- There was no place better
than the Dublin Horse Show to display such elegance.
The nobility, the English and Irish sportsmen
and tourists from all over the world provided
a perfect background for Alois's dashing appearance.
- While admiring the horses
at the 1909 show, Alois struck up an idle conversation
with two locals, William Dowling and his neighbour,
Mr Tynan. Soon William's daughter, seventeen year
old Bridget, took an interest. She was immediately
fascinated by the handsome foreigner. 'Everything
he said was so new and interesting that even his
broken English seemed charming'.
-
 |
Later, Alois and Bridget
met in the National Gallery, Dublin. Soon
they were talking about getting married. Bridget's
parents were so totally against the relationship
that the couple eventually eloped and married
in London on 3 June 1910. William Dowling
threatened to appeal to the police and to
have Alois arrested for kidnapping, but his
wife dissuaded him from doing so. Peace was
finally made about a year later when William
Dowling went to Liverpool to be present at
the baptism of his first grandchild, William
Patrick Hitler. |
-
Meanwhile, Adolf was going through the worst period
of his life. He was sleeping rough or living in
doss houses. Eventually he took up permanent residence
in a hostel for men in Vienna. He made his living
by beating carpets, carrying bags, shoveling snow
and doing other menial labouring jobs. As time
passed and Adolf rose to prominence, both Bridget
and her son did their best to take advantage of
the situation.
| Bridget attempted to cash
in on her connection with the German Fuehrer
by writing a book. She wrote My Brother-in-Law
Adolf in the United States shortly after herself
and her son settled there in 1939. She never
managed to get it published, however. The 225
page typescript is undated and unfinished. At
present it is in the manuscript department of
the New York Public Library. It became widely
available for the first time in 1979 when an
edited version was published by Gerald Duckworth
and Co Ltd. |
 |
The most sensational part of
the book deals with an alleged visit to Britain
made by Adolf Hitler. Bridget claims that during
the period November 1912 to April 1913 Adolf resided
at her flat in Liverpool with herself, Alois and
William Patrick. Adolf was draft dodging at the
time. He was avoiding compulsory service in the
Austrian army. This is the main reason, she says,
why he afterwards maintained silence about his English
trip, it 'would not have made good publicity for
the German prophet'. Much of his time was spent
in the company of Bridget: 'he would often come
and sit in my cosy little kitchen playing with my
two-year old baby, while I was preparing our meals.
I thought he felt very much at home then. Usually
he wouldn't say much, but just sit, from time to
time telling me of the different dishes his mother
used to make.'
- Bridget claims to have introduced
Adolf to astrology, a subject in which she herself
had been interested since childhood. Before Adolf's
arrival, she had become acquainted with a Mrs
Prentice who cast horoscopes. Again and again,
she claims, Adolf asked Mrs Prentice to cast his
horoscope. Reflecting on how it was said that
in later life Adolf Hitler did very little of
importance without consulting his astrologers
Bridget says 'I thought back then to the idle
words I had spoken which had served as an introduction
to this absorbing interest'. In May 1913 Adolf
took leave of his sister-in-law and her family
and went, on Alois's advice, to Munich, where
he would still be able to evade service in the
Austrian army.
- Before he left, Bridget advised
Adolf to trim his moustache. Like Alois, he sported
a handlebar moustache at that time and she suggested
that he should cut off the points. Years later,
when she saw his picture in a newspaper she noticed
that he had taken her advice but, she comments,
'Adolf had gone too far'.
It is difficult to imagine how
Bridget and Adolf managed to communicate so well
on such a variety of subjects. Bridget says that
Adolf hadn't enough English at the end of his stay
to enable him to ask directions to the railway station.
She describes her own German as 'stumbling'.
- The suspicion that My Brother-in-Law
Adolf is a work of the imagination is strengthened
by much of the rest of the book. When Bridget
meets Adolf again he is Chancellor of Germany.
