Ferdinand Adolf Heinrich August Graf von Zeppelin.
School period
College/University
Gallery of Ferdinand von Zeppelin
Career
Gallery of Ferdinand von Zeppelin
1908
Ferdinand Adolf Heinrich August von Zeppelin.
Gallery of Ferdinand von Zeppelin
1910
Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin.
Gallery of Ferdinand von Zeppelin
1910
Ferdinand Adolf Heinrich August Graf von Zeppelin.
Gallery of Ferdinand von Zeppelin
1911
Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin, German Army officer and inventor, and designer of airships.
Gallery of Ferdinand von Zeppelin
1913
Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin, German aeronautical pioneer, who designed and manufactured airships.
Gallery of Ferdinand von Zeppelin
1915
German army officer Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin (center), who from 1897 to 1900 constructed his first Zeppelin airship, at Nordholz with German aeronautical engineer Dr. Hugo Eckener and frigate captain Peter Strasser, commander of marine airships in World War I.
Gallery of Ferdinand von Zeppelin
1933
Friedrichshafen, Germany
Zeppelin LZ 127 "Graf Zeppelin" landing at Friedrichshafen, Germany, 1933.
German army officer Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin (center), who from 1897 to 1900 constructed his first Zeppelin airship, at Nordholz with German aeronautical engineer Dr. Hugo Eckener and frigate captain Peter Strasser, commander of marine airships in World War I.
Ferdinand Adolf Heinrich August Graf von Zeppelin was a German soldier and airship builder. He was the first notable builder of rigid dirigible airships, for which his surname is still a popular generic term.
Background
Ferdinand Adolf Heinrich August Graf von Zeppelin was born in Konstanz, Grand Duchy of Baden on 8 July 1838 in an old noble family. His father was Württemberg Minister and Hofmarschall Friedrich Jerôme Wilhelm Karl Graf von Zeppelin and mother Amélie Françoise Pauline.
Education
Ferdinand von Zeppelin spent his childhood with his sister and brother at his families’ Girsberg manor near Konstanz, where he was educated by private tutors. In his 15th year of life Graf von Zeppelin left to attend the polytechnic at Stuttgart (now University of Stuttgart) and in 1855 he became a cadet of the military school at Ludwigsburg. After that, he became an army officer in the army of Württemberg. He was promoted to Lieutenant in 1858 when he took leave to study science, engineering, and chemistry at the University of Tübingen. Austro-Sardinian War in 1859 interrupted him and he was called to join the Prussian engineering corps.
Ferdinand von Zeppelin entered the army in 1857 as an officer. In 1863 Zeppelin took leave to be an observer for the northern troops of the Union's Army of the Potomac in the American Civil War. In 1865 he becomes adjutant of the King of Württemberg and as a general staff officer joins the Austro-Prussian War of 1866. He was a commander of the 19th Uhlans in Ulm, a light cavalry, from 1882 until 1885 and then then the envoy of Württemberg in Berlin. After critiques of his handling of the Prussian cavalry brigade, he was forced to retire from the Army with the rank of Generalleutnant.
While he was an official observer with the Union Army during the American Civil War he visited the balloon camp of Thaddeus S. C. Lowe. His first ascent in a balloon during this visit inspired his interest in aeronautics. In a diary entry dated 25 March 1874 he recorded his first ideas for large dirigibles. Inspired by a lecture given by Heinrich von Stephan and the airship La France he designed an airship large rigidly-framed outer envelope continuing a number of separate gasbags. When he left the army in 1891, Zeppelin concentrated on airships, materials, engines, and air propellers. After many troubles to find funds, appropriate materials, and support in government Graf von Zeppelin began construction of his first rigid airship, LZ 1, on 17 June 1898.
The German company Luftschiffbau Zeppelin, owned by Count Ferdinand Graf von Zeppelin, was the world's most successful builder of rigid airships. Zeppelin flew the world's first untethered rigid airship, the LZ-1, on July 2, 1900, near Lake Constance in Germany, carrying five passengers. The cloth-covered dirigible, which was the prototype of many subsequent models, had an aluminum structure, seventeen hydrogen cells, and two 15-horsepower (11.2-kilowatt) Daimler internal combustion engines, each turning two propellers. It was about 420 feet (128 meters) long and 38 feet (12 meters) in diameter and had a hydrogen-gas capacity of 399,000 cubic feet (11,298 cubic meters). During its first flight, it flew about 3.7 miles (6 kilometers) in 17 minutes and reached a height of 1,300 feet (390 meters). However, it needed more power and better steering and experienced technical problems during its flight that forced it to land in Lake Constance. After additional tests conducted three months later, it was scrapped.
Zeppelin continued to improve his design and build airships for the German government. In June 1910, the Deutschland became the world's first commercial airship. The Sachsen followed in 1913. Between 1910 and the beginning of World War I in 1914, German zeppelins flew 107,208 (172,535 kilometers) miles and carried 34,028 passengers and crew safely.
