
Passengers
Ages: Otto Ernst - 77
Elsa Ernst - 63
Residence: Hamburg, Germany
Mr. Ernst's occupation: Seed trader
Location at time of fire: Passenger decks – portside dining room
Otto Ernst: Died in hospital
Elsa Ernst: Survived
Otto and Elsa Ernst were a couple from Hamburg, Germany. Otto C. Ernst was part of a large seed company and nursery in Hamburg, Ernst & von Spreckelsen, which had been established back in 1849. He and his wife were longtime aviation enthusiasts, and since there was finally a reliable non-stop air service across the North Atlantic, they had decided to take a trip by air to the United States. They booked passage to New York on the Hindenburg on its first North American flight of the 1937 season, which left Frankfurt on the evening of May 3rd. They planned to stay for a week and then return on the Hindenburg's second eastbound flight of the season on May 14th (and would have shared a second flight with fellow passenger Nelson Morris, who was also planning to return to Europe on the Hindenburg's May 14th flight.)
Fellow passenger Margaret Mather later remembered the Ernsts as "gentle old people who had been flying for 25 years and loved the air." The couple spent most of their time sitting quietly by the observation windows, contentedly watching the clouds and the ocean pass by beneath them.
When the Hindenburg came in to land at Lakehurst on the evening of May 6th, Mr. and Mrs. Ernst were in the portside dining room, sitting on one of the couches near the front-most observation window near stewards Wilhelm Balla and Max Henneberg, as well as fellow passenger Joseph Späh. Suddenly they felt the ship give a heavy shake, and Mrs. Ernst noticed a yellowish glow outside the windows. The stern of the ship then tilted down and the Ernsts were thrown from their seat and instinctively grabbed hold of Balla. The three of them tumbled to the floor and began sliding down toward the aft wall of the dining room. Once the floor leveled out again, the Ernsts sat where they'd fallen, dazed, until rescuers entered the wreckage of the dining room and led the couple down the ship's debarkation stairs to safety.
As the Ernsts emerged from the wreck steward Eugen Nunnenmacher, who had leapt from a window and had already begun helping passengers to safety, saw the Ernsts and immediately came over to help. Mr. Ernst was in shock and ready to collapse, so Nunnenmacher and a member of the ground crew both took hold of him to lend him support, and took them to a car that was headed for the air station's infirmary.


The Ernsts were taken to Paul Kimball Hospital in nearby Lakewood to recover from their injuries. Elsa Ernst did recover but Otto's condition gradually worsened due to trauma from his burns and from shock. He was given at least one transfusion, on May 14th, but it wasn't enough to save him. At 8:40 on the morning of May 15th, 1937, at which time he and his wife had thought they'd be enjoying a second Hindenburg flight over the ocean, Otto Ernst passed away.
Elsa Ernst brought Otto's body home to Germany a week later onboard the steamship Bremen.