Passengers aboard airship ‘Hindenburg’ (LZ-129) during an Atlantic flight on August 11, 1936. (Fox Photos/Getty Images)
The German zeppelin Hindenburg, displaying the German Nazi swastika symbol, is pulled to a nearby hangar in Lakehurst, N.J. on May 9, 1936. The Hindenburg landed at the U.S. Navy field after its record breaking flight for a lighter-than-air craft across the North Atlantic. (AP Photo)
Navy men and others moor the Hindenburg at the Lakehurst Naval Station. (Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis via Getty Images)
The German-built zeppelin Hindenburg, right, floats over the Manhattan skyline on Aug. 8, 1936. The Empire State Building, measuring 1,250 feet in height, can be seen at left. (AP Photo)
The Hindenburg, Germany’s latest and the biggest Zeppelin photographed from an aeroplane, over the English channel near Beachy Head on March 31, 1936. (AP Photo)
A view of some of the crowds of visitors who viewed the Zeppelin Hindenburg in the hanger at Lakehurst, New Jersey, May 10, 1936. (Planet News Archive/SSPL/Getty Images)
The German zeppelin Hindenburg flies over Manhattan on May 6, 1937. A few hours later, the ship burst into flames in an attempt to land at Lakehurst, N.J. (AP Photo)
This May 6, 1937 file photo, taken at almost the split second that the Hindenburg exploded, shows the 804-foot German zeppelin just before the second and third explosions send the ship crashing to the earth over the Lakehurst Naval Air Station in Lakehurst, N.J. The roaring flames silhouette two men, at right atop the mooring mast, dangerously close to the explosions. (AP Photo)
The German-designed and built passenger airship the Hindenburg (LZ-129) catches fire as it attempts to land in Lakehurst, New Jersey, following it’s first cross-ocean flight of the year, May 6, 1937. The lighter-than-air craft had made more than 30 successful cross-ocean trips previously, but the disaster, in which 35 of the 90-odd passengers and crew members died, effectively ended this type of commerical air travel. (Arthur Cofod/Pictures Inc./The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images)
The German zeppelin Hindenburg bursts into flames as it noses toward the mooring post at the Naval Air Station in Lakehurst, N.J. on May 6, 1937. Thirty-five people on board and one ground crew member were killed. (AP Photo/Murray Becker)
In this May 6, 1937 file photo, the German dirigible Hindenburg crashes to earth in flames after exploding at the U.S. Naval Station in Lakehurst, N.J. Only one person is left of the 62 passengers and crew who survived when the Hindenburg burst into flames 80 years ago Saturday, May 6, 2017. Werner Doehner was 8 years old when he boarded the zeppelin with his parents and older siblings after their vacation to Germany in 1937. The 88-year-old now living in Parachute, Colo., tells The Associated Press that the airship pitched as it tried to land in New Jersey and that “suddenly the air was on fire.” (AP Photo/Murray Becker, File)
The German airship ‘Hindenburg’ (LZ-129) in flames after the disaster on its arrival at Lakehurst, New Jersey on May 6, 1937. (Central Press/Getty Images)
The blazing inferno that was the German airship Hindenburg is reduced to ruins as a survivor, lower right hand corner, runs to safety, May 6, 1937, after it exploded on mooring at Lakehurst Naval Air Station in New Jersey. Rescuers, left and center, rush forward to pull other passenger and crew away from the fiery wreckage. (AP Photo)
An aerial view taken on May 7, 1937 of the remnants of the airship Hindenburg after exploding in Lakehurst, New Jersey on May 6, 1937. (AP)
The Hindenburg: A look back – from first flight to blazing infernohttps://www.yahoo.com/news/hindenburg-look-back-first-flight-slideshow-wp-164956412.html
Zeppelin - Wikipedia
齊柏林飛船(Zeppelin)是一種或一系列硬式飛船(Rigid airship)的總稱
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