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What Caused The Hindenburg Disaster

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What Caused The Hindenburg Disaster
Disaster Strikes Hindenburg No More

The Hindenburg disaster took place on Thursday, May 6, 1937, as the German passenger airship LZ 129 Hindenburg caught fire and was destroyed.

The source of how the fire started is till today being debated. The occupancy of the aircraft was 36 passengers and an additional 61 crew members . The fatalities of this disaster was totaled at 36 people, which included 13 passengers and 23 crewmen. This unpredictable tragedy sparked fear in people and in turn ending a period of airship popularity.

Hindenburg began its last flight on the third of May 1937. It began its doomed flight in Frankfurt at 7:16 PM and flew over Cologne, the crossing into the Netherlands before passing over English Channel past the mountainous regions of southern England. Reaching the Atlantic Ocean at 2 pm the following day. Hindenburg navigated a northern following across the ocean, cruising over Greenland and crossing the North American coast at Newfoundland. Harsh winds delayed the airship’s travels across the Atlantic, and the Lakehurst arrival, which had been scheduled for 6:00 AM on May 6th, was postponed to 6:00 PM. By noon on sixth of May Hindenburg had reached Boston. At exactly 3 pm Hindenburg was meters over the skyscrapers of Manhattan in New York City.
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Even though being an airship it did not compromise on elegance. The interior of this magnificent piece of ingenuity was complete with all the luxuries that was never again matched in the air. Passengers ate in dining rooms that left people in awe. They were soothed by sounds of li an aluminum piano in a modern lounge. They were then homed in spacious comfortable cabins and could even enjoy some tobacco in the ship’s smoking

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