That 12-second flight at Kitty Hawk on 17 December 1903 was the first time a machine carrying a man flew forward under control without a reduction in speed and landed at a point as high as that from which it had started. Designed and constructed by Orville Wright and his brother Wilbur, it was a fragile machine made of wood, wire, and fabric and was equipped with a 12-horsepower, four-cylinder, water- cooled engine.
Although the official birthday of U.S. naval aviation is 8 May 1911, the U.S. Navy showed early interest in aviation in 1898, when an interservice board was formed to investigate the military possibilities of Samuel P. Langley’s Aerodrome flying machines. Not until September 1910, however, was the first official aviation office established, when Captain Washington Irving Chambers was designated as the officer to whom all aviation matters were to be referred. Shortly thereafter, on 14 November 1910, Eugene Ely took off successfully from the USS Birmingham (CL-2), anchored in Hampton Roads, Virginia; just more than two months later, on 18 January 1911, Ely made the first arrested landing in history on the USS Pennsylvania (ACR-4) in San Francisco Harbor. A series of memorable photographs commemorates these two significant milestones in aviation history.
Other historic events followed in quick succession that year. Lieutenant T. G. Ellyson reported for flight training as Naval Aviator Number One and was a key figure in demonstrating the Navy’s first airplane, the Curtiss A-l. Lieutenant John Rogers and Lieutenant (junior grade) John H. Towers also reported for flight training as Naval Aviators Number Two and Three, respectively. Ellyson’s efforts in the development of the catapult included his unceremonious dunking in Maryland’s Severn River during an unsuccessful catapult shot at the U.S. Naval Academy in July 1912, as well as his successful launch in a Curtiss A-2 from a catapult at the Washington Navy Yard in November 1912. All these activities are preserved in photographs from the collection of Commander Ellyson.
The years leading to U.S. entry into World War I were marked by significant progress in the Navy’s efforts to take aviation to sea. Pilots and aircraft set endurance records and executed the first successful shipboard catapult launch. In 1914, combat sorties were flown at Veracruz, Mexico, and the first permanent air station was established at Pensacola, Florida.
These achievements by a handful of pioneer naval aviators were remarkable in their scope and imagination. Nonetheless, when the United States declared war with Germany on 6 April 1917, naval aviation was ill prepared for such a conflict. Only one naval air station was in operation, and a mere 48 aviators and student aviators and 54 aircraft were on hand. In the ensuing 19 months leading to the armistice, however, programs at new air stations were training thousands of new pilots. All the while, Navy and Marine Corps pilots and planes were engaged actively in patrol and combat missions overseas. It was a remarkable period of growth in numbers and capabilities, and it set the stage leading to World War II.
The two decades between the World Wars have been viewed by many as the “good old days,” when new airplane performance records were set literally every day and heroes made overnight. Air shows and exploits of Navy long-distance fliers provided excitement and drama on a daily basis and were the essence of the “golden age of naval aviation.” Of even more importance, air races and transoceanic and intercontinental flights by Navy patrol boats were testing grounds and showcases for the latest advances in engines, airframe design, construction materials, and instruments. As aircraft design and performance proliferated at a rapid rate, the aircraft carrier evolved from a converted collier, the USS Langley (CV-1), into the larger fleet carriers that held the line in the Pacific during the early days of World War II. Consequently, on the eve of the war, Navy ships and aircraft had been transformed from rudimentary platforms with an uncertain future into established yet still evolving fighting machines.
These revolutionary changes are documented thoroughly in the Naval Institute’s naval aviation collection. Vivid black-and-white images evoke memories of men, machines, and events that were the essence of naval aviation history during these formative years. A. C. Read, Marc Mitscher, P. N. L. Bellinger, John Towers, and other crew members of the famed NC flying boats posed before embarking on their epochal transatlantic odyssey in May 1919, during which Read’s NC-4 completed the first crossing of the Atlantic Ocean by air. Other naval aviators made their mark during these formative years, and their exploits were captured on film as well. Lieutenant Commander G. deC. Chevalier made the first arrested landing on the Langley on 26 September 1922. Record breakers Apollo Soucek and C. C. Champion were frequent altitude record breakers in their Wright Apache, while other Navy and Marine pilots participated often in the prestigious Thompson, Schneider, Curtiss Marine, and Pulitzer races. Navy pilots such as A1 Williams, Adolphus Gorton, David Rittenhouse, and William Tomlinson, and Marine pilots Charles Lutz, Christian Schilt, and Arthur Page were frequent comped- tors and winners, often posing by their sleek Curtiss racers after winning a race or breaking yet another world speed record.
