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Lenormand’s parachute, 1784

Lenormand’s parachute, 1784.jpg Veranzio’s parachuteThumbnailsBanked turn on a biplaneVeranzio’s parachuteThumbnailsBanked turn on a biplaneVeranzio’s parachuteThumbnailsBanked turn on a biplaneVeranzio’s parachuteThumbnailsBanked turn on a biplaneVeranzio’s parachuteThumbnailsBanked turn on a biplane

Previous to Lenormand’s experiments, Blanchard, the aëronaut, had dropped small parachutes from his balloon, sometimes carrying animals, but never a human being. For unaccountable reasons the world had to wait fourteen years longer to see a man make the new familiar parachute descent from a balloon. On October 22, 1797, in presence of a large crowd Jacques Garnerin ascended in a closed parachute to a height of 3,000 feet, then cut loose. The people were astonished and appalled; but they soon saw the umbrella-shaped canvas spread open and oscillate in the sky with its human freight. As it was but eight yards in diameter, it descended rapidly and struck the ground with violence, throwing Garnerin from his seat. He escaped with a bruised foot, mounted a horse, and returned to the starting point, where he received a lively ovation.