BURLINGTON, VA. (THECOUNT) — Jake Burton Carpenter, founder of Burton Snowboards, has passed away after a fight with cancer, according to TMZ Thursday. He was 65.

Carpenter, a snowboarding pioneer, died after battling cancer, the company announced. He had fought testicular cancer in 2011. On Nov. 9 he said the cancer had returned.

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The news of Carpernter’s death was revealed to Burton employees in an email on Thursday … with co-CEO John Lacy saying, “It is with a very heavy heart that I share the news that Jake passed away peacefully last night surrounded by his family and loved ones as a result of complications from recurring cancer,” reports TMZ.

Carpenter built his very first snowboard in a barn in Vermont in 1977 … and things exploded from there. The sport became massive and now you can’t go to a mountain anywhere in the world without seeing people shredding on a Burton board.

“He was our founder, the soul of snowboarding, the one who gave us the sport we all love so much.”

Lacy added, “This all happened very sudden, and it’s a tremendous loss for his family, his friends and all of you. We will share more details about plans to celebrate Jake’s life soon.”

“It’s the same tumor as the first time around,” Carpenter said at the time … “We just never got rid of it all. A bit of it hung out in my lymph nodes and got back into business.”

Carpenter added, “As much as I dread what is facing me, it’s easier to deal with when you know that you have a family that will carry on. I feel the same way about my company, my friends and our sport,” reports TMZ.

He noted the company was in “good hands, which is an amazing feeling when entering this zone of uncertainty.”

Carpenter is survived by his wife and 3 sons.

Geo quick facts: Burlington is a city in northwestern Vermont, on the eastern shore of Lake Champlain, south of the Canadian border. Downtown, shops and restaurants line pedestrianized Church Street Marketplace. North of downtown, the Ethan Allen Homestead Museum is a former home of the Revolutionary War hero. The vast Shelburne Museum, south of the city, houses American folk and decorative art in a collection of historic buildings – wikipedia.