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Art Smith toured in Japan on invitation in 1916. He was offered the princely sum of $10 000 to do a series of exhibition flights there. Japanese newspapers had nig reports on him and even the Crown Prince was coming to see the spectable of Art Smith flying. The tour was to last four months but Smith crashed in Sapporo breaking his plane and his leg. Undaunted he came back next year with a repaired / reconstructed Curtiss and a healed leg again to fulfill the other flights in the japanese contract.
“No longer is Art Smith an insignificant Hoosier boy, a simple citizen of the United States, for he has so to speak become an international figure.
“Ever since he landed at Yokohama he was busy exhibiting his wonderful skill in the mastery of air and machine. Immense crowds thronged to see his matchless art wherever he went; men, women, and children tried to outrival each other in the encomiums of the aviator. Yes, the lords, ladies, and even their majesties, the Emperor and the Empress, themselves graciously condescended to look into the matter. Numberless banquets were held in his honor; priceless medals were given him; and the papers vied with each other to report his movements.
“In Tokio, when a furious wind was raging at a rate of thirty-two meters a second, he was successfully looping the loop. It was a marvelous dash and surely a record breaking feat. He conquered the winds in Japan!”
–
Art Smith in Japan, by Eijiro Takasugi, Ph.D., Tohoku Imperial University, published in
Northwestern Christian Advocate, Volume 64, September 13, 1916