Launching and trial flights Four years after construction began in 1932,
Hindenburg made its
maiden test flight from the Zeppelin
dockyards at
Friedrichshafen on March 4, 1936, with 87 passengers and crew aboard. These included the Zeppelin Company chairman,
Dr. Hugo Eckener, as commander, former
World War I Zeppelin commander Lt. Col. Joachim Breithaupt representing the German Air Ministry, the Zeppelin Company's eight airship captains, 47 other crew members, and 30 dockyard employees who flew as passengers.
Harold G. Dick was the only non-Luftschiffbau representative aboard. Although the name
Hindenburg had been quietly selected by Eckener over a year earlier, only the airship's formal registration number (D-LZ129) and the five
Olympic rings (promoting the
1936 Summer Olympics to be held in Berlin that August) were displayed on the hull during its trial flights. As the airship passed over
Munich on its second trial flight the next afternoon, the city's Lord Mayor,
Karl Fiehler, asked Eckener by radio the LZ129's name, to which he replied "
Hindenburg". On March 23,
Hindenburg made its first passenger and mail flight, carrying 80 reporters from Friedrichshafen to
Löwenthal. The ship flew over
Lake Constance with
Graf Zeppelin. (modern recreation) The name
Hindenburg lettered in high red
Fraktur script (designed by Berlin advertiser Georg Wagner) was added to its hull three weeks later before the on March 26. No formal naming ceremony for the airship was ever held. The airship was operated commercially by the , which had been established by
Hermann Göring in March 1935 to increase Nazi influence over airship operations. The DZR was jointly owned by the (the airship's builder), the
Reichsluftfahrtministerium (German Air Ministry), and (Germany's national airline at that time), and also operated the during its last two years of commercial service to South America from 1935 to 1937.
Hindenburg and its sister ship, the (launched in September 1938), were the only two airships ever purpose-built for regular commercial transatlantic passenger operations, although the latter never entered passenger service before being scrapped in 1940. After a total of six flights made over a three-week period from the Zeppelin dockyards where the airship had been built,
Hindenburg was draftedover Hugo Eckener's objectionsfor a formal public debut in a Nazi Party propaganda flight around Germany (, ) made jointly with the from March 26 to 29. This was to be followed by its first commercial passenger flight, a four-day transatlantic voyage to
Rio de Janeiro that departed from the
Friedrichshafen Airport in nearby Löwenthal on March 31. After again departing from Löwenthal on 6 May on its first of ten round trips to North America made in 1936, all
Hindenburgs subsequent transatlantic flights to both North and South America originated at the airport at
Frankfurt am Main. ====== Although designed and built for commercial transatlantic passenger, air freight, and mail service, at the behest of the
Reich Ministry for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda ( or ),
Hindenburg was first pressed into use by the Air Ministry (its DLZ co-operator) as a vehicle for the delivery of Nazi propaganda. On March 7, 1936, ground forces of the
German Reich had entered and occupied the
Rhineland, a region bordering
France, which had been designated in the 1919
Treaty of Versailles as a
de-militarized zone established to provide a buffer between Germany and that neighboring country. In order to justify its
remilitarization—which was also a violation of the 1925
Locarno Pact—a
post hoc referendum was quickly called by Hitler for March 29 to "ask the German people" to both ratify the Rhineland's occupation by the German Army, and to approve a single party list composed exclusively of Nazi candidates to sit in the new
Reichstag. The
Hindenburg and the
Graf Zeppelin were designated by the government as a key part of the process. As a public relations ploy, Propaganda Minister
Joseph Goebbels demanded that the Zeppelin Company make the two airships available for a tour of Germany (), flying "in tandem" around Germany over the four-day period prior to the voting with a joint departure from Löwenthal on the morning of March 26. The Zeppelin Company chairman, Dr. Hugo Eckener, disapproved of this propaganda use of his craft. According to American reporter
William L. Shirer, "Hugo Eckener, who is getting [the Hindenburg] ready for its maiden flight to Brazil, strenuously objected to putting it in the air this weekend on the ground it was not fully tested, but Dr. Goebbels insisted. Eckener, no friend of the regime, refused to take it up himself, but allowed Captain [Ernst] Lehmann to. [Goebbels] is reported howling mad and is determined to get Eckener." While gusty wind conditions on the morning March 26 threatened a safe launch of the new airship,
Hindenburgs commander, Captain
Ernst Lehmann, was determined to impress the politicians, Nazi party officials, and press present at the airfield with an "on time" departure and thus proceeded with its launch despite the adverse conditions. As the massive airship began to rise under full engine power she was caught by a 35-degree crosswind gust, causing her lower vertical
tail fin to strike and be dragged across the ground, resulting in significant damage to the bottom portion of the
airfoil and its attached
rudder. Hugo Eckener was furious and rebuked Lehmann.
