André-Jacques Garnerin (31 January 1769 – 18 August 1823) was a balloonist and the inventor of the frameless parachute. He was appointed Official Aeronaut of France.
Garnerin was born in Paris. He was captured by British troops during the first phase of the Napoleonic Wars 1792–1797, turned over to the Austrians and held as prisoner in Buda in Hungary for three years.
Garnerin, a student of the ballooning pioneer professor Jacques Charles, was 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.
Eventually he was appointed Official Aeronaut of France.
Garnerin regularly staged tests and demonstrations at Parc
Monceau, Paris from 1797, but these became a cause célèbre when he announced in 1798 that his next
flight would include a woman as a passenger. Although the public and
press were in favour, he was forced to appear in front of officials of
the Central Bureau of Police to justify his project. They were concerned
about the effect that reduced air pressure might have on the organs of
the delicate female body and loss of consciousness, plus the moral
implications of flying in such close proximity. Unsatisfied with
Garnerin's responses, the police issued an injunction against him,
forbidding the ascent on the grounds that the young woman was committing
herself to the venture without any idea of the possible outcome. After
further consultation with both the Minister of the Interior and the
Minister of the Police the injunction was overturned on the grounds that
"there was no more scandal in seeing two people of different sexes
ascend in a balloon than it is to see them jump into a carriage." They
also agreed that the decision of the woman showed proof of her
confidence in the experiment and a degree of personal intrepidity.
Citoyenne Henri had already been chosen, so
when the ban was lifted Garnerin was ready to proceed. He advertised the
ascent in the L'Ami des Lois (a Parisian newspaper published
from 1795–1798) :
The young citoyenne who will accompany me is delighted to see the day approach for the journey. I shall ascend with her from the Parc Monceau, some time during the next ten days.You may also see THE DAY THE FIRST PARACHUTE JUMPED
On 8 July 1798 a large number of spectators gathered in the Parc
Monceau to witness the ascent. By all accounts Citoyenne Henri was
young and beautiful, and she and Garnerin took several turns around the
park to the applause of the crowd before she was assisted into the
basket of the balloon by the astronomer,
Jérôme Lalande. The balloon trip passed
without incident and the journey ended at Goussainville about 30 kilometres
(19 mi) to the north of Paris.
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
parachute was umbrella-shaped and approximately 23 feet (7 m) in
diameter.
His student Jeanne Geneviève Labrosse, who
later became his wife, was both a balloonist and the first female
parachutist. Labrosse first flew on 10 November 1798, one of the
earliest women to fly in a balloon, and on 12 October 1799 Labrosse was
the first woman to parachute, from an altitude of 900 meters.
Garnerin died in a construction accident when he was hit by a
beam while making a balloon in Paris on 18 August 1823.
Garnerin's first parachute jump was commemorated by Google in a
Google Doodle on October 22, 2013.
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