This picture was not taken in 1936, it was taken in 1929 or 1930.

That’s R101, note her distinctive ring of circular intake vents around the nose. R101 crashed killing most of the passengers and crew in October of 1930, which pretty much killed British interest in airships. Her rival/cousin, R100, was scrapped the following year.

I’m unaware of any other airship that would have been flying in 1936 that moored to a high mast like that; the Germans preferred to moor their airships at ground level and load/unload via ramps directly to the surface like an ocean liner at a pier, the Americans never operated passenger airships. USS Akron and USS Macon were both aircraft carriers that used the vastly inferior yet safer helium as a lifting gas. Where R101 and Hindenberg crashed and burned, Akron and Macon merely crashed.