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The following paragraphs chart the history of naval aviation from 1910 to the present. 1910 The first successful launch of a aircraft from a ship was made by Eugene Ely, who flew a Curtiss biplane from a specially built 83-foot wooden platform on the forecastle of the cruiser Birmingham. See figure 1-1. 1911 On  8  May  1911,  the  Navy  purchased  its  first aircraft from Glenn Curtiss the A-1 Triad. This date of   purchase   became   the   official   birthday   of   naval aviation.  The  Wright  brothers  soon  sold  the  Navy another aircraft. Curtiss and the Wrights agreed to train a pilot and a mechanic. Eugene Ely landed on a 120-foot wooden platform built on the after turret of the Pennsylvania (fig. 1-2). Then, Ely launched from the wooden platform and flew back  to  shore.  The  day  of  the  "aircraft  carrier"  had arrived. By the end of 1911, the U.S. Navy had three aircraft, four pilots, and one naval air station located at Greenbury   Point,   near   Annapolis,   Maryland.   The station  eventually  moved  to  North  Island,  California. Later,    the    Naval    Aeronautic    Station,    Pensacola, Florida,   was   established   and   became   the   primary training  facility  for  all  naval  aviators  and  enlisted aircrew personnel. 1917 When the U.S. declared war on Germany on 6 April 1917,  naval  aviation  had  48  officers  and  239  enlisted men. There were 54 aircraft, 1 airship, 3 balloons, and 1 naval air station. By the end of WWI, naval aviation had 6,716 officers, 30,693 enlisted men, 252 land air craft, and  1,865  flying  boats  and  seaplanes.  Naval  aviation had grown enormously and was well on its way. 1922 The  converted  collier  ship  Jupiter  (AC-3)  was renamed  USS  Langley  and  commissioned.  It  became the   first   official   aircraft   carrier   (CV-1)   supporting fighter and torpedo bomber squadrons. See figure 1-3. 1940s Five  more  aircraft  carriers  joined  the  carrier  task force before the outbreak of World War II. 1941.  The  U.S.  Congress  declared  a  state  of  war with  Japan.  During  World  War  II,  the  F-6F  Hellcat, 1-2 ANF0101 Figure 1-1.—Eugene Ely in the first takeoff from a ship, November 14, 1910.

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