New York Daily News

Flames & claims

Hindenburg insure policy at museum

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IT’S A PART of aviation most people don’t think about — until they need it.

On May 6, 1937, when the sky over Lakehurst, N.J., caught fire and burst into tragedy, it was needed desperatel­y.

The insurance policy for the Hindenburg — the German passenger airship that exploded about 70 miles outside New York city eight decades ago — has been unveiled at the New York City Fire Museum on Spring St. in lower Manhattan.

“I’m always looking for something that has never been told, so this is right in my sweet spot,” museum Executive Director Gary Urbanowicz said Thursday. “These are elements of a historic event that often goes unnoticed.”

The frail, 10-page Lloyd’s of London document lists underwrite­rs and insurance brokers with the monetary amounts they were willing to pay if the airship were destroyed. In return, the investors would receive a percentage of the insurance premium during the life of the coverage.

“It’s fragile, so much so that someone at one time tried to fix the pages with Scotch tape, which is probably the worst thing you can do with a historical document,” Urbanowicz said. of the 13 passengers and 22

The policy, in total, was valued crewmen who died when the at 6 million Reichsmark­s, Hindenburg caught fire and exploded which at the time amounted to as it tried to dock with a $14.9 million. In current dollars, mooring mast at the Naval Air that would translate to about Station in Lakehurst. A crewman $80 million, according to on the ground was also Forbes. killed by falling debris.

The money went to the families At the time, the Daily News reported that the zeppelin was “blown asunder and consumed by flames” some “300 feet above the heads of a thousand terrified spectators.” Ninety-seven people were on board.

Historians and descendant­s of the victims will mark the 80th anniversar­y of the disaster on Saturday.

Urbanowicz said the insurance policy had been in storage in the Fire Museum since the 1980s. The paperwork was acquired from the Harold V. Smith Museum — which focused on insurance policies. The Smith museum, which was located on Maiden Lane in lower Manhattan, donated its archive to the Fire Museum when it closed, Urbanowicz said. “We have so much in storage that never gets displayed,” he said. “But with the 80th anniversar­y of the disaster coming, I knew that this was the right time to pull it out.”

 ??  ?? The city Fire Museum is showing the Hindenburg insurance document to commemorat­e 80th anniversar­y of zeppelin’s explosion.
The city Fire Museum is showing the Hindenburg insurance document to commemorat­e 80th anniversar­y of zeppelin’s explosion.
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