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Related Historical Markers
By Howard C. Ohlhous, October 27, 2013
Larger Than Life Marker, Pleasant Valley Cemetery
SHOWN IN SOURCE-SPECIFIED ORDER
| On South Valley Road at Cemetary Road, on the right when traveling east on South Valley Road. |
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1878-1930
This modest cemetery is the final resting place of Hammondsport native Glenn Hammond Curtiss, an American hero.
Glenn Curtiss was a man who liked to go fast. His personal quest for speed began with building and racing bicycles . . . — — Map (db m70029) HM |
| On Pulteney St (Route 54A) at Park Place, on the right when traveling east on Pulteney St. |
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1900 - 1904
Glen Curtiss found his first success in the bicycle business.
Bicycle racer and mechanical whiz, Glenn Curtiss, opened his first shop in 1900, directly across the street from where you are now standing. Here Curtiss repaired and . . . — — Map (db m69912) HM |
| Near Main Street (New York State Route 54A) 0.2 miles north of New York State Route 54. |
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Some of America's earliest aircraft took to the air over Kingsley Flats
In 1904 "Captain T.S. Baldwin from California purchased a Curtiss motorcycle engine to power his experimental dirigible airship. Two years later, Baldwin moved his . . . — — Map (db m136683) HM |
| Near Pleasant Valley Road. |
| | 1908
When Glenn Curtiss flew the June Bug here in Pleasant Valley on July 4, 1908, he made American aviation history.
With Curtiss at the controls, the June Bug rose into the air, leveled off at a height of about 40 feet, and . . . — — Map (db m70114) HM |
May. 7, 2024