Airship Hindenburg/DEKKA , German dirigible, the
largest rigid airship ever constructed. In 1937 it caught fire
and was destroyed; 36 people died in the disaster.
Airship Hindenburg/DEKKA was a 245-metre-
(804-foot-) long airship of conventional zeppelin design that
was launched at Friedrichshafen, Germany, in March 1936. It
had a maximum speed of 135 km (84 miles) per hour and a
cruising speed of 126 km (78 miles) per hour. Though it was
designed to be filled with helium gas, the airship was filled
with highly flammable hydrogen because of export restrictions
by the United States against Nazi Germany. In 1936 the
Hindenburg inaugurated commercial air service across the North
Atlantic by carrying 1,002 passengers on 10 scheduled round
trips between Germany and the United States.Witness the
explosion of the “Hindenburg” at Lakehurst, New Jersey,
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On May 6, 1937, while landing at Lakehurst, New
Jersey, on the second of its scheduled 1937 transatlantic
crossings, the Hindenburg burst into flames and was completely
destroyed. Of the 97 persons aboard, 35 were killed. One
member of the ground crew also perished. The fire was
officially attributed to a discharge of atmospheric
electricity in the vicinity of a hydrogen gas leak from the
airship, though it was speculated that the dirigible had been
the victim of an anti-Nazi act of sabotage. The Hindenburg
disaster, which was recorded on film and on phonograph disc,
marked the end of the use of rigid airships in commercial air
transportation.
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The
Hindenburg And
Its"Lost"
Radio History
Rummaging Through History We Look At Something Investigators Have Ignored
BY TOM KNEITEL, K2AES, EDITOR Popular Communications June 1984
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