Curtis
Pitts' pioneering efforts to design the Pitts Special, fine-tune it and
make it widely available have had a more significant impact on air shows
today than the flying accomplishments of any half dozen air show
performers put together.
From the first prototype to the
hundreds of Pitts Specials that have performed at air shows over the last
half century to the design ideas taken from the Pitts Special and
integrated into today's high-performance monoplanes, much of what air show
flying is all about today can be traced back to the Pitts Special.
The face of aerobatic flying
changed forever in 1945 when Curtis Pitts built the first aircraft
specifically designed for aerobatics, the Pitts Special S-1. Pitts
envisioned an aircraft that could flout gravity and respond crisply on its
controls, a smaller aircraft than the war-era biplanes that could climb,
roll, and maneuver swiftly. Pitts abandoned the concept of a large radial
engine and designed a swept-wing aircraft powered by a smaller, lighter,
horizontally-opposed engine with a center of gravity that allowed for
tight snap rolls. The resulting Pitts line of aerobatic
aircraft—small (with only a 17-foot (5-meter) wingspan), lightweight, and
extremely agile with a high power-to-weight ratio—soon dominated aerobatic
competitions.

At the induction ceremony in Las Vegas, members of the
audience
who had flown Pitts Specials were invited onstage. It would have been
easier to ask anyone who hadn't flown a Pitts!
In 1990, a group of aerobatic
pilots from all over the world gathered in Florida to help Curtis Pitts
celebrate his birthday. Here's what they had to say about his contribution
to aerobatics:
Curtis didn't invent aerobatics.
He didn't invent biplanes. He didn't invent the concept of small planes
with big engines. He did, however, re-invent all of those factors and
mold them into the image we now know as modern aerobatics. He and his
little airplanes completely rewrote the aerobatic history books and
opened the world of serious aerobatics and pure high performance to the
masses. As a result of his efforts, an individual with dedication and a
yearning for the third dimension could take a roll of drawings and
convert them into a rag and tube ball of lightning that would never fail
to take their breath away.
There's a sticker that you'll
often see on the flight bags and airplanes of aerobatic pilots that
says, "A Pitts is something special." And that doesn’t just refer to the
airplane.
Curtis Pitts left perhaps the biggest mark on
aerobatics and air shows with his innovative airplane designs. He died at
his home in Homestead, Florida in June 2005.