Curtiss CR

It was a conventional single-seater biplane with a monocoque fuselage and staggered single-bay wings of equal span braced with N-struts.

Their first major win was at the 1921 Pulitzer Trophy race, where piloted by Bert Acosta the CR-1 took first place with an average speed of 176.75 mph (283.49 km/h), nearly two minutes ahead of its closest rival.

The race was won by Lt. Russell Maughan with an average speed of 205.856 mph (330.172 km/h) with Lt. Lester Maitland in second place (198.850 mph/318.936 km/h).

Maughan's effort incidentally broke every closed-circuit airspeed record up to 124 mi (200 km).

The Army built upon this success with the R-6s by using the aircraft to break the world airspeed record before 1922 was over, Gen Billy Mitchell flying one to 224.28 mph (359.72 km/h) on 18 October.

An Army Curtiss R-6, which won the 1922 Pulitzer Trophy with an average speed of 330 km/h.
LT David Rittenhouse (center) Cowes , England September 1923.