Los Angeles Times

Last survivor of the Hindenburg

Werner Doehner, who lost his father and sister in the 1937 dirigible disaster that killed 36, was 90.

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The last remaining survivor of the Hindenburg disaster, Werner Gustav Doehner, has died at age 90.

Doehner, who died Nov. 8 at a hospital in Laconia, N.H., was the only person left of the 62 passengers and crew who survived the May 6, 1937, fire that killed his father, sister and 34 others. He was 8 at the time.

“He did not talk about it,” said his son Bernie Doehner. “It was definitely a repressed memory. He lost his sister, he lost his dad.”

As the 80th anniversar­y of the disaster approached in 2017, Werner Doehner said that he and his parents, older brother and sister were returning to Mexico City from a vacation in Germany on the 804-foot-long zeppelin to Lakehurst Naval Air Station in New Jersey. .

As the Hindenburg arrived, f lames began to f licker on top of the ship. Hydrogen, exposed to air, fueled an inferno.

“Suddenly, the air was on fire,” Werner Doehner recalled.

He said his mother threw him and his brother out of the ship before she left too.

They suffered burns. He was in the hospital for three months before going to a hospital in New York City in August for skin grafts.

The U.S. Commerce Department determined the accident was caused by a leak of the hydrogen that kept the airship aloft. It mixed with air, causing a fire. “The theory that a brush discharge ignited such mixture appears most probable,” the department’s report said.

Werner Doehner was born in Darmstadt, Germany, and grew up in Mexico City.

In 1984, he moved to the United States to work for General Electric as an electrical engineer, according to his obituary. He also worked in Ecuador and Mexico. He retired from New England Electric System in Westboroug­h, Mass., in 1999.

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