jettick-aerocar-1930s/

A fleet of 4 was built for the Enna Jettick shoe company. Their sales staff used them to visit dealers, and to promote the Enna Jettick shoe.

Note the unique streamlined shape which echoed the Enna Jettick blimp.

Another copy of this photo on the net, bears the hand written inscription "July 1930". From the style of the car the trailers were probably made in 1929 or 1930.The photo appears to have been taken in winter when the leaves were off the trees. The Enna Jettick brand was launched in 1928.

post-48461-14314244164_thumb.jpg

Rusty_OToole what a pleasure to see that.Thank you very much for the effort.with all that,I hope to build a model in scale.

Effectively on some pics the top of the trailers seems to be covered with leather.

Sorry to disturb the post of Dave Mellor and thank you again mister OToole.

Rusty_OToole what a pleasure to see that.Thank you very much for the effort.with all that,I hope to build a model in scale. Effectively on some pics the top of the trailers seems to be covered with leather. Sorry to disturb the post of Dave Mellor and thank you again mister OToole. Bernard.

They were covered with imitation leather that was used for the tops of closed cars at the time.

The bill of materials in the trailer plans, includes 16 yards of 52" wide top material. This would be about 15 meters of 1.3 meter wide material. Also 6 rolls of blue cotton padding to cover the roof and make it smooth before applying the imitation leather.

If you look at a Model A Ford sedan, the whole roof is covered with imitation leather. Other cars have a small insert in the center of the roof.

This was because of the difficulty of making a whole roof in one piece, a limitation of the technology of the time. Eventually they learned to make a roof in one piece, and after 1937 did not use the fabric insert.

Trailer makers bought the same material that the car makers used. A similar material was used on the bodies of expensive trailers. Cheaper trailers used canvas, waterproofed with 2 coats of white lead paint for the roof. For the body they used Masonite painted with auto enamel.

The bill of materials includes 26 yards ( 24 meters) of Fabrikoid for the outside of the trailer, in addition to the roof material. And 14 yards (13 meters) of light colored upholstery grade Fabrikoid for the interior ceiling.

I don't feel disturbed. I took the pic from The Old Motor

  • 1 month later...

I have an other question about the wheel box.I have not an accurate pic of the interior of the trailer to see the wheel box.Are you sure it was on the pic below?

I think it would be embarrassing to walk backwards,no?

memaerobilia

memaerobilia

I sent a lot of info on the Curtiss Aerocar, trailer etc, to the Seattle Museum of Flight, about 10 years ago.. There were the ORIGINAL dwgs, patent descriptions, and long technical reports *from the Original Curtiss and Curtiss Wright Company archives. The Museum has this material preserved and indexed, and should be able to help with specific requests, should you need accurate and detailed info.

smithbrother

I saw the unit from Canada at the Frankenmuth, Mi. Show.

Interesting was the flexible trailer/tongue mount in the pull truck.

They took a spare tire/wheel combo, wrapped the outside of the rubber with brackets mounted to the floor, then the tongue/fifth wheel turn assembly was fastened to the center bolt pattern, thus flexible.

I assume that was an original design, but neat,

Dale in Indy

Thank you for the info.

The wheel boxes are shown clearly in the plans. They are the square dotted lines in the left picture.

In the right picture the wheel box is the curved line. It is marked "1' X ? Laminated rim". The ? indicates a number obliterated by your blue line.

It seems they took 2 pieces of thin plywood or Masonite, bent them in a circle, then glued them together. That is what "laminated" means.

In the corners they show 2" filler blocks. That would mean, pieces cut of 2" thick wood to fill in the space between the laminated wheel box and the frame. Incidentally in old drawings " means inch and ' means foot.

The inside vertical part of the wheel box is shown as 3/4" plywood.

Did you look at the picture gallery of the Hindley trailer? It has some good pictures of the interior. They were not standardized. Each trailer was custom built to order. This means, you can change the design or layout and still be authentic if you use the type of design and materials available at the time.

http://www.hindleysgarage.com/gallery_aerocar.htm

If you need extra details, Email the Hindleys and see if they will send you some more pictures. I am sure they will help you if they can.

Yes I'm right with the dimension.All blue print are clear.