Graf Zeppelin, which had been hovering above the airfield waiting for
Hindenburg to join it, had to start off on the propaganda mission alone while LZ 129 returned to her hangar. There temporary repairs were quickly made to its
empennage before joining up with the smaller airship several hours later. As millions of Germans watched from below, the two giants of the sky sailed over Germany for the next four days and three nights, dropping propaganda leaflets, blaring martial music and slogans from large loudspeakers, and broadcasting political speeches from a makeshift radio studio aboard
Hindenburg. On March 29, as German citizens voted overwhelmingly in favor of the Rhineland re-occupation, the
Hindenburg was aloft over Berlin. Later, Hugo Eckener privately mocked Goebbels by telling friends, "There were forty persons on the
Hindenburg. Forty-two 'yes' votes were counted." William Shirer recorded: "Goebbels has forbidden the press to mention Eckener's name."
First commercial passenger flight With the completion of voting on the referendum (which the German Government claimed had been approved by a "98.79% 'Yes' vote"),
Hindenburg returned to Löwenthal on March 29 to prepare for its first commercial passenger flight, a transatlantic passage to
Rio de Janeiro scheduled to depart from there on March 31. Hugo Eckener was not to be the commander of the flight, however, but was instead relegated to being a "supervisor" with no operational control over
Hindenburg while Ernst Lehmann had command of the airship. To add insult to injury, Eckener learned from an
Associated Press reporter upon
Hindenburgs arrival in Rio that Goebbels had also followed through on his month-old threat to decree that Eckener's name would "no longer be mentioned in German newspapers and periodicals" and "no pictures nor articles about him shall be printed." This action was taken because of Eckener's opposition to using
Hindenburg and
Graf Zeppelin for political purposes during the , and his "refusal to give a special appeal during the Reichstag election campaign endorsing Chancellor
Adolf Hitler and his policies." The existence of the ban was never publicly acknowledged by Goebbels, and it was quietly lifted a month later. While at Rio, the crew noticed one of the engines had noticeable carbon buildup from having been run at low speed during the propaganda flight days earlier. On the return flight from South America, the automatic valve for gas cell 3 stuck open. Gas was transferred from other cells through an inflation line. It was never understood why the valve stuck open, and subsequently the crew used only the hand-operated maneuvering valves for cells 2 and 3. Thirty-eight hours after departure, one of the airship's four
Daimler-Benz 16-cylinder
diesel engines (engine car no. 4, the forward port engine) suffered a
wrist pin breakage, damaging the
piston and
cylinder. Repairs were started immediately and the engine functioned on fifteen cylinders for the remainder of the flight. Four hours after engine 4 failed, engine no. 2 (
aft port) was shut down, as one of two bearing cap bolts for the engine
crankshaft failed and the cap fell into the crank case. The cap was removed and the engine was run again, but when the ship was off
Cape Juby the second cap broke and the engine was shut down again. The engine was not run again to prevent further damage. With three engines operating at a speed of and headwinds reported over the
English Channel, the crew raised the airship in search of counter-
trade winds usually found above , well beyond the airship's
pressure altitude. Unexpectedly, the crew found such a wind at the lower altitude of which permitted them to guide the airship safely back to Germany after gaining emergency permission from France to fly a more direct route over the
Rhône Valley. The nine-day flight covered in 203 hours and 32 minutes of flight time. All four engines were later overhauled and no further problems were encountered on later flights. For the rest of April,
Hindenburg remained at its hangar where the engines were overhauled and the lower fin and rudder received a final repair; the ground clearance of the lower rudder was increased from 8 to 14 degrees.
