Early The first flight
decks were inclined wooden ramps built over the
forecastle of warships.
Eugene Ely made the
first fixed-wing aircraft take-off from a warship from on 14 November 1910. Two months later, on 18 January 1911, Ely landed his Curtiss pusher plane on a platform on anchored in
San Francisco Bay using the first
tailhook system, designed and built by circus performer and aviator Hugh Robinson. Ely told a reporter: "It was easy enough. I think the trick could be successfully turned nine times out of ten." On 9 May 1912, Commander
Charles Samson became the first man to take off from a ship which was underway when he flew his
Short S.27 off , which was steaming at . Because the take-off speed of early aircraft was so low, it was possible for an aircraft to make a very short take off when the launching ship was steaming into the wind. Later, removable "flying-off platforms" appeared on the gun turrets of
battleships and
battlecruisers starting with , allowing aircraft to be flown off for scouting purposes, although there was no chance of recovery. On 2 August 1917, while performing trials, Squadron Commander
Edwin Harris Dunning landed a
Sopwith Pup successfully on board the flying-off platform of , becoming the first person to land an aircraft on a moving ship. However, on his third attempt, a tire burst as he attempted to land, causing the aircraft to go over the side, killing him; thus Dunning also has the dubious distinction of being the first person to die in an aircraft carrier landing accident. The landing arrangements on
Furious were highly unsatisfactory. In order to land, aircraft had to maneuver around the superstructure.
Furious was therefore returned to dockyard hands to have a deck added aft for landing, on top of a new hangar. The central superstructure remained, however, and turbulence caused by it badly affected the landing deck.
Full length The first aircraft carrier that began to show the configuration of the modern vessel was the converted liner , which had a large flat wooden deck added over the entire length of the hull, giving a combined landing and take-off deck unobstructed by superstructure turbulence. Because of her unobstructed flight deck,
Argus had no fixed
conning tower and no funnel. Rather, exhaust gases were trunked down the side of the ship and ejected under the fantail of the flight deck (which, despite arrangements to disperse the gases, gave an unwelcome "lift" to aircraft immediately prior to landing). The lack of a command position and funnel was unsatisfactory, and
Argus was used to experiment with various ideas to remedy the solution. A photograph in 1917 shows her with a canvas mock-up of a starboard "island" superstructure and funnel. This was placed on the starboard side because the
rotary engines of some early aircraft created
torque which pulled the nose left, meaning an aircraft naturally
yawed to port on take-off; therefore, it was desirable that they turned away from the fixed superstructure. This became the typical aircraft carrier arrangement and was used in the next
British carriers, and . After
World War I,
battlecruisers that otherwise would have been discarded under the
Washington Naval Treaty—such as the British and , the American and , and the Japanese and battleship —were converted to carriers along the above lines. Being large and fast they were perfectly suited to this role. The heavy armoring and
scantlings and low speed of the converted battleship
Eagle served to be something of a handicap in practice. Because the military effectiveness of aircraft carriers was then unknown, early ships were typically equipped with cruiser-calibre guns to aid in their defense if surprised by enemy warships. These guns were generally removed in
World War II and replaced with
anti-aircraft guns, as carrier doctrine developed the "task force" (later called "battle group") model, where the carrier's defense against surface ships would be a combination of escorting warships and its own aircraft. In ships of this configuration, the hangar deck was the strength deck and an integral part of the hull, and the hangar and light steel flight deck were considered to be part of the superstructure. Such ships were still being built into the late 1940s, classic examples being the U.S. Navy's and carriers. However, in 1936, the
Royal Navy began construction of the . In these ships, the flight deck was the strength deck, an integral part of the hull, and was heavily armored to protect the ship and her air complement. The flight deck as the strength deck was adopted for later construction. This was necessitated by the ever-increasing size of the ships, from the 13,000
ton in 1922 to over 100,000 tons in the latest and carriers.
Armored When aircraft carriers supplanted battleships as the primary fleet capital ship, there were two schools of thought on the question of armor protection being included into the flight deck. The
United States Navy (USN) initially favored unarmored flight decks because they maximized aircraft carrier hangar and flight deck size, which in turn maximized aircraft capacity in the hangar, and on the flight deck, in the form of a permanent "deck park" for a large proportion of the aircraft carried. In 1936 the Royal Navy developed the armored flight deck aircraft carrier which also enclosed the hangar sides and ends with armor. The addition of armor to the flight deck offered aircraft below some protection against aerial bombs while the armored hangar sides and ends helped to minimize damage and casualties from explosions or fires within or outside the hangar. The addition of armor to the hangar forced a reduction in top-weight, so the hangar height was reduced, and this restricted the types of aircraft that these ships could carry, although the
Royal Navy's armored carriers did carry spare aircraft in the hangar overheads. The armor also reduced the length of the flight deck, reducing the maximum aircraft capacity of the armored flight deck aircraft carrier. Additionally, Royal Navy aircraft carriers did not use a permanent deck park until approximately 1943; before then the aircraft capacity of RN aircraft carriers was limited to their hangar capacity. The 23,000-ton British had a hangar capacity for 36
Swordfish-sized aircraft and a single hangar, but carried up to 57 aircraft with a permanent deck park, while the 23,400-ton featured increased hangar capacity with a upper hangar and the addition of a lower hangar, forward of the after elevator, which had a total capacity of 52 Swordfish-sized aircraft or a mix of 48 late-war aircraft in the hangar plus 24 aircraft in a permanent deck park, but carried up to 81 aircraft with a deck park. The 27,500-ton USN had a hangar that was designed to handle a mix of 72 prewar USN aircraft. but carried up to 104 late-war aircraft using both the hangar and a permanent deck park. The experience of World War II caused the USN to change their design policy in favor of armored flight decks on much larger ships: "The main armor carried on is the heavy armored flight deck. This was to prove a significant factor in the
catastrophic fire and explosions that occurred on
Enterprises flight deck in 1969. The US Navy learned its lesson the hard way during
World War II when all its carriers had only armored hangar decks. All attack carriers built since the have had armored flight decks." ==Landing==