I find it odd the elevation of the ground just above the wheel axle;people should lift the leg to go through the trailer,it's just that I do not understand.

I continue my research and I'll contact the Hindleys.

At this time I am having problems with my webhost pics,so I'll place a pic of my progress asap.

Thanks so much.Bernard.

ply33

This thread brings to mind this rig I saw at a local show back in 2002: A 1935 Bowlus trailer pulled by a 1932 Packard.

post-30650-143142510317_thumb.jpg

Thank you ply33,I'll add these pics to my collection.I must find a pic of the interior just above the wheel axle.

I used vaccuform technique with a piece of wood and a heat gun to reproduce the top with curved lines.

Hope you'll enjoy.Bernard.

I see what you mean now. The high box in the floor for axle clearance. This seems strange to me. A step like that would be inconvenient or dangerous. If you wanted to eliminate the step, you could use a drop axle (bent down in the middle) or make the floor higher.

Maybe the Hindleys have more information.

Bernard I took another look at the plans. They show a straight axle with 3" thick wooden blocks between the axle and springs. This was done to lower the trailer. But it means they had to raise the floor for clearance.

I do not believe the Curtis trailer was made this way. They would have used a dropped axle. This would not require raising the floor for clearance.

Durant Mike

Durant Mike

The Glenn Curtis Museum in Hammondsport, New York, about 45 minutes from Corning has one in the museum. An excellent museum by the way.

Ok Rusty,thank you for the interest.I'm waiting for a reply of Mr and Mrs Hindley.

  • 3 months later...

Guest JohnA

Guest JohnA

Hi Bernard,

Did you finish your project? I have detailed information if needed.

Thanks, John

Thank you to all those who bring help and also for the interest.

I would put pictures of updates shortly and you will understand with the pictures the chosen design with flat floor, maybe it is not the total reality but my model I like better that way.

After an initial response from the daughter of the Hindley family I have never received the requested information, so be it.

Some health problems are slowing my project, it's in stand by but hopefully get back to it.

:)

I have over 80+ photos of Curtiss Aerocars from the early 30's. They came from an Aerocar salesman to show customers different trailers. A lot of the photos are interior shots. All have a flat floor. My Aerocar also has a flat floor but it does have the cut out in the frame for the drop axel to clear as shown in the drawing.

Like to see the model when you get the chance, and best of health to you.

post-102891-143142708412_thumb.jpg

Some news of the model;so I made a flat floor and a shifted axle.

For the underside I followed a " blue print " send by Rusty_Otoole consisting of crossties,I don't know if it was the reality,but...

So JohnA,is it possible to have copies of your documents?by pm?

Some updates.Thank you.

post-48461-143142709028_thumb.jpg

Recently I saw a Curtis trailer in a 1933 Will Rogers movie titled "Mr. Skitch". In this movie Will Rogers plays Mr. Skitch, a man forced to leave his home and travel with his family to California during the depression. In a tourist camp, he offers to wash another traveller's car and trailer, but the traveller ends up doing the work. The car is a Lincoln coupe similar to your roadster model, the trailer is a Curtis.

In the movie, bracing wires are clearly visible in the front windows.

Thank you Rusty,I sought on youtube but didn't find the movie in streaming.

Maybe one day on TCM cable TV.

set-72157633092279900

Very interesting album. I hope Bernard comes around and gets a look at it. It has answered some questions for me, about the construction of these unique land yachts. I wonder why they weren't more popular with those who could afford them, or maybe they were? Do you have any information on the number built? It seems the company was in business for at least 10 years. They must have built quite a few yet there has never been much information about them. This thread has more about them than I have ever seen elsewhere.

Information about Glenn Curtiss trailers and also his cars, motorcycles, and planes http://www.coachbuilt.com/bui/c/curtiss/curtiss.htm

Hello JohnA and Rusty_OToole.

thanks so much for the album photos.

I found history on Coachbuilt.com. but it's really nice to help me.

The project is on hold, I have work in the bathroom,so when I get a little more time for model making, I'll post more pictures.

I wish you a Happy New Year.

Best regards,Bernard.

  • 2 weeks later...

Another Curtis Aerocar, this one equipped as a school bus for the Todd School For Boys.

http://theoldmotor.com/?p=136548

It seems the Todd School was an exclusive prep school, and they had at least 2 Aerocars.

