,
National City, and the surrounding area circa 1923|left North Island was commissioned a
Naval Air Station in 1917, called
Naval Air Station San Diego until 1955. On August 15, 1963, the station was granted official recognition as the "Birthplace of Naval Aviation" by resolution of the
House Armed Services Committee. The U.S. Navy's first aviator, Lieutenant
Theodore Ellyson, and many of his colleagues were trained at North Island starting as early as 1911. This was just eight years after
Orville and Wilbur Wright flew the
first manned aircraft at
Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. At that time, North Island was an uninhabited sand flat. It had been used in the late 19th century for horseback riding and hunting by guests of
J. D. Spreckels's resort hotel, the
Hotel del Coronado. North Island derived its name from the original geography. In the nineteenth century it was referred to as North Coronado Island, because it was separated from South Coronado (now the city of Coronado) by a shallow bay known as the Spanish Bight, which was later filled in 1945 during
World War II. In 1886, North Coronado Island and South Coronado were purchased by a developer to become a residential resort. South Coronado, which is not an island but the terminus of a peninsula known as the
Silver Strand, became the city of
Coronado. However, North Coronado was never developed. Instead,
Glenn Curtiss opened a flying school and held a lease to the property until the beginning of
World War I. Curtiss invited both the
U.S. Army and U.S. Navy to use the site for aviation training, with the Navy being the first to open a station in 1912. However the Navy abandoned its camp and did not return for five years, while the Army established an aviation school in 1913 at the southern end of the island. In 1917, Congress appropriated the land, and two airfields were commissioned on its sandy flats. The Navy started with a tent city known as "Camp Trouble". As its name suggests, things did not always go well in the early days. The Navy shared North Island with the Army's
Signal Corps,
Air Service, and Air Corp's
Rockwell Field until 1937, when the Army left and the Navy expanded its operations to cover the whole of North Island. In 1914, then-unknown aircraft builder
Glenn Martin took off and demonstrated his
pusher aircraft over the island with a flight that included the first
parachute jump in the San Diego area. The jump was made by a ninety-pound civilian woman named
Tiny Broadwick. Other aviation milestones originating at North Island included the first
seaplane flight in 1911, the first
mid-air refueling, and the first non-stop
transcontinental flight, both in 1923. One of history's most famous aviation feats was the flight of
Charles A. Lindbergh from
New York to
Paris in May 1927. That flight originated at Rockwell Field on North Island on May 10, 1927, when Lindbergh began the first leg of his journey. Forefathers of today's "
Blue Angels", the three-plane "Sea Hawks" from
VF-6B, the "Felix the Cat" squadron, were thrilling audiences with flight demonstrations as early as 1928. They demonstrated the training skills of Navy
fighter and
bomber pilots and on many occasions, flew their aircraft in formation with the wings tethered together. The list of American military pilots trained at North Island reads like the Who's Who of aviation; however, the U.S. was not the only country interested in aviation early in the twentieth century. Six years before the Naval Air Station was commissioned, Glenn Curtiss trained the first group of Japanese aviators at his flying school on North Island. Among them were a Lieutenant
Yamada, later the head of the
Imperial Japanese Navy's
Naval Aviation arm in World War II and
Chikuhei Nakajima, founder of
Nakajima Aircraft Company. Even the base's first commanding officer, Lieutenant Commander
Earl Winfield Spencer Jr., USN, added a degree of celebrity to North Island. His wife was
Wallis Warfield, a prominent socialite who was to remarry twice and finally become Wallis Warfield Spencer Simpson Windsor, better known as the
Duchess of Windsor, for whom King
Edward VIII abdicated his throne in 1936. During World War II, North Island was the major continental U.S. base supporting the operating forces in the
Pacific. Those forces included over a dozen
aircraft carriers, the
Coast Guard,
Army,
Marines, and
Seabees. The city of Coronado became home to most of the aircraft factory workers and dependents of the mammoth base which was operating around the clock. Major
USO entertainment shows and bond drives were held weekly at the Ship's Service auditorium, which was later replaced by the 2,100 seat Lowry Theater. Famous people stationed here or on ships home ported here during the war years included
Douglas Fairbanks Jr.,
Guy Madison, future television cowboy star of the 1950s and 1960s as
Wild Bill Hickok, was at that time Seaman Bob Mosely, a lifeguard at the NAS crews' pool. Stars like the
Marx Brothers and
Bob Hope appeared regularly at USO shows at the auditorium. == Tenant squadrons ==