Pioneer Jerry Bourquin Passes Away

Published on Wednesday, February 3, 2021

Pioneer Jerry Bourquin Passes Away

Pioneering Skydiver Gerald “Jerry” Bourquin, D-22, passed away on January 21 at 87 years of age. He had been a skydiver for more than 50 years. Bourquin joined the U.S. Army in 1951 and earned his airborne jump wings in 1957. In 1960, Bourquin joined the Strategic Army Corps (STRAC) Parachute Team, the forerunner of today’s U.S. Army Golden Knights. Bourquin served on the team until 1964 and was the competition team leader from 1961-1964. In 1962, Bourquin won the U.S. National Style Championship and took second overall at Nationals in 1962 and 1964.  

Bourquin was the second person to earn the Gold Wings (now called the 1,000-Jump Wings) from the Parachute Club of America, USPA’s predecessor organization. Amassing more than 4,000 skydives overall, he jumped well into his 80s and was a member of the Jumpers Over Eighty Society. In 2014, he was inducted into the International Skydiving Hall of Fame.  

Comments (0)Number of views (28799)

Author: USPA Staff

Categories: Homepage, People, Industry News

Tags: February 2021

Print
 

 

 
Photo by David Cherry

At the USPA National Championships of 4-Way Formation Skydiving at Skydive Arizona in Eloy, Ranch TNT competes in the open class and earns selection to the U.S. Parachute Team for the female 4-way division at the world championships.

Skydive Store

 

Stolen Gear

Normalizing Excellence
Features | Jan 08, 2026

Normalizing Excellence

Kyle Taylor D-31575
Profiles | Jan 01, 2026

Kyle Taylor D-31575

AXIS

Safety Check: Dear Santa
Safety Check | Dec 19, 2025

Safety Check: Dear Santa

The Sky Chooses—Survival Psychology in Skydiving
Features | Dec 15, 2025

The Sky Chooses—Survival Psychology in Skydiving

AXIS

Jumpers Celebrate 50 Years of Friendship
People | Dec 12, 2025

Jumpers Celebrate 50 Years of Friendship

Squirrel

1345678910Last