The US Navy initially purchased four of these aircraft in addition to the
Freak Boat (
C-1/
AB-1) that it had already obtained and which was retrofitted to approximately the same design as the others. One of these, the
C-2 became the first aircraft to fly under
automatic control on 30 August
1913 when fitted with a
gyroscopic stabiliser designed by
Elmer Sperry. The same aircraft (by now redesignated
AB-2) then became the first aircraft to be launched by
catapult from a warship while underway when it took off from on 5 November
1915, piloted by Captain
Henry C. Mustin, Navy Air Pilot No.3, and Naval Aviator No. 11. Her sister,
AB-3, became the first US heavier-than-air aircraft to see military action when launched from the
USS Mississippi on 25 April
1914 on a scouting mission over
Veracruz during the
United States Occupation of Veracruz. The US Navy bought another eight aircraft before the end of 1916, but orders in quantity only came following the type's selection as the Navy's standard flying-boat trainer in April
1917. An initial batch of 144 of the basic F model were ordered, followed by 22 MFs in 1918. Another 80 MFs were produced under license by the
Naval Aircraft Factory. This aircraft was especially useful for training because of its favorable
stall recovery, while many other aircraft of the era were likely to stall into a
spin. A small number of Model Es and Fs were also purchased by the US Army. The Russian Navy purchased two batches of Model Fs in 1913-14 and operated them as part of the Black Sea and Baltic Sea fleets until replaced by the
Model K shortly thereafter. In Italy, the Curtiss representative
Enea Bossi secured rights for local license-production of the Type F by the
Zari brothers, who built eight examples at their workshop in
Bovisa,
Milan. The first of these was demonstrated to the Italian Navy on
Lake Como on 22 September 1914. The Model F was adopted by
Regia Marina on the battleship
Dante Alighieri, cruisers
Amalfi and
San Marco, and the
seaplane tender Elba. Rogers Airlines operated a postwar fleet of ten Curtiss Seagulls as late as 1927. The aircraft flew routes out of Miami and Nassau in the winter months and returned to upstate New York for maintenance and barnstorming in the summer. ==Variants==