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Explore the interior of the Hindenburg and the events leading up to the tragic accident of 1937. This video showcases the A ...
Alves, now 89, had already been working as an art director for more than a decade when he was sent galley sheets of a book ...
The moment the Hindenburg suffered the first of three explosions over the Lakehurst naval air station in New Jersey on 6 May 1937. Thirty-six people, including one ground crew, were killed (AP) ...
The Hindenburg crash effectively brought about the end of the commercial airship industry. Werner G. Doehner, the disaster’s last survivor, died in 2019, at age 90.
Of the 97 people aboard Hindenburg, 62 survived and 35 died. Another fatality, a ground crew member, who was positioned underneath Hindenburg as it began docking, died when part of the structure ...
The burning airship rapidly fell 200 feet to the ground. Of the 97 on board, 62 survived. Among the dead were 13 passengers, 22 crew, and a member of the ground crew.
The Hindenburg, at nearly 804 feet in length, disintegrated over the landing field as all of its hydrogen ignited into a conflagration and swallowed the ship. Nevertheless, of the 97 people aboard ...
The Hindenburg, at nearly 804 feet in length, disintegrated over the landing field as all of its hydrogen ignited into a conflagration and swallowed the ship. Nevertheless, of the 97 people aboard ...
The German airship Hindenburg, known for crashing into a New Jersey township in May 1937, was adorned with a swastika symbol, the logo of the German Nazi Party.