In 1903, at age 22, Boeing moved to
Hoquiam, Washington, in the
Pacific Northwest. He purchased extensive timberland around
Grays Harbor on the
Olympic Peninsula and bought into lumber operations. He was successful in the venture, in part by shipping lumber to the East Coast via the then-new
Panama Canal, generating funds that he would later apply to a very different business. While being president of Greenwood Timber Company, Boeing, who had experimented with boat design, traveled to
Seattle. During the
Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition in 1909, he saw a piloted flying machine for the first time and became fascinated with
aircraft. In 1910, at the
Dominguez Flying Meet, Boeing asked every pilot foreign and domestic if he could go for an airplane ride and was repeatedly denied except for French aviator
Louis Paulhan. Boeing waited and Paulhan finished the meet and left, never giving Boeing his ride. Boeing took flying lessons at
Glenn L. Martin Flying School in Los Angeles and purchased one of Martin's planes. Martin pilot
James Floyd Smith traveled to Seattle to assemble Boeing's new
Martin TA hydroaeroplane and continue to teach its owner to fly. Huge crates arrived by train and Smith assembled the plane in a tent hangar erected on the shore of Lake Union. Boeing's test pilot, Herb Munter, soon damaged the plane. When he was told by Martin that replacement parts would not be available for months, Boeing told his friend, Commander
George Conrad Westervelt of the US Navy, "We could build a better plane ourselves and build it faster." Westervelt agreed. They soon built and flew the
B & W Seaplane, an amphibian biplane that had outstanding performance. Boeing decided to go into the aircraft business, using an old boat works on the
Duwamish River near Seattle for his factory.
Founding of Boeing Aircraft In 1916, Boeing went into business with
George Conrad Westervelt as "B & W" and founded Pacific Aero Products Co. It was headquartered in the former Heath shipyard. When America entered the
First World War on April 8, 1917, Boeing changed the name to
Boeing Airplane Company ==Boeing family==