The golden age photo collection is an eclectic mix of photographs from aircraft manufacturers, official U.S. Navy sources, the National Archives, private collections, and professional aviation photographers and collectors. Chief among these are the images from the collection of James C. Fahey, who compiled and edited the authoritative reference work, The Ships and Aircraft of the U.S. Fleet. His photographs are all immediately recognizable by their distinctive interplay of light and color, perspective, depth, and composition. The 1930s images of Vought Corsairs, distinctive Grumman amphibians and squat, barrel-shaped fighters, Douglas Dauntless dive bombers and obsolescent Devastator torpedo bombers of Battle of Midway fame, and stately Consolidated and Martin flying boats all capture the spirit and romance of the golden age to a rare degree.
During World War II, U.S. naval aviation expanded at an unprecedented rate, from a modest, untested peacetime force of one escort carrier, seven fleet carriers, and 1,774 combat aircraft to a fleet of 99 carriers of all types, and 29,125 combat aircraft. Four of the original seven carriers—the Lexington (CV-2), Yorktown (CV-5), Wasp (CV-7), and Hornet (CV-8)—were lost in the great carrier battles of 1942—Coral Sea, Midway, Guadalcanal, and Santa Cruz. The losses in ships, aircraft, and people soon were replaced the following year. The new Essex (CV-9)- class carriers began to arrive in 1943, as did the Independence (CVL-22)-class light carriers. The smaller escort, or “jeep,” carriers, which along with non-rigid airships had performed so well in the Battle of the Atlantic, resupplied the Pacific Fleet with new aircraft, as well as providing invaluable support for amphibious landings.
Naval aviation fought widely diverse forms of warfare over two oceans during World War II. In the process, requirements for new warfighting capabilities precipitated a vast variety of technological innovations in electronics, communications, weapons, aircraft engines, and shipboard damage-control systems. Radar and the proximity fuse played particularly key roles in the Pacific War, as procedures, doctrine, and training evolved rapidly to keep pace with technical advances.
With this unprecedented mix of offensive power, people continued to be the key to success. Many of the pioneer aviators emerged as the leaders, commanding task forces, carriers, and squadrons throughout the war. Marc Mitscher, John Towers, P. N. L. Bellinger, DeWitt C. Ramsey, and Aubrey Fitch all played important roles, as did the younger aviators who became the heroes of the carrier battles in the Pacific. Scores of Navy and Marine aviators distinguished themselves in individual combat while leading their squadrons in the key carrier and island battles of the war. Naval aviators such as Jimmie Thach, Max Leslie, Bill Martin, J. D. Ramage, and David McCampbell, and Marine aces Joe Foss, Gregory “Pappy” Boyington, and Marion Carl provided rare opportunities for photographs and interviews by the photographers and war correspondents who followed the fleet.
Among those who made tremendous contributions to the photographic documentation of naval aviation in World War II were world-renowned photographer Edward Steichen and his group of eight young professionals who were commissioned and sent to the Pacific to ride aircraft carriers and catch naval aviation in action. Many of the Naval Institute’s photos are by the Steichen group (including the background photo on previous pages of an SBD Dauntless flying over Wake Island on 6 October 1943). Large numbers are by Steichen himself. They are considered classics of the Pacific War.
With war’s end came a rapid demobilization and decommissioning of aviation squadrons and carriers, as advancing technologies, such as jet propulsion, guided weapons, and nuclear weapons, effected fundamental changes in how the Navy would wage future wars. By the mid-1960s, helicopters had replaced catapults on the fan- tail of cruisers and battleships, and the airship and the flying boat, reminders of the golden age of naval aviation, had seen their missions absorbed by land-based patrol planes and helicopters.
