The first parachute jump in Canada was made in 1912, by an American, in Vancouver. In 1919, Frank Ellis became the first Canadian to jump in Canada, when he descended from a Jenny aircraft over Lake Erie; the Frank Ellis Trophy commemorates this event. After WWII, clubs and competitions were organized in Canada. The oldest surviving club is the St Catharines Parachuting Club, formed in 1948. The Parachute Club of Canada was formed in 1956, for the control and advancement of Canadian sport parachuting; this club merged with the Western Canada Parachute Club in 1962, and in 1967 it was re-named the Canadian Sport Parachuting Association. In 1967, the CSPA initiated a system to train instructors.
The Canadian National Parachuting Team has ranked among the top 10 countries in international competition since 1960. S.F. Wykeham-Martin became the first Canadian to win a medal in world competition, placing 2nd in individual accuracy in 1966; in that same year, the Canadian men's team placed 2nd in the group precision event, and 3rd overall at the World Championships. In 1976 Pierre Forand won the silver medal in the men's absolute overall category, missing the world championship by 1/500th of a second. Canadian teams dominated parachuting in the late 1970s, winning the world overall relative-work (2 or more parachutists maneuvering together during free-fall) championships in 1977 and 1979. They placed 2nd overall in 1981, and won gold (8-way) in 1983 and 1984, silver (8-way) in 1984 and silver (4-way) and bronze (8-way) in 1985. In 1990 and 1994, the Canadian team placed 3rd in CF Rotation, and, in 1998, 3rd in CF Sequential. In 1996, 50 people established the largest Canadian freefall formation, and in 1998, 18 created the largest canopy formation.
Canadian women have also performed well in international jumping competitions. In 1970, Carol Brand became the first Canadian female parachutist to win a medal in world competition, when she placed 3rd overall. Kathy Cox won the women's world accuracy championship in 1980, and in 1984 was awarded the Order of Canada for her achievements in parachuting. The Canadian women's team won the silver medal in team accuracy at the 1982 world championships. In 1987 Bev Watson won the World Para-ski Overall competition, and in 1988 Lisa Olsen won the World Individual Accuracy event.
Five licences of proficiency are awarded, and competition jumping (in both 4- and 8-person teams) is also organized by the CSPA. The G.R. Masterson Trophy is the premier parachuting award in Canada.
Author BARBARA SCHRODT
Links to Other Sites
Canadian Sport Parachuting Association
The Canadian Sport Parachuting Association (CSPA), through affiliation with the Aero Club of Canada (ACC), is Canada's representative to the Federation Aeronautique Internationale (FAI), and is thereby the official sport organization for sport parachuting in Canada.

That hockey is “our game” is incontestable. We invented it. We dominated it for so long and to such a degree that we could cobble together teams of amateurs, servicemen and semi-pros and beat the best the rest of the world had to offer...
INSIDE TCE