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Curtiss Aerocar, 1928

Motorcycle and aviation pioneer Glenn Curtiss formed the Curtiss Aerocar Company in 1928. The Aerocar was an early version of the fifth-wheel campers that became popular in later decades. The trailer's strength and carrying capacity were due in part to struts and wires inspired by those used in Curtiss's early airplanes.

Curtiss Aerocar Company, Inc. 

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Collection Title

Research Center Aeronautics Collection 

 On Exhibit

By Request in the Benson Ford Research Center

84.1.1629.241

From the Collections of The Henry Ford.

Paper (Fiber product)

Printing (Process) Photomechanical processes

Black-and-white (Colors)

Height: 6 in

Width: 9 in

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Rosatom Starts Production of Rare-Earth Magnets for Wind Power Generation

TVEL Fuel Company of Rosatom has started gradual localization of rare-earth magnets manufacturing for wind power plants generators. The first sets of magnets have been manufactured and shipped to the customer.

curtiss aerocar land yacht

In total, the contract between Elemash Magnit LLC (an enterprise of TVEL Fuel Company of Rosatom in Elektrostal, Moscow region) and Red Wind B.V. (a joint venture of NovaWind JSC and the Dutch company Lagerwey) foresees manufacturing and supply over 200 sets of magnets. One set is designed to produce one power generator.

“The project includes gradual localization of magnets manufacturing in Russia, decreasing dependence on imports. We consider production of magnets as a promising sector for TVEL’s metallurgical business development. In this regard, our company does have the relevant research and technological expertise for creation of Russia’s first large-scale full cycle production of permanent rare-earth magnets,” commented Natalia Nikipelova, President of TVEL JSC.

“NovaWind, as the nuclear industry integrator for wind power projects, not only made-up an efficient supply chain, but also contributed to the development of inter-divisional cooperation and new expertise of Rosatom enterprises. TVEL has mastered a unique technology for the production of magnets for wind turbine generators. These technologies will be undoubtedly in demand in other areas as well,” noted Alexander Korchagin, Director General of NovaWind JSC.

For reference:

TVEL Fuel Company of Rosatom incorporates enterprises for the fabrication of nuclear fuel, conversion and enrichment of uranium, production of gas centrifuges, as well as research and design organizations. It is the only supplier of nuclear fuel for Russian nuclear power plants. TVEL Fuel Company of Rosatom provides nuclear fuel for 73 power reactors in 13 countries worldwide, research reactors in eight countries, as well as transport reactors of the Russian nuclear fleet. Every sixth power reactor in the world operates on fuel manufactured by TVEL. www.tvel.ru

NovaWind JSC is a division of Rosatom; its primary objective is to consolidate the State Corporation's efforts in advanced segments and technological platforms of the electric power sector. The company was founded in 2017. NovaWind consolidates all of the Rosatom’s wind energy assets – from design and construction to power engineering and operation of wind farms.

Overall, by 2023, enterprises operating under the management of NovaWind JSC, will install 1 GW of wind farms. http://novawind.ru

Elemash Magnit LLC is a subsidiary of Kovrov Mechanical Plant (an enterprise of the TVEL Fuel Company of Rosatom) and its main supplier of magnets for production of gas centrifuges. The company also produces magnets for other industries, in particular, for the automotive

industry. The production facilities of Elemash Magnit LLC are located in the city of Elektrostal, Moscow Region, at the site of Elemash Machine-Building Plant (a nuclear fuel fabrication facility of TVEL Fuel Company).

Rosatom is a global actor on the world’s nuclear technology market. Its leading edge stems from a number of competitive strengths, one of which is assets and competences at hand in all nuclear segments. Rosatom incorporates companies from all stages of the technological chain, such as uranium mining and enrichment, nuclear fuel fabrication, equipment manufacture and engineering, operation of nuclear power plants, and management of spent nuclear fuel and nuclear waste. Nowadays, Rosatom brings together about 350 enterprises and organizations with the workforce above 250 K. https://rosatom.ru/en/

