circa 1932 A number of nations operated airships between the two world wars, including Britain, the United States, Germany, Italy, France, the Soviet Union and
Japan. This period marked the great age of the airship. Before the First World War, pioneers such as the German Zeppelin company had begun passenger services, but the airships constructed in the years following were altogether larger and more famous. Large airships were also experimented with for military purposes, notably the American construction of two airborne aircraft carriers, but their large size made them vulnerable and the idea was dropped. This period also saw the introduction of non-flammable
helium as a lifting gas by the United States, while the more dangerous
hydrogen continued to be used since the United States had the only sources of the gas at that time, and would not export it. In 1919 the British airship
R34 flew a double crossing of the
Atlantic and in 1926 the Italian semi-rigid airship,
Norge was the first aircraft confirmed to fly over the
North Pole. The first American-built rigid airship, the , flew in 1923. The
Shenandoah was the first to use helium, which was in such short supply that the one airship contained most of the world's reserves. in 1933 The US Navy explored the idea of using airships as
airborne aircraft carriers. Whereas the British had experimented with an aircraft "trapeze" on the
R33 many years before, the Americans built hangars into two new airships and even designed specialist airplanes for them. The and were the world's largest airships at the time, with each carrying four
F9C Sparrowhawk fighters in its hangar. Although successful, the idea was not taken further. By the time the Navy started to develop a sound doctrine for using these airships, both had been lost in accidents. More significantly, the seaplane had become more mature and was considered a better investment. The
Empire State Building, then the tallest building in the world, was completed in 1931 with a dirigible mast, in anticipation of passenger airship service. The most famous airships today are the passenger-carrying rigid airships made by the German Zeppelin company, especially the
Graf Zeppelin of 1928 and the
Hindenburg of the year 1936. The
Graf Zeppelin was intended to stimulate interest in passenger airships, and was the largest airship that could be built in the company's existing shed. Its engines ran on
blau gas, similar to
propane, which was stored in large gas bags below the hydrogen cells. Since its density was similar to that of air, it avoided any weight change as fuel was used, and thus the need to vent hydrogen. The
Graf Zeppelin became the first aircraft to fly all the way around the world. Airship operations suffered a series of highly publicised fatal accidents, notably to the British
R101 in 1930 and the German
Hindenburg in 1937. Following the Hindenburg disaster, the age of the great airships was effectively over. ==Aeronautical advances==