Posted
on May 6, 2014
They
were called airships...
...dirigibles...
...Zeppelins...
...even
blimps!
These
airships have giant envelopes (or balloons) filled with hydrogen or
helium, which are lighter than air and which cause the entire ship to
rise into the sky. Unlike hot air balloons, the airships have engines
that propel them through the sky.
Airships
traveled majestically across the sky and over the Atlantic Ocean for
more than 30 years. By the 1930s, they were making regular runs
across the Atlantic, traveling round trip from Germany to the U.S.
and Brazil. Airships could carry far more passengers than could the
airplanes of the day, and although they were slow by modern air
flight standards, they were faster than ships traveling on the water.
This is an actual photo of the dining car of the Hindenburg. |
They
were posh, too. By the 1930s, Zeppelins featured private cabins and
observation decks. Of course there were dining rooms, but there were
also passenger lounges, writing rooms, and smoking lounges.
Crossing the ocean via the Hindenburg, “Queen of the Airships,” was THE most elegant way to travel of its time.
Crossing the ocean via the Hindenburg, “Queen of the Airships,” was THE most elegant way to travel of its time.
(Of
course, they said that about the Titanic, too, didn't they?)
The
Golden Age of Airships is considered to be from July 2, 1900, until
this date in 1937. Of course there have been blimps and Zeppelins
since May 6, 1937—there are some still! But the popularity of this
form of travel came crashing down...
...when the Hindenburg came crashing down.
What
happened?
On
May 6, 1937, the Hindenburg had made it safely across the
Atlantic and was about to dock with its mooring mast at an air
station in New Jersey.
But
then a spark of static electricity started a small fire on the
Hindenburg—and hydrogen is VERY flammable!— and there were
16 huge bags full of hydrogen filling the “envelope” of the
airship. In little more than a second, the small fire became a big fire, and in less than a minute, the ship was destroyed.
The
worst air disaster of its time, the fiery crash killed 13 passengers,
22 crew members, and 1 person on the ground. Still, more than half of
the people aboard the Hindenburg somehow survived – and that seems
more surprising to me than the death toll!
But,
just like that, the industry airship travel was pretty much over!
Does
that seem strange to you?
There
had been a few other airship accidents before the Hindenburg. And
there have been and continue to be accidents with airplanes and
automobiles—including the recent tragic disappearance of a
Malaysian airplane and the 239 people aboard—and we still fly on
planes and ride in cars. Why would this one accident and 36 deaths
spell the end of the entire industry?
I
think it may be because people were not used to seeing disasters on
film yet. The Hindenburg was flown during the first half
century of motion-picture history, and television broadcasting had
not yet begun. People hadn't seen the sorts of things I've seen over
and over: the Kennedy assassination, the Challenger space
shuttle disaster, the collapse of the World Trade Center on 9/11.
It
just so happened that this journey of the Hindenburg was the
first of the season, and quite a few journalists were on hand to
cover the event. There were five newsreel cameras with their
operators and at least one spectator with a movie camera, all ready
to film what they assumed would be the safe landing of the airship
and the happy debarkation of the passengers. When the Hindenburg
burst into flames, none of the cameras happened to be running—but
the camera operators hurriedly turned them on and captured the
horrifying event. Soon the newsreel of the disaster was being viewed
in movie theaters all over the world. Also, radio broadcaster Herbert
Morrison's horrified reaction to the disaster was aired and listened
to by equally horror-struck citizens.
It's
apparently one thing to hear that there had been an accident and that
people had died – and it's an entirely different thing to actually
see what the disaster looked like!
Why
on earth did the Hindenburg use hydrogen?
Some
people think that scientists of the early 1900s just didn't know that
hydrogen was so flammable, and that it would be much safer to use
helium, which is incredibly stable and doesn't burn.
But
scientists did know all of that. The engineers who were crafting the
airships wanted to use helium, and they designed the Hindenburg
to use helium.
However, helium is rare and very expensive to produce, whereas hydrogen is extremely
common and therefore much cheaper. The U.S. was one of the few places
in the world that had quite a bit of helium—and the Americans refused to
sell it to Germany, probably because the two nations had so recently
fought against each other in World War I. So the engineers had to
redesign the airship to use hyrdrogen.
To
learn more about airships in general, check out this earlier post.
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on this date:
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