Graf Zeppelin
The
Graf Zeppelin was a large rigid
airship (or dirigible), which was a type of craft pioneered by Count
Ferdinand von Zeppelin in the early
20th century.
Graf Zeppelin
The most traveled airship in history.
The LZ-127
Graf Zeppelin was named after the
German pioneer of dirigble airships, and flew for the first time on on
September 18,
1928. He (German airships were often referred to in the
masculine at the time) had a total length of 236.6 m and a volume of 105,000 m³, it was the largest dirigible up to that time.
Initially it was to be used for experimental and demonstration purposes to prepare the way for regular airship traveling, but also carried passengers and
mail to cover the costs. In
October 1928 the first long-range voyage led the craft to
Lakehurst,
New Jersey, and the crew were welcomed enthusiastically with confetti parades in
New York and invitations to the
White House. Later
Graf Zeppelin toured in Germany and visited
Italy,
Palestine and
Spain. A second trip to the United States was aborted in
France due to engine failure in
May 1929.
In
August 1929, LZ 127 departed for another daring enterprise: a complete circumnavigation of the globe. The growing popularity of the "giant of the air" made it easy for Zeppelin company chief
Dr. Hugo Eckener to find sponsors. One of these was the American press tycoon
William Randolph Hearst, who requested the tour to officially start in Lakehurst. From there,
Graf Zeppelin flew to
Friedrichshafen first, continuing to
Tokyo,
Los Angeles and back to Lakehurst. It completed the voyage in 21 days, 5 hours and 31 minutes. Including the initial and final trips Friedrichshafen-Lakehurst and back, the dirigible travelled 49,618 km.
In the following year,
Graf Zeppelin undertook a number of trips around
Europe, and following a successful tour to
South America in
May 1930, it was decided to open the first regular
transatlantic airship line. Despite the beginning of the
Great Depression and growing competition by fixed-wing aircraft, LZ 127 would transport an increasing amount of passengers and mail across the ocean every year until
1936. Besides, the ship pursued another spectacular destination in
July 1931 with a research trip to the
Arctic; this had already been a dream of Count Zeppelin twenty years earlier, which could not, however, be realized at the time due to the outbreak of war.
Eckener intended to supplement the successful craft by another, similar Zeppelin, projected as LZ 128. However the disastrous accident of the British passenger airship
R 101 in 1931 led the Zeppelin company to reconsider the safety of
hydrogen-filled vessels, and the design was abandoned in favor of a new project. LZ 129 which was to eventually be named the
Hindenburg would advance Zeppelin technology considerably, and was intended to be filled with
helium. The
embargo by the United States because of the looming war prevented German access to the large quantities of helium, and the Hindenburg was fatefully converted to a hydrogen design.
After the
Hindenburg disaster, public faith in the security of dirigibles was shattered, and flying passengers in hydrogen-filled vessels became intolerable. LZ 127
Graf Zeppelin was retired one month past the disaster and turned into a museum. The end for the
Graf Zeppelin came with the outbreak of
World War II. In
March 1940,
Nazi Hermann Göring, the German Air minister
(Reichsluftfahrtminister), ordered the destruction of the remaining dirigibles, and the aluminium parts were fed into the german war industry.
See also
\n* Zeppelin\n*
List of Zeppelins\n*
List of airships of the United States Navy
\n
Category:Airships