In the Western world prior to the Sixteenth Century, it was generally 
assumed that the acceleration of a falling body would be proportional to
 its mass — that is, a 10 kg object was expected to accelerate ten times
 faster than a 1 kg object. The ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle
 (384-322 BCE), included this rule in what was perhaps the first book on
 mechanics. It was an immensely popular work among academicians and over
 the centuries it had acquired a certain devotion verging on the 
religious.
          It wasn't until the Italian scientist Galileo Galilei
 (1564-1642) came along that anyone put Aristotle's theories to the 
test. Unlike everyone else up to that point, Galileo actually tried to 
verify his own theories through experimentation and careful observation.
 He then combined the results of these experiments with mathematical 
analysis in a method that was totally new at the time, but is now 
generally recognized as the way science gets done. For the invention of 
this method, Galileo is generally regarded as the world's first 
scientist.
          In a tale that may be apocryphal, Galileo (or an assistant, more likely)
 dropped two objects of unequal mass from the Leaning Tower of Pisa. 
Quite contrary to the teachings of Aristotle, the two objects struck the
 ground simultaneously (or very nearly so). Given the speed at which 
such a fall would occur, it is doubtful that Galileo could have 
extracted much information from this experiment. Most of his 
observations of falling bodies were really of bodies rolling down ramps.
 This slowed things down enough to the point where he was able to 
measure the time intervals with water clocks and his own pulse 
(stopwatches and photogates having not yet been invented). This he 
repeated "a full hundred times" until he had achieved "an accuracy such 
that the deviation between two observations never exceeded one-tenth of a
 pulse beat."
Source: http://physics.info/falling/
 
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