The
Engineering Division was set up to evaluate proposals, and the first project it undertook was installing an American
Liberty L-12 engine on the British
Airco DH.9 aircraft, designating it USD-9 and USD-9A. Other aircraft modified include the
Bristol F.2 Fighter, designated XB-1. In 1920, the Engineering Division's
Bureau of Aircraft Production completed the design of the Ground Attack, Experimental, (GAX) aircraft built as the
Boeing GA-1, and designed the
Verville-Clark Pursuit (led by
Alfred V. Verville) that after redesign won the
initial Pulitzer Race in 1920 at Roosevelt Field. The division also designed the TP-1 and TW-1. In 1925, in order to promote private aircraft developments, the Engineering Division was restricted by General
Mason Patrick and could no longer build experimental aircraft. In 1926 the
United States Army Air Service was replaced with the
United States Army Air Corps, and the Engineering Division merged in 1926 with the Air Service's Supply Division (formed by 1919) to form the
Material Division (Air Corps) at
Wright Field. ==References==