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The
ancient Chinese and Leonardo da Vinci are both credited
with conceiving the idea of a parachute but it was in France
in the 18th century that the first parachutes were made
and used.
In 1797 the Frenchman, Andre Jacques
Garnerin made the first parachute drop from an aircraft
(a gas filled balloon) using a basket under an open parachute
which was made of silk and stiffened with supporting poles.
The next development was the invention of the limp parachute
which had no stiffening to hold it open and a trapeze bar
instead of a basket; the first limp parachute descent was
made in 1897 by an American, Tom Baldwin.
Another American, Leslie Irvin,
made the first ever international free-fall parachute jump
near Dayton, Ohio in 1919 using his own hand operated chute,
a design which revolutionized parachuting and gave birth
to a new sport.
Parachutists from the earliest days,
along with the balloonists and early aviators, formed part
of aerial circuses. The development of aviation and parachuting
between the wars still carried a barnstorming
image and despite attempts in the 1930s parachuting was
not accepted by the Federation
Aeronautique Internationale - the World Air Sports
Federation - as an aeronautical sport until the 1950s.
These early sport parachutists used
ex-military parachute equipment, experimenting with the
aerodynamics of the parachutes by cutting holes in them
to improve the steering and flight. Gradually, as competition
became fiercer parachutes were developed for sport use.
Today, whether a first time student
or a top competitor, the parachute you use has been
designed for that use within the sport.
The first World Championships were held in Bled, Yugoslavia
in 1951; the 20th World Parachuting Championships were held
there in 1990. Today, parachuting forms the largest internationally
represented aeronautical sport within the FAI.
For more information please visit "The
World of Parachutes, Parachuting and Parachutists"
article.
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