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he veered off to fly over some town. He dressed in an ordinary business suit and flew without goggles or gloves, carrying a suitcase with clean clothing, a few tools and some extra spark plugs. Great crowds greeted him all along the way and he was headline new everywhere. The consistent regularity of his day-after-day flying amply proved his remarkable flying ability and thorough understanding of the limitations of his plane. Considering the frailty of the machines of that day, and the utter lack of service facilities along the route, it was indeed a striking achievement. On the flight he carried a message from the St. Louis Post Dispatch to the New York World. It is reported that Mr. Evans presented the prize award to Atwood at the Knickerbocker Hotel in New York on August 25th. Totaling his 1911 cross-country jaunts after this trip, Atwood had covered 2,950 miles since learning to fly.
 Following this, Atwood returned to Boston where he was a contestant in the Harvard-Boston Aviation Meet which was held August 26th to September 6th. Flying there were Claude Grahame-White, Tom Sopwith, Earl Ovington, Arthur Stone, Lincoln Beachey, Eugene Ely, Frank Coffyn, Howard Gill and George Beatty. All Boston honored Atwood on August 28th and it was proclaimed "Atwood Day." During the Meet Atwood flew to Medford, Massachusetts, and returned carrying his father. After this event Atwood returned to Hempstead, Long Island, New York, and flew form there to give an exhibition at Riverhead, Long Island, on September 21st.
 Atwood talked of entering the Hearst Transcontinental Race that fall, but evidently his plans did not work out. September 26th and 28th he flew at the Stark County Fair, Canton, Ohio, with Brookins, Drew, Ely, and Seligman. It was a good event and passengers were carried. On October 3rd he flew at the Brockton Fair, Brockton, Massachusetts, with Beachey and on October 14th was at New Bedford, Massachusetts, he flew to Middleboro, Massachusetts, carrying E.C. Cotton of Lynn. At Middleboro he made three flights in a rainstorm during an "Atwood Day" celebration.