MessageToEagle.com – On October 22, 1797, first recorded parachute jump from one thousand meters (3,200 feet) above Paris, was made by André-Jacques Garnerin.
A balloonist and student of the ballooning pioneer professor Jacques Charles, Garnerin (1769 –1823) was also involved with the flight of hot air balloons, and worked with his brother Jean-Baptiste-Olivier Garnerin (1766–1849) in most of his ballooning activities.
Garnerin was the inventor of the frameless parachute.
Several others had parachuted before him, but he is credited as the first to jump using a parachute without a rigid frame.
In the aeronaut’s jumps, he used a white canvas umbrella-shaped parachute, 23 feet across.
He lifted off in a craft that incorporated his parachute.
On top was a hot-air balloon. At 3,200 feet, he cut off the balloon, his parachute opened and he made a rather wild descent to the ground.
Garnerin died in a construction accident when he was hit by a wooden beam while making a balloon in Paris on 18 August 1823.
MessageToEagle.com