The Hindenburg as Nazi Symbol
Nazi officials were very much aware of the symbolic value of the huge and impressive airship, and frequently called on Hindenburg for propaganda flights, often in company with the Graf Zeppelin.
Hindenburg made appearances at public events such as the 1936 Berlin Games and the Nuremberg Party rally, and Hindenburg’s first major flight, after test flights were completed, was a 74-hour
propaganda flight in support of Hitler’s remilitarization of the Rhineland.
When boxer
Max Schmeling defeated black American boxer Joe Louis, the Nazi government arranged for Schmeling to return to Germany on Hindenburg.
Schmeling’s victory in the boxing ring had made him a national hero, and Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels wanted to maximize publicity for Schmeling’s homecoming; to associate the victorious boxer with this symbol of technological achievement, and demonstrate German supremacy in all fields from sport to aviation, the government had Schmeling cancel his reservation on an ocean liner and return to Germany aboard Hindenburg instead.