Harry Nelson Atwood (November 15, 1883 – July 14, 1967) was an American engineer and inventor known for pioneering work in the early days of aviation, including setting long-distance flying records and delivering the first delivery of air mail in New England.

Harry N. Atwood
Atwood circa 1913
Born(1883-11-15)November 15, 1883
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedJuly 14, 1967(1967-07-14) (aged 83)
Resting placeHanging Dog Baptist Church Cemetery, Murphy, North Carolina
EducationWright Flying School
Spouses
Sarah Jenkins
(divorced)
Ruth Satterthwaite
(m. 1914; died 1920)
Helen Satterthwaite
(divorced)
Mary Dalton
(died 1930)
Nellie Pickens
(date missing)
Children7

Early life

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Atwood was born on November 15, 1883, in Roxbury, Boston, Massachusetts.

He trained at the Wright Flying School at Huffman Prairie, near Dayton, Ohio, with fellow students Thomas D. Milling, Calbraith Perry Rodgers and Henry H. Arnold. Within three months of his first lesson he flew a record-breaking 576 miles (927 km) from Boston to Washington, D.C., and on July 14, 1911, landed on the White House lawn.[1][2][3] A prize of $10,000 was offered to Atwood to fly between Chicago and Milwaukee on August 10.[4] Between August 14, 1911, and August 25, 1911, he flew 1,256 miles (2,021 km) from St. Louis to New York City, making 11 stops and spending 28 hours 31 minutes in the air.[5][6] Atwood funded his flying activities with the sale of two different electric meter designs to General Electric.[7]

Aviation career

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Atwood Leaving Toledo, Ohio on August 17, 1911

Straight out of flight school in May 1911, Atwood became the chief flight instructor for William Starling Burgess whose Burgess Company built a variety of airplanes, including licensed Wright aircraft between 1911 and 1913.[7] In 1912, Atwood signed with the General Aviation Corporation for three years. The company purchased Franklin Park race track in Saugus, Massachusetts, and converted it into an airfield, which they named after Atwood.[7] Atwood served as the chief instructor of the company's flight instruction school there from the time it opened until he quit on June 10, 1912, because he could make more money in exhibition flights and because he was disenchanted with fellow instructor Arch Freeman.[8] On May 31, 1912, Atwood made the first airmail delivery in New England. He flew about five miles (8 km) from Atwood Park to the Lynn Common in Lynn, Massachusetts where he dropped a sack of mail from the plane. The sack was then retrieved by a Lynn postal employee and driven to the post office.[9]

Plastic planes

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Harry Atwood was also a pioneer the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and other authorities called "The Father of Plastic Planes." He introduced a somewhat revolutionary method of constructing a plane by molding wood veneers treated with cellulose acetate. He began working on his in 1912 when searching for aircraft materials that were cheap and abundant, possessed essential strength-to-weight requirements, and lend themselves to mass production of the larger aircraft assemblies such as complete wings and hole fuselages, as an integral one-piece structure.

The monocoque, or single shell, fuselage was one of his great hopes. The general idea of his thinking was a practice used by the ancient Egyptians. Skilled cabinet makers employed plywood and glue which produced a light, strong, and durable wood by taking two thin flat panels of wood, laying the grain of each sheet at right angles to each other, and then sticking them together with a bonding agent. Atwood experimented with wood processed in a similar manner forming the wood into complex shapes using molds and mandrels. The plane he successfully completed and flew in 1912 used this technique, but it failed in one important respect. The strongest albumen glue of the time was used as the bonding agent but did not hold up well in weather and came apart in the rain.

Eight years later, Atwood unveiled his second plastic plane. Great improvements had been made in albumen glues such as the waterproof albumen glue made by Henry L. Haskell, but there were still bonding problems. He and his followers of this technique for aircraft manufacturing felt that a plastic or synthetic resin would solve the bonding problems. Others continued Atwood's vision which led to improvements in glue's and molding. The success of the Virginius E Clark's Duramold process and Gene Vidal's Weldwood process, and Timm Aircraft's Aeromold process.[10]

Personal life

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Atwood was married five times. His first marriage was to Sarah Jenkins of Lynn, Massachusetts. The union resulted in two children: Edgar, who died at the age of 3 days, and Bethany. The couple later divorced.

On March 2, 1914, Atwood married Ruth Satterthwaite in a courthouse ceremony in her hometown of Reading, Pennsylvania. The couple had three children, Katrina, Gene, and Ruth. Atwood and his wife remained wed until she died in October 1920 at the age of 27.

His third wife, Helen Satterthwaite, was the widow of Ruth's brother. They were married for 90 days before divorcing. His fourth wife, Mary Dalton died shortly after giving birth to their son, Harry, Jr., in 1930. Harry, Jr. was raised by a minister and his wife. His fifth wife was his housekeeper Nellie Pickens. They had one daughter, Nelda Stiles.[7] Atwood died on July 14, 1967, in Murphy, North Carolina, at age 83.[11][12]

References

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  1. ^ "Taft Greets Atwood after Rainy Flight", The New York Times, July 15, 1911
  2. ^ John Carver Edwards, Orville's Aviators: Outstanding Alumni of the Wright Flying School, 1910–1916 (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2009), 172.
  3. ^ "ATWOOD AT CAPITAL; WINS THE TIMES CUP: Flies to Army Aviation Field, Completing 568-Mile Air Journey from Boston. MAY NOT REACH WHITE HOUSE Hamilton Won't Risk His Machine Further and Atwood Wrecks Similar One in Government Test. ATWOOD AT CAPITAL; WINS THE TIMES CUP". New York Times. July 12, 1911. p. 1. ProQuest 97157668.
  4. ^ Aero & Hydro. August 5, 1911. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  5. ^ "Atwood Ends Record Air Trip. Lands Here 1,265 Miles from St. Louis, Beating Best Previous Flight by 101 Miles" (PDF). The New York Times. August 26, 1911. Retrieved 2012-10-11. Harry N. Atwood, the young Boston aviator, landed at Governors Island at 2:38 yesterday afternoon, at the end of the greatest cross-country flight in the history of ...
  6. ^ Daniel, Clifton, ed., Chronicle of the 20th Century, Mount Kisco, New York: Chronicle Publications, 1987, ISBN 0-942191-01-3, p. 153.
  7. ^ a b c d Howard Mansfield (1999). Skylark: The Life, Lies, and Inventions of Harry Atwood. Lebanon, New Hampshire: University Press of New England. ISBN 978-0874518917.
  8. ^ Edwards, John Carver (2009). Orville's Aviators: Outstanding Alumni of the Wright Flying School, 1910–1916. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company. p. 63. ISBN 978-0786442270.
  9. ^ "Atwood as Aerial Mail Man". Boston Evening Transcript. May 31, 1912. Retrieved 2011-03-06.
  10. ^ World Progress: The Standard Quarterly Review, Vol. X, First Quarter, April 1942, No. 1, The Standard Education Society, Chicago, pp. 64–65.
  11. ^ "Pioneer Pilot Is Dead At 83". Ocala Star-Banner. Associated Press. July 16, 1967. Retrieved 19 August 2012. The man thought to be the last of the pioneer pilots of the Wright brothers flying machines has died at the age of 83. Harry Nelson Atwood, who held several flight records set in the first part of this century, died Friday in a hospital near Murphy. ...
  12. ^ "Harry N. Atwood, Early Aviator, 83. First Man to Fly Over New York City, in 1911, Dies". The New York Times. Associated Press. July 15, 1967. Retrieved 2012-09-20. Harry Nelson Atwood, who set several flying records in the early nineteen-hundreds, died today. He was 83 years old.
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