Werner Franz, believed to be the last surviving crewmember of the German airship Hindenburg that crashed 77 years ago, has died. He was 92.
Franz was a 14-year-old cabin boy when the hydrogen-filled Zeppelin caught fire and crashed in Lakehurst, New Jersey, on May 6, 1937.
The disaster was captured by waiting photographers, film crews and a radio broadcaster on the ground, making it one of history’s most iconic air accidents.
Luck and quick thinking meant Franz was able to jump out of the Hindenburg as it fell burning to the ground, said historian John Provan, a long-time friend.
“Werner survived the crash without a scratch on him,” Provan said.
Franz returned to Germany and served as an aircraft technician during World War II, and was a rollerskating and ice skating coach in later life.
He spoke freely about his experience, said Carl Jablonski, president of the Navy Lakehurst Historical Society, who last met Franz at a 2004 event commemorating the disaster.
The crash killed 35 of the 97 people on board and a US Navy crewman on the ground.
Provan confirmed a report by German news agency Deutsche Presse-Agentur, quoting his widow, Annerose, that Franz died of heart failure on Aug. 13 in his hometown of Frankfurt.
Franz came to be on the Hindenburg by chance, Provan told reporters.
“His older brother worked at a fancy hotel in Frankfurt where the passengers and the captain stayed overnight before the airship took off early in the morning,” Provan said.
“One of the captains said they were looking for a cabin boy and [his brother] heard about it,” he added.
Franz completed three journeys to South America and one to North America before the disaster.
The huge airship — as long as three soccer fields and about 15 stories tall — was considered the most luxurious means to cross the Atlantic at the time. Its loss — widely attributed to static electricity that ignited leaking hydrogen — was a heavy blow to the image of a resurgent Germany that the Nazis wanted to project to the world.
“Werner was most fortunate because he was in the officers’ mess cleaning up,” Provan said.
“Above him was a large tank of water that burst open and drenched him, which protected him a bit from the flames and the heat,” he said.
Franz was able to jump out of a cloth supply hatch onto the ground below and made the wise decision to run into the wind.
“He didn’t make the mistake of going in the other direction or the flames would have caught him,” Provan said.
Jablonski said three other survivors of the disaster are believed to be still alive today. Werner Doehner and Horst Schirmer, who were both passengers aboard the Hindenburg, and Robert Buchanan, a member of the ground crew, who was waiting to moor the ship.
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