Pack Man
Charles Broadwick invented a new way of falling.
- By Lisa Ritter
- Air & Space magazine, May 2010
Glenn Martin (standing). By 1913 Martin was taking credit for Broadwick’s invention, and the following year he patented it. Here, he and Tiny watch Broadwick stitch up the canopy of a parachute.
Library Of Congress
(Page 5 of 5)
In 1942, he was admitted to the hospital, and the following year he died of heart disease. He did not die a rich man, or a celebrated one, and he seems to have died alone—family ties long broken, no pretty young companion by his side.
Forgotten for decades, Tiny found renewed fame in old age. In 1964, she donated an original Broadwick coatpack to the Smithsonian Institution. Due to its fragile condition, it is now kept in a climate-controlled storage unit in Suitland, Maryland. The other two existing coatpacks reside in North Carolina: one at the state’s Museum of History in Raleigh, the other with Tiny’s family. Credited with more than 1,100 jumps, Tiny died in 1978.
How are Broadwick’s contributions remembered today? Peter Hearn, author of five books on parachuting history, describes Broadwick as “one of those leading pioneers who used practical experience and technical expertise, rather than scientific qualification, to advance the development of a life-saving parachute.” Hearn also believes Broadwick deserves some credit for pioneering static-line chute deployment.
The U.S. Parachute Association’s executive director, Ed Scott, says that “just about all modern parachute systems” retain Broadwick’s chief innovation: “an integrated, form-fitting harness and container system nestled on the back.” Static-line deployment is still used by some novices making their first jumps, to ensure that the chute will open, but experienced parachutists today deploy a folded pilot chute that inflates and then extracts the main canopy.
As for the written record, Tiny has been memorialized in numerous books and magazines, but Charles’ name is fading. You’ll see a few parachute patents citing a Broadwick design, and aviation histories will briefly mention his invention of the backpack parachute. But what you won’t find in any of those documents is the complex tale of the man who spent a lifetime perfecting a life preserver of the air.
Lisa Ritter became interested in Charles Broadwick when she discovered that he boarded with her great, great aunt in San Francisco in the 1920s. She is currently writing a book about him.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5





Comments (3)
I thank Lisa Ritter for this leading article. She pays homage to an unrecognized man whose invention saved numerous lives.
Posted by Yves Bosch on March 17,2010 | 04:56 AM
<I>Static-line deployment is still used by some novices making their first jumps, to ensure that the chute will open, but experienced parachutists today deploy a folded pilot chute that inflates and then extracts the main canopy.</i>
You'll also find those "novices" of the US Army 82nd Airborne Division using static lines on a regular basis. Static lines are used on all Army parachutes except those used for HALO/HAHO operations. THE WRITER REPLIES: The language regarding static-line deployment by novices referred to recreational parachuting. It is true that experienced Army paratroopers utilize static-line deployment. According to Army aerospace engineer G. Mark Whiteman, project lead for the new T-11 mass tactical personnel parachute, static-line deployment is used to drop airborne soldiers in large numbers from aircraft at low altitudes (500-1,000 ft.).
Posted by Larry Jacks on March 24,2010 | 12:29 PM
What an interesting and informative article. I can hardly wait for the book.
Tiny was a Venice, CA. girl and we are proud of her part in early aviation.
Elayne Alexander, author, historian
Venice Heritage Foundation
Posted by Erika Elayne Alexander on July 20,2010 | 10:45 AM