In
1917
, during World War I, the
United States Navy
sent out specification for a flying boat of sufficient range to cross the Atlantic Ocean by air to Great Britain, where it would serve as an anti-submarine patrol aircraft. The
Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company
, in conjunction with the
United States Navy
, developed a three-engine aircraft to meet these specifications. The first of the new aircraft was the NC-1 that flew for the first time on
October 4, 1918
. This was followed by the NC-2 whose maiden flight took place on
April 12, 1919
with four engines in tandem pairs. The engine arrangement of the NC-2 had been declared unsatisfactory for the mission and the wings were removed and installed on the NC-1 to replace the originals that had been damaged in a storm. By this time, World War I had ended, but the Navy decided to continue the program in an effort to make the first transatlantic flight crossing by air. The new NC-3 and NC-4 models reverted to the three-engine format, although the NC-4 had a fourth engine mounted as a pusher behind the center engine. On
May 16, 1919
the NC-1, NC-3 and NC-4 assembled at Trepassy Bay, Newfoundland, under the command of Commander
John H. Towers
, to begin the 1400-mile flight to the Azores. The NC-1 was forced down short of the island and sank. Naval vessels stationed along the flight path rescued the crew of the NC-1. The NC-3 landed two hundred miles short and taxied the remaining distance to the island. Only the NC-4 completed the flight successfully, reaching Plymouth, England, via Lisbon, Portugal, on
May 31, 1919
. Following publicity tours of the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the United States, the Curtiss NC-4 was given over to the
Smithsonian Institution
and is now part of the National Air and Space Museum collection.