By the late 1950s and early 1960s, the Navy had progressed from the first operational carrier-based jets, the FJ-1 Fury and the FH-1 Phantom, to the fourth generation, so-called “high-performance” aircraft such as the F-4 Phantom II and the A-5 Vigilante. The arrival of these two aircraft spurred an all out assault by the Navy on world aircraft performance records. It was a throwback to the golden age, as Navy and Marine pilots took turns breaking most existing world speed and altitude records during the 1959- 1962 period.
Of paramount importance to the success of the new airplanes were fundamental changes to aircraft carrier design and construction. From the British came the angled deck, the steam catapult, and the mirror landing system, later to be replaced by the Fresnel lens system. The Essex- class carriers of World War II were modernized, and the first of the so-called “super” carriers, the USS Forrestal (CV-59), arrived in 1955, to be followed by the USS Enterprise (CVN-65) in 1961, first of the nuclear-powered carriers that became the foundation of sea-based conventional striking power in the 21st century.
In 1959, a new breed of hero appeared on the aviation scene, when the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) selected the first group of astronauts for what was to be known as Project Mercury. Four naval aviators were among the seven selected for the space program: Marine Lieutenant Colonel (later Senator) John Glenn, Lieutenant Commanders Wally Schirra and Alan Shepard, and Lieutenant Scott Carpenter. Shepard later became the first American in space, and the Mercury program taught NASA how to conduct manned space flight. Through the years, other naval aviators became household names: Neil Armstrong, James Lovell, John Young, Eugene Cernan, and Bruce McCandless, to name a few. As the space program matured, women began to play an integral part. In 1995, Lieutenant Commander Wendy Lawrence, the first female Naval Academy astronaut, became the first female naval aviator in space on the Space Shuttle Endeavor. From the first brief journeys into space by the Mercury astronauts in the early 1960s to the assembly of the International Space Station in the new millennium, more naval aviators flew in space than any other service. By 2002, the U.S. Naval Academy had produced 51 astronauts, more than any other institution.
Twice in the three decades following World War II an unsettled peace gave way to so-called limited wars in Korea and Vietnam. In both conflicts, aircraft carriers conducted offensive operations against Asian nations as they steamed in a fairly stationary sanctuary offshore. The Navy produced only one ace in the Korean conflict: Lieutenant Guy P. Bordelon, who destroyed five enemy intruders at night over South Korea. Marine Major John F. Bolt, a World War II ace, also distinguished himself in Korea by becoming the first naval aviator to attain five victories in jet combat.
Heroes in the Vietnam War were numerous but seldom recognized for their courage and deeds in battle. Phantom pilot Lieutenant (later Congressman) Randall H. Cunningham and his radar intercept officer, William P. Driscoll, downed five North Vietnamese aircraft to become the Navy’s only aces during that war. There were heroes aplenty in the 144 naval aviation personnel who were prisoners of war in North Vietnam. James B. Stockdale, William P. Lawrence, Jeremiah Denton, and John S. McCain III were among the many recognized for their resourcefulness, bravery, and patriotism under extremely arduous and barbaric conditions in captivity.
In every decade since World War II, Navy and Marine Corps aviation have been called on to support a seemingly endless series of crises, wars hot and cold, and humanitarian missions from Central America to Africa and from the Middle East to the Far East. From the superb performance of Navy transport squadrons in the Berlin Airlift in 1948- ’49 to the most recent call to action in Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003, every aviation community in the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps has been called on to support U.S. interests abroad. It is a tribute to the foresight, wisdom, and great courage of the Navy’s senior leadership that naval aviation survived the challenges facing the Navy during the last half-century.
The primary source for names, places, and events for this article is United States Naval Aviation, 1910-1995, by Roy A. Grossnick (Washington, D.C.: Naval Historical Center, 1997), an indispensable reference work for any researcher of naval aviation history.