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Cheryl Stearns, current and seventeen time US women's parachuting champion,
is the World Champion of Style and Accuracy Skydiving. She is the only woman and
joins one man who has won the world championship twice. Since winning her first
world championship in 1978 at age 23, Cheryl has proven she is still the world's
best by repeating as champion at the biannual championship 16 years later.
Cheryl Stearns is the most successful competitive skydiver in the world.
Cheryl began skydiving in Scottsdale, Arizona, at age 17, by convincing her
mother to sign for permission and loaning her forty dollars for her first jump.
Her father then tried to encourage her in a new direction by paying for her
flying lessons. Cheryl fell in love with both activities and set her sites on
success in both.
Cheryl continued developing her flying and parachuting while she attended
Scottsdale Community College on a tennis scholarship. In 1975, after graduating
with an Associates in Arts, with highest distinction, Cheryl contacted world
renowned skydiving coach Gene Paul Thacker to see if she could work for him at
his airport and learn competitive parachuting from him. With Thacker's promise
to help her, Cheryl moved to Raeford, North Carolina, with her dog, her
parachute gear, and fifty dollars in her pocket. Between flying and maintaining
planes for Thacker's skydiving center, Cheryl learned the finer points about her
chosen sport from her new coach. Cheryl focused on competition in the classic
events of parachuting style and accuracy. The style event consists of jumping
from an aircraft at 7000 feet and while in freefall, completing a series of six
maneuvers (turns and backloops) as quickly and precisely as possible. The
accuracy competition involves controlling the parachute during landing so that
the skydiver's heel touches the center of a target (currently a 5 centimeter
disk) placed in the landing area.
In 1977, after winning her first national championship and establishing a
world record in accuracy, Cheryl joined the US Army and became the first woman
member of the Golden Knights, the US Army's elite parachute team. She served two
3-year tours with the team, winning many national and international
championships. During her assignments with the Golden Knights, Cheryl won
recognition as the leading performer in her sport and did numerous special
skydiving demonstrations. Her most memorable was parachuting into the grounds of
the Statue of Liberty trailing the American flag for the Statue of Liberty
Celebration.
Cheryl has a total of 29 world records and at one time held four different world
records simultaneously: a feat no other parachutist, man or woman, has matched.
She also holds the Guinness World Record for the most parachute jumps in 24
hours by a woman, 255 jumps.
So far, Cheryl has won a total of 53 first place women's title from the
annual US National and biannual World Championships in Parachuting and scores of
medals from other national and international competitions. Three times Cheryl
has been the overall US Champion for men and women combined. With over 10,000
skydives, the most of any woman in the world, Cheryl has clearly set the
standard in her sport.
Besides her success in skydiving, Cheryl has excelled in the air as a pilot.
After earning her instrument, multi-engine and instructor ratings in Arizona and
gaining experience flying for Raeford Aviation, Cheryl taught flying during her
free time while in the Army. She also found time to earn the degrees of Bachelor
of Science in Aviation Administration (magna cum laude) and Master of
Aeronautical Science from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University's Pop Air Force
Base campus. She subsequently gained experience flying medical evacuation,
teaching and competing in aerobatics, flying and jumping for Air Show America,
and flying for Henson Airlines. In 1986 she was hired by Piedmont Airlines and
currently is a full time pilot for US Air as a co-pilot in the Boeing
737-300/400. She has over 11,000 flying hours and over 15,900 aircraft landings.
Cheryl Stearns has already been awarded the Diplome Leonardo da Vinci, the
world's highest award in aerosports, for her unique achievements in skydiving.
Since she is still competing and winning at the national and world levels, no
one can predict what else she may accomplish. For Cheryl, even the sky is not
the limit!
First woman on the US Army Parachute Team Golden Knights 1974
US Nationals
| Year |
Style |
Accuracy |
Overall |
| 1974 |
17 |
7 |
9 |
| 1975 |
1 |
11 |
7 |
| 1976 |
3 |
2 |
1 |
| 1977 |
3 |
- |
2 |
| 1978 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
| 1979 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
Made a record setting 255 jumps in 24 hours, Lodi CA 1987.
The Making of a World Record |