André-Jacques Garnerin and the feat of the parachuting

André-Jacques Garnerin
Garnerin releases the balloon and descends with the help of a parachute, 1797. Illustration from the late 19th century

André-Jacques Garnerin was a balloonist and the inventor of the frameless parachute.

Garnerin began experiments with early parachutes based on umbrella-shaped devices and carried out the first parachute descent (in the gondola) with a silk parachute on 22 October 1797 at Parc Monceau, Paris (1st Brumaire, Year VI of the Republican calendar). Garnerin’s first parachute resembled a closed umbrella before he ascended, with a pole running down its center and a rope running through a tube in the pole, which connected it to the balloon. Garnerin rode in a basket attached to the bottom of the parachute; at a height of approximately 3,000 feet (1,000 m) he severed the rope that connected his parachute to the balloon. The balloon continued skyward while Garnerin, with his basket and parachute, fell. The basket swung violently during descent, then bumped and scraped when it landed, but Garnerin emerged uninjured. The white canvas[citation needed] parachute was umbrella-shaped and approximately 23 feet (7 m) in diameter.

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