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  2. James Floyd Smith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Floyd_Smith

    Smith also invented the “Floyd Smith Safety Seat” for Switlik (U.S. Patent No. 1,779,338). His Safety Seat had an attached parachute and could be dropped through the bottom of an airplane's fuselage in an emergency. [3] In 1930, the family was living in Morrisville, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and Floyd worked as an engineer. [5]

  3. Charles Broadwick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Broadwick

    Charles Broadwick (born John Murray, 1870s–1943) was an American pioneering parachutist and inventor. An executive director of the U.S. Parachute Association, Ed Scott, said "just about all modern parachute systems" use ideas Broadwick developed: "an integrated, form-fitting harness and container system nestled on the back."

  4. Parachute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parachute

    A parachute is usually made of a light, strong fabric. Early parachutes were made of silk. The most common fabric today is nylon. A parachute's canopy is typically dome-shaped, but some are rectangles, inverted domes, and other shapes. A variety of loads are attached to parachutes, including people, food, equipment, space capsules, and bombs.

  5. Baby Ruth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baby_Ruth

    The Baby Ruth sign at Wrigley Field in Chicago. To promote the candy, company founder Otto Schnering chartered a plane in 1923 to drop thousands of Baby Ruth bars, each with its own miniature parachute, over the city of Pittsburgh. [5] [6] Thereafter, Schnering performed the parachute drops in various cities in over forty states. [5]

  6. Albert Berry (parachutist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Berry_(parachutist)

    Albert Berry (born March 1, 1878, date of death unknown) [citation needed] was one of two people credited as the first person to make a successful parachute jump from a powered airplane. Berry made his pioneering jump on March 1, 1912, in St. Louis, Missouri, leaping from a Benoist pusher biplane. [1] [2] [3]

  7. Stanley Switlik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanley_Switlik

    Stanley Switlik (December 4, 1890 – March 4, 1981) was a parachute pioneer. Born in Galicia , now part of Poland , he immigrated to the United States at the age of 16. [ 1 ] Originally, his company made heavy sewn items such as golf bags and mailbags.

  8. DB Cooper’s infamous parachute may have just been found ...

    www.aol.com/news/d-b-cooper-infamous-parachute...

    The 50-year-old cold case of D.B. Cooper may have seen a new development after an amateur sleuth claims to have found the parachute used by the infamous, yet still unidentified plane hijacker.

  9. Tiny Broadwick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiny_Broadwick

    Broadwick ready to drop from a Martin T airplane piloted by Glenn Martin.. Georgia Ann "Tiny" Thompson Broadwick (April 8, 1893 in Oxford, North Carolina – August 25, 1978 in Long Beach, California), or Georgia Broadwick, previously known as Georgia Jacobs, and later known as Georgia Brown, was an American pioneering parachutist and the inventor of the ripcord. [1]