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A Look Back: The First Canuck
Written by Ray Canon   
279-canuckThe word ‘Canuck’ in the Canadian aviation world is normally associated with the CF-100, the first fighter aircraft designed in Canada; it will therefore come as a surprise to some Canadians that the honour really goes to the Curtiss Jenny, a plane that was built under licence in Canada during World War I and which trained 2,500 military pilots for service in Europe.

The Jenny owes its fame in Canada to the beginnings of military aviation in this country. In 1914 Canadians wishing to fly had to join the Royal Flying Corps in Great Britain and be trained in that country. The demand for pilots became so great, however, that the British started to look to Canada, among other places, for replacements.

In 1917 an extensive training program was set up in this country, for the most part from the ground up. The most suitable aircraft available was to be found in the US, the already famous Curtiss Jenny; a contract was rapidly signed with that company to licence and build the plane in Canada. The first Jenny, or Canuck as it was called here, was produced in Toronto by Canadian Airplanes Ltd. Over the next two years, some 1,200 Canucks were built to train the pilots who were then sent on to England for combat operations.

Although a goodly number of aircraft were lost in training accidents, the Canuck was considered a relatively pleasant airplane to fly. However, training pilots was considered by some instructors to be at the same level of danger as combat flying. Thus was the groundwork laid for such future training programs as the Britiish Commonwealth Air Training Plan during World War II and the similar NATO program in the 1950s.

Nor did use of the Canuck remain restricted to training embryonic pilots in this country. Some of the 1,200 aircraft plus parts built here were shipped back to the US to help its air force with its own military programs.

After the war many of the Canucks were made available for a variety of peacetime purposes and as such were used for barnstorming as well as becoming the first aircraft in Canada to carry out aerial surveys. Above all, the Canuck put substance to the expression ‘air mail.’

It was only fitting that on November 10, 1980 Canada Post issued a 35-cent stamp picturing the Canuck in this service. A fitting tribute to a versatile airplane!