American Decades
Ships in the Clouds: the Golden Age of Airships
U.S. Involvement.
America's relationship to rigid airships was a troubled one. Aside from Germany and Great Britain, nowhere else was the promotion of dirigible transport such a large-scale affair. Beginning in the 1920s Goodyear built blimps for the U.S. Navy. However, the apparent sturdiness of bigger machines with an internal metal structure to sustain them had become legendary as a result of German airship operations during World War I. Eventually, following the purchase of a German-built machine, the Los Angeles, a contract with the Zeppelin Company in Germany cleared the way for the transfer of technological experience that would allow the construction of large rigid airships in the United States. Slow negotiations eventually led to a navy contract for two 6.5-million-cubic-foot airships, numbered ZRS-4 and ZRS-5, valued at $8 million each, signed in October 1928. The dock for the construction of the airships was...
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1930's Science and Technology
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Astronomy
- Atoms and More: Physics
- Chemistry
- The Decline of the Eugenics Movement
- Developments in Biology
- Earth Sciences
- Engineering in Bridge Building
- From Rails to Roads: the Plight of Roads and Railroads
- The Hoover Dam
- The Rise of the Airplane
- Ships in the Clouds: the Golden Age of Airships
- Synthetic Rubber or Nylon?
- Television
- Women in Science
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Science and Technology, 1930–1939
