Canon PowerShot S100
ƒ/2
5.2 mm
1/20
1600

A rare and rarified find, hollow and airy to the touch…

This twisted duralumin beam with bolted hinge was part of the Hindenburg’s superstructure, retrieved from the wreckage of the disaster at Lakehurst, New Jersey, 75 years ago. Much of the aircraft was incinerated, and most of duralumin was retained by the Zeppelin Company and sent back to Germany for examination and recycling into military aircraft.

The Hindenburg was the largest aircraft ever built. The disaster shattered public confidence in the Zeppelin, and marked the end of the airship era.

This relic was featured in the 20th century film The Hindenburg.

12 responses to “The Hindenburg Remains”

  1. Here is a size comparison to the largest aircraft, such as the Spruce Goose:
    Size comparison

    and the iconic image of its demise…
    PPP30058022

    From that photo, I always thought it was sparking-distance from the tower…. But that is a structure in the foreground. The Zeppelin burst into flame in the open, 200 feet in the air:
    s_h19_05060105

    It is roughly the size of the Titanic, going through a rapid airborne version of a sinking airship…
    s_h21_82817367

    Gone in 60 seconds… (first flame to total immolation took less than 37 seconds):
    pb-120504-hindenburg-10.photoblog900

    s_h23_82817321

    s_h24_70506088
    (click photo for a 5-second video)

  2. I’ve seen the spruce goose – it was too big to photograph where it is indoors

  3. Wow! What a piece of history!

  4. I keep hearing that airships are going to make a comeback. Cheap to run, land anywhere, could open whole new areas to industry etc. Also very climate friendly, ecological and all that stuff.

  5. Absolutely… Zeppelin NT…. better than Windows NT…

    Do the Dog

    Soaring over the Monterey Peninsula

    more photos.

  6. I like the idea of crossing the Atlantic in a blimp, or traveling over the Amazon jungle at that speed, better than those horrible cruise ships that run aground.

  7. Thank you! Never knew this before. You’re a remarkable storyteller.

  8. People forget just how *big* these lighter than air ships were. Imagine what that must have been like to see those zeppelins flying above cities.

  9. Hey, you took a picture above my house!

  10. the Zeppelin hangers are still there and we had a delivery to one in late 70’s HUGE DOES NOT DESCRIBE the buildings these ships were stored in, a plaque is on the spot where the zep went down, OH THE HUMANITY!!!!!!!! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F54rqDh2mWA

  11. its name was Hindenburg 😉

  12. thanks! fixed now. I got it wrong half the time.

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