. Grand Day Fète, on Monday, the 24th of July, 1837.'' Robert Cocking was a professional watercolour artist with a keen amateur interest in science. He had seen
André-Jacques Garnerin make the first parachute jump in
England in 1802 (the first modern parachute jump had been carried out in 1785 by
Jean-Pierre Blanchard) and was inspired to develop an improved design after reading
Sir George Cayley's paper
On Aerial Navigation. Cayley's paper, published in 1809–1810, discussed Garnerin's jump at some length. Garnerin had used an umbrella-shaped parachute which had swayed excessively from side-to-side during the descent; Cayley theorised that a cone-shaped parachute would be more stable. Cocking spent many years developing his improved parachute, based on Cayley's design, which consisted of an inverted cone 107 feet (32.61 m) in circumference connected by three hoops. Cocking approached
Charles Green and Edward Spencer, owners of the balloon
Royal Nassau (formerly the
Royal Vauxhall), to allow him an opportunity to test his invention. Despite the fact that Cocking was 61 years old, was not a professional scientist, and had no parachuting experience, the owners of the balloon agreed and advertised the event as the main attraction of a Grand Day Fete at
Vauxhall Gardens. On 24 July 1837, Cocking's parachute was gaily decorated by the Gardens' artist
E. W. Cocks. At 7:35 pm, Cocking ascended hanging below the balloon, which was piloted by Green and Spencer. Cocking was in a basket which hung below the parachute which in turn hung below the basket of the balloon. Cocking had hoped to reach 8,000 feet (2,440 m), but the weight of the balloon coupled with that of the parachute and the three men slowed the ascent; at 5,000 feet (1,500 m) and with the balloon nearly over
Greenwich, Green informed Cocking that he would be unable to rise any higher if the attempt was to be made in daylight. Faced with this information, Cocking released the parachute. ==Crash==