1936 transatlantic season Hindenburg made 17 round trips across the
Atlantic in 1936—its first and only full year of service—with ten trips to the United States and seven to
Brazil. The flights were considered demonstrative rather than routine in schedule. The first passenger trip across the
North Atlantic left
Frankfurt on 6 May with 56 crew and 50 passengers, arriving in
Lakehurst, New Jersey on 9 May. Passengers included journalist
Grace Drummond-Hay and aviation enthusiast
Clara Adams. As the elevation at
Rhein-Main's airfield lies at above
sea level, the airship could lift more at takeoff there than she could from Friedrichshafen, which was situated at . Each of the ten westward trips that season took 53 to 78 hours and eastward took 43 to 61 hours. The last eastward trip of the year left Lakehurst on October 10; the first North Atlantic trip of 1937 ended in the
Hindenburg disaster. In May and June 1936,
Hindenburg made surprise visits to England. In May it was on a flight from America to Germany when it flew low over the
West Yorkshire town of
Keighley. A parcel was then thrown overboard and landed in the High Street. Two boys, Alfred Butler and Jack Gerrard, retrieved it and found the contents to be a bouquet of
carnations, a small silver cross and a letter on official note paper dated May 22, 1936. The letter read: "To the finder of this letter, please deposit these flowers and cross on the grave of my dear brother, ,
POW in
Skipton cemetery in Keighley near
Leeds. Many thanks for your kindness.
John P. Schulte, the first flying priest". Historian Oliver Denton speculates that the June visit may have had a more sinister purpose: to observe the industrial heartlands of
Northern England. In July 1936,
Hindenburg completed a record Atlantic round trip between Frankfurt and Lakehurst in 98 hours and 28 minutes of flight time (52:49 westbound, 45:39 eastbound). Many prominent people were passengers on the
Hindenburg, including boxer
Max Schmeling making his triumphant return to Germany in June 1936 after his world heavyweight title knockout of
Joe Louis at
Yankee Stadium. In the 1936 season, the airship flew and carried 2,798 passengers and 160 tons of freight and mail, encouraging the Company to plan the expansion of its airship fleet and transatlantic service. The airship was said to be so stable a pen or pencil could be balanced on end atop a table without falling. Launches were so smooth that passengers often missed them, believing the airship was still docked to the
mooring mast. A one-way fare between Germany and the United States was US$400 ();
Hindenburg passengers were affluent, usually entertainers, noted sportsmen, political figures, and leaders of industry.
Hindenburg was used again for propaganda when it flew over the
Olympic Stadium in Berlin on August 1 during the opening ceremonies of the
1936 Summer Olympic Games. Shortly before the arrival of
Adolf Hitler to declare the Games open, the airship crossed low over the packed stadium while trailing the
Olympic flag on a long weighted line suspended from its
gondola. On September 14, the ship flew over the annual
Nuremberg Rally. On October 1, 1936, the three American journalists
Herbert Roslyn Ekins,
Leo Kieran, and
Dorothy Kilgallen boarded the vessel on the first leg of their race
around the world in 20 days. On October 8, 1936,
Hindenburg made a 10.5 hour flight (the "Millionaires Flight") over
New England carrying 72 wealthy and influential passengers including financier and future U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom
Winthrop W. Aldrich; his 28-year-old nephew
Nelson Rockefeller, who became the
Governor of New York and, later,
Vice President of the United States; various German and American government officials and military officers, as well as key figures in the aviation industry, including
Juan Trippe, founder and Chief Executive of
Pan American Airways; and
World War I flying ace Captain
Eddie Rickenbacker, president of
Eastern Airlines. The ship arrived at
Boston by noon and returned to Lakehurst at 5:22pm before making its final transatlantic flight of the season back to Frankfurt. During 1936,
Hindenburg had a
Blüthner aluminium
grand piano placed on board in the music salon, though the instrument was removed after the first year to save weight. Over the winter of 1936–37, several alterations were made to the airship's structures. The greater lift capacity allowed nine passenger cabins to be added, eight with two beds and one with four, increasing passenger capacity to 70. These windowed cabins were along the starboard side aft of the previously installed accommodations, and it was anticipated for the LZ 130 to also have these cabins. Additionally, the Olympic rings painted on the hull were removed for the 1937 season.
Hindenburg also had an experimental aircraft hook-on
trapeze similar to the one on the U.S. Navy Goodyear–Zeppelin built airships and . This was intended to allow customs officials to be flown out to
Hindenburg to process passengers before landing and to retrieve mail from the ship for early delivery. Experimental hook-ons and takeoffs, piloted by
Ernst Udet, were attempted on March 11 and April 27, 1937, but were not very successful, owing to turbulence around the hook-up trapeze. The loss of the ship ended all prospects of further testing. ==Final flight: May 3–6, 1937==