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IMAGES

  1. 1932 Graham with a Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht, in a New Zealand museum

    curtiss aerocar land yacht

  2. Graham Blue Streak Coupe and Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht

    curtiss aerocar land yacht

  3. Graham Blue Streak Coupe + Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht 1932…

    curtiss aerocar land yacht

  4. 1932 Graham Blue Streak Coupe and Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht

    curtiss aerocar land yacht

  5. 1932 Graham Blue Streak + Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht

    curtiss aerocar land yacht

  6. Graham Blue Streak Coupé & Curtiss Aerocar Land yacht

    curtiss aerocar land yacht

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COMMENTS

  1. The 1938 Vagabond, a Custom REO and Curtiss Aerocar, Is ...

    The Curtiss Aerocar was a trailer manufactured by Glenn H. Curtiss and the Aerocar Company. ... It was supposedly inspired by Brooks Stevens' Zephyr Land Yacht, which had been delivered just two ...

  2. Graham Blue Streak Coupe and Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht

    Graham Blue Streak Coupe and Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht. A rather unusual vehicle for daily use, but not to the American banker Hugh McDonald who used this luxurious combination in the early 1930s to be driven from his estate on Long Island to his office in New York. The semi-trailer resembles an aeroplane and was built in accordance with ...

  3. Curtiss

    The makers were the Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht company, certainly related in some way to the Curtiss aircraft manufacturers whose founder Glenn Curtiss was a rival of the Wright brothers in the early days of aviation. ... up, down, and sideways. The Curtiss Aerocar Co. was a thriving business into the late 1930's (old friend Hugh Robinson was ...

  4. The Enduring Legacy of Aviation Pioneer Glenn Curtiss

    An avid outdoorsman, he developed a folding tent-type trailer in 1917. A very streamlined fifth-wheel trailer was developed from this in 1919, called the Aerocar. The Curtiss four-wheeled Aerocar Motor Bungalow, or Land Yacht, evolved, which was 19 feet long, 12 feet wide and more than 7 feet high.

  5. RV History

    The Aerocar Land Yacht had the best leather, velvet, and woods during the Depression. Curtiss partnered with a car company, so customers could choose between a coupe or roadster explicitly designed to tow the RV. The Land Yacht measured 22-feet in length. It had a water closet with a commode and sink. The kitchen had a sink, stove, oven, and ...

  6. Aerocar

    Aerocar, Curtiss Aerocar, Aerocar Trailer, Aerocar Corp., Opa-locka, Coral Gables, Miami, Florida, Aerocar Co. of Detroit, Aero-Car. ... Mayor Sewall encouraged him to become a permanent resident and in In 1918 Curtiss purchased a large plot of land there using some of it to establish a Marine Corp.'s Naval Air base, and the remainder for ...

  7. Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht in the Louwman Museum

    Media in category "Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht in the Louwman Museum" The following 9 files are in this category, out of 9 total. 1932 Graham Blue Streak Coupe, 4litre 8cylinders 90hp 137kmh & Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht pic1.JPG 4,608 × 3,456; 2.14 MB.

  8. The Curtiss' Museums

    Glenn Curtiss designed the hitch for his fifth wheel trailer the Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht. This is a 1938 International D15 tow car pulling a 1936 Curtiss Aerocar. This style of travel trailer was invented in about 1927 by Glenn Curtiss, a leading American aircraft designer. By using airplane principles he felt that he could build a trailer ...

  9. Graham Blue Streak Coupe and Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht

    1932 Graham Blue Streak Coupe and Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht . The descriptions of the Classic Cars in the Directory were partly generated or supplemented with the help of artificial intelligence (AI). The content may occasionally not always be entirely accurate or factually correct despite careful checking. ...

  10. 1932 Graham Blue Streak Coupe and Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht

    Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht! Ο όρος "σπίτι-δουλειά-σπίτι" στις αρχές του 1930 ήταν κάτι αρκετά κουραστικό ίσως ακόμα και επικίνδυνο για κάποιους ανθρώπους, ωστόσο η παραγγελία του Αμερικανού τραπεζίτη Hugh ...

  11. Curtiss Aerocar: the Century-Old Ultra Luxurious ...

    Folks of all ages, behold, this is the Curtiss Aerocar. A quaint little trinket of the early 1920s designed by one of the early 20th century's greatest inventors. Glenn Hammond Curtiss was a man ...

