The Hindenburg was not a plane; it was an airship, a type of balloon. It was filled with highly combustible Hydrogen instead of inert Helium; so when a static electric charge set of a spark as it was landing in Lakehurst, New Jersey, it exploded and went up in flames in a matter of minutes.
The Hindenburg did not crash, it exploded.
The Hindenburg disaster took place in Lakehurst, New Jersey.
No
No
2 people are still alive
The Hindenburg disaster was the crash of a German zeppelin in 1937 CE. It launched the news industry and ended air travel for several years.
There are only 5 theories. St Elmo's fire (static), sabotage, human error, lightening, an errant spark while docking.
it was named after the late president of Germany, paul von Hindenburg
Hindenburg.
Hindenburg crashed at Lakehurst Naval Air Station, New Jersey.
The Hindenburg could fly as high as 7600 meters. The Hindenburg was lost in a fiery crash on May 6, 1937.
Weather That Changed the World - 2013 Crash of the Hindenburg - 1.1 was released on:USA: 9 June 2013Weather That Changed the World - 2013 Crash of the Hindenburg 1-1 was released on:USA: 9 June 2013
lakehurst naval air station, lakehurst , NJ
Ghost Hunters - 2004 Hindenburg Crash Site 5-26 was released on: USA: 16 December 2009
2 people are still alive
Yes, that is what made it even more tragic
The Hindenburg crashed at the Naval Air Station in Lakehrst, New Jersey, USA.
The Hindenburg disaster was the crash of a German zeppelin in 1937 CE. It launched the news industry and ended air travel for several years.
The Golden Age of Airships began in 1900 with the flight of the LZ1 Luftschiff Zeppelin; it ended in 1937 with the crash of the Hindenburg.
The crash of LZ 129 Hindenburg on 6 May 1937 at the Lakehurst Naval Air Station.
There are only 5 theories. St Elmo's fire (static), sabotage, human error, lightening, an errant spark while docking.