At the beginning of World War I, Germany had ten zeppelins. During the war, Hugo Eckener, a German aeronautical engineer, helped the war effort by training pilots and directing the construction of zeppelins for the German navy. By 1918, 67 zeppelins had been constructed, and 16 survived the war.
During the war, the Germans used zeppelins as bombers. On May 31, 1915, the LZ-38 was the first zeppelin to bomb London, and other bombing raids on London and Paris followed. The airships could approach their targets silently and fly at altitudes above the range of British and French fighters. However, they never became effective offensive weapons. New planes with more powerful engines that could climb higher were built, and the British and French planes also began to carry ammunition that contained phosphorus, which would set the hydrogen-filled zeppelins afire. Several zeppelins were also lost because of bad weather, and 17 were shot down because they could not climb as fast as the fighters. The crews also suffered from cold and oxygen deprivation when they climbed above 10,000 feet (3,048 meters).
At the end of the war, the German zeppelins that had not been captured were surrendered to the Allies by the terms of the Treaty of Versailles, and it looked like the Zeppelin company would soon disappear. However, Eckener, who had assumed the company's helm upon Count Zeppelin's death in 1917, suggested to the United States government that the company build a huge zeppelin for the United States. military to use, which would allow the company to stay in business. The United States agreed, and on October 13, 1924, the United States Navy received the German ZR3 (also designated the LZ-126), delivered personally by Eckener. The airship, renamed the Los Angeles, could accommodate 30 passengers and had sleeping facilities similar to those on a Pullman railroad car. The Los Angeles made some 250 flights, including trips to Puerto Rico and Panama. It also pioneered airplane launch and recovery techniques that would later be used on the United States airships, the Akron and Macon.
When the various restrictions imposed by the Treaty of Versailles on Germany were lifted, Germany was again allowed to construct airships. It built three giant rigid airships: the LZ-127 Graf Zeppelin, LZ-l29 Hindenburg, and LZ-l30 Graf Zeppelin II.
The Graf Zeppelin is considered the finest airship ever built. It flew more miles than any airship had done to that time or would in the future. Its first flight was on September 18, 1928. In August 1929, it circled the globe. Its flight began with a trip from Friedrichshaften, Germany, to Lakehurst, New Jersey, allowing William Randolph Hearst, who had financed the trip in exchange for exclusive rights to the story, to claim that the voyage began from American soil. Piloted by Eckener, the craft stopped only at Tokyo, Japan, Los Angeles, California, and Lakehurst. The trip took 12 days - less time than the ocean trip from Tokyo to San Francisco.
During the 10 years the Graf Zeppelin flew, it made 590 flights including 144 ocean crossings. It flew more than one million miles (1,609,344 kilometers), visited the United States, the Arctic, the Middle East, and South America, and carried 13,110 passengers.
When the Hindenburg was built in 1936, the revived Zeppelin company was at the height of its success. Zeppelins had been accepted as a quicker and less expensive way to travel long distances than ocean liners provided. The Hindenburg was 804 feet long (245 meters), had a maximum diameter of 135 feet (41 meters), and contained seven million cubic feet (200,000 cubic meters) of hydrogen in 16 cells. Four 1,050-horsepower (783-kilowatt) Daimler-Benz diesel engines provided a top speed of 82 miles per hour (132 kilometers per hour). The airship could hold more than 70 passengers in luxurious comfort and had a dining room, library, lounge with a grand piano, and large windows. The Hindenburg's May 1936 launch inaugurated the first scheduled air service across the North Atlantic between Frankfurt am Main, Germany, and Lakehurst, New Jersey. Its first trip to the United States took 60 hours, and the return trip took only a quick 50. In 1936, it carried more than 1,300 passengers and several thousand pounds of mail and cargo on its flights. It had made 10 successful round trips between Germany and the United States. But that was soon forgotten. On May 6, 1937, as the Hindenburg was preparing to land at Lakehurst, New Jersey, its hydrogen ignited and the airship exploded and burned, killing 35 of the 97 people on board and one member of the ground crew. Its destruction, seen by horrified spectators in New Jersey, marked the end of the commercial use of airships.
Count Zeppelin died on 8 March 1917 in Girsberg manor of his family. Two rigid airships and the unfinished World War II German aircraft carrier were named after him.
On 7 August 1869 Ferdinand married Isabella Freiin von Wolff in Berlin. They had a daughter, Helene (Hella) von Zeppelin (1879 - 1967) who in 1909 married Alexander Graf von Brandenstein-Zeppelin (1881 - 1949).
Father:
Friedrich Jerôme Wilhelm Karl Graf von Zeppelin (1807–1886)
Mother:
Amélie Françoise Pauline (born Macaire d'Hogguer) (1816–1852)