  12. Stunning Streamliner! This Coach-Built 1938 REO and Curtiss Aerocar

    And that's just what we have here. While cruising eBay, we found this unbelievable and rare combo: a top-of-the-line 1937 Curtiss Aerocar trailer mated to a one-of-one 1938 REO cab-forward hauler, custom commissioned by a real estate magnate so he could travel between developmental properties in total style. Let's check it out!

  13. Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht with Auburn

    The trailer is an Aerocar Land Yacht made by Glen Curtiss of "Jenny" fame. Note how much front load there is but it hardly bears down at all on the coupe thanks to the lightweight, aircraft-inspired construction. Compare this to that S-10 pickup under the fifth-wheel trailer posted a few days ago.

  14. Hemmings Find of the Day

    The second (streamlined fifth-wheel tractor that Standard Carriage built in 1938) was built for pioneer balloonist and aviator Augustus Post, a close personal friend of Glen Curtiss, the designed and manufacturers of the Aerocar 5th wheel trailer. Built using a 1938 Chevrolet 1-ton truck cab and chassis, Standard Carriage Works constructed an ...

  15. 1932 Curtiss RV 5th wheel car camp travel trailer,,land yacht'.aerocar

    A Graham Bleu Streak and a curtiss aerocar , what more do you need ?? as seen at the Louwman Museum in The Hague , Holland.

  16. The Complete History of RVs, and Campers

    1930 Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht. In the 1850s, blacksmiths discovered a new hitch for horse-drawn wagons that helped loggers and other heavy-haul industries. They called it a fifth wheel hitch because it acted like another wheel on the wagon. It allowed the drivers to maneuver rougher terrain and make tighter turns without having to unhitch the ...

  17. Curtiss Aerocar, 1928

    Motorcycle and aviation pioneer Glenn Curtiss formed the Curtiss Aerocar Company in 1928. The Aerocar was an early version of the fifth-wheel campers that became popular in later decades. The trailer's strength and carrying capacity were due in part to struts and wires inspired by those used in Curtiss's early airplanes.

  18. A 1939 Ford COE Truck And Matching Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht Make A

    1930's Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht, beautifully restored to its former glory. Everything looks and works just the way it was designed 70 years ago. This gorgeous 22 feet long Aerocar sleeps 4, has a bathroom (toilet and sink), full kitchen (2 burner stove, kitchen sink, ice chest, storage cabinets), the beautiful interior has been restored to ...

  19. Glenn Curtis Fifth Wheel RV

    Glenn Curtiss - Fifth Wheel Trailer the Curtiss Aerocar Land Yacht - Origin of the Term Fifth Wheel. Home Page Origin of the Term Fifth Wheel Wikipedia says: The term fifth wheel comes from a similar coupling used on four-wheel horse-drawn carriages and wagons. The device allowed the front axle assembly to pivot in the horizontal plane, to ...

  20. Captured a/c on Eastern front in 1914

    The Aerodrome Forum > WWI Aviation > Aircraft: Captured a/c on Eastern front in 1914 User Name

  21. Rosatom Starts Production of Rare-Earth Magnets for Wind Power

    06 Nov 2020 by Rosatom. TVEL Fuel Company of Rosatom has started gradual localization of rare-earth magnets manufacturing for wind power plants generators. The first sets of magnets have been manufactured and shipped to the customer. In total, the contract between Elemash Magnit LLC (an enterprise of TVEL Fuel Company of Rosatom in Elektrostal ...

  22. Crash-aerien 20 OCT 2014 d'un Dassault Falcon 50EX F-GLSA

    A Dassault Falcon 50EX plane, registered F-GLSA, was destroyed in a take-off accident at Moskva-Vnukovo Airport (VKO), Russia. There were one passenger and three crew members on board. The airplane operated on a flight from Moskva-Vnukovo Airport (VKO) to Paris-Le Bourget Airport (LBG).

  23. Elektrostal to Moscow

    The city covers an area of 2511 km2, while the urban area covers 5891 km2, and the metropolitan area covers over 26000 km2. Moscow is among the world's largest cities, being the most populous city entirely in Europe, the largest urban and metropolitan area in Europe, and the largest city by land area on the European continent. - Wikipedia