His only acknowledgement that they met before
is the rather flattering comment 'the years have
passed over your head without touching you'. The
part of the book dealing with Bridget's attempts
to rescue her son from Germany during the 1930s
read like a third rate television spy story.
- Despite the book's lack of
authenticity it has been accepted as reliable
by some of Hitler's best biographers. John Toland
uses it as a source in his 1,000 page book Adolf
Hitler, as does Robert Payne in his The Life and
Death of Adolf Hitler. Robert Waite, an American
professor, provides convincing evidence in an
appendix to his The Psychopathic God Adolf Hitler
to show that the book is mostly fiction.
- William Patrick tried to
gain advantage from his famous uncle by more direct
means: blackmail. At least this is the story told
by Hitler's close associate Hans Frank, in the
course of his trial as a war criminal at Nuremberg.
In order to understand Frank's testimony it is
necessary to take a look at Hitler's peculiar
family background and his sensitivity towards
it.
- Hitler's father, Alois, was
born on 7 June 1837 to Maria Anna Schickelgruber,
unmarried daughter of Johann Schickelgruber from
the village of Strones in Lower Austria. The entry
in the baptismal register of Dollerscheim parish
shows that the baby was christened Alois Schickelgruber.
The space in the register for the father's name
was left blank.
- When Alois was five years
old, his mother married a mill worker named Johann
Georg Hiedler. Alois was passed over to his step-father's
brother, who raised him like his own son.
In 1876, when he was 39, Alois,
now a customs official in the Austrian service,
succeeded in persuading his foster father, Johann
Nepomuk Hiedler, to have his birth records altered.
In the old register, under the entry of 7 June 1837,
the parish priest was persuaded to change the term
'illegitimate' to 'legitimate', to fill in the name
Johann Georg Hiedler in the blank space for the
name of the father p; accidently mis-spelling it
'Johann Georg Hitler' in the process, and to insert
a marginal note: 'The undersigned confirm that Georg
Hitler, registered as the father, who is well known
to the undersigned witnesses, admits to being the
father of the child Alois as stated by the child's
mother, Anna Schickelgruber, and has requested the
entry of his name in the present baptismal register'.
Three illiterate witnesses appended their marks
to the statement. The statement was clearly false
if only to the extent that by this time both the
mother and alleged father had been dead for about
twenty years. From January 1877 Alois Schickelgruber
called himself Alois Hitler.
In later years, Adolf Hitler's
political enemies tried to ridicule him by claiming
that he had changed his name to Hitler because 'Heil
Schickelgruber' did not roll as trippingly off the
tongue as 'Heil Hitler'. This, of course, was nonsense
since Hitler's father used the surname Hitler twelve
years before the birth of his infamous son.
- Hitler's father's marital
experiences made the family background even more
curious. He was married three times. His first
marriage, to Anna Glassl who was fourteen years
his senior, was childless. He was 46 when he married
for the second time. Franziska Matzenberger, his
new bride was 22. She had already borne him a
son before their marriage, Alois junior, the future
Shelbourne waiter. Two months after the wedding
she gave birth to a daughter called Angela. When
Franziska died of T.B. Alois married Klara Polzl.
She was 23 years younger than him. He had to get
a papal dispensation for the marriage as Klara
was the daughter of his niece. Of the six children
born of this marriage, two survived, Adolf and
a younger sister called Paula.
-
- During his lifetime, Hitler
was very secretive about his background. Only
the dimmest outline of his parents emerges from
the biographical chapters of Mein Kampf. He falsified
his father's occupation, changing him from a customs
official to a postal official. He repulsed relatives
who tried to approach him.
One of the first things he did
after taking over Austria was to have a survey carried
out of the little farming village of Dollerscheim
where his father's birth had been recorded. The
purpose of the survey of March 1938 was to ascertain
the suitability of the village as an artillery range
for the Wehrmacht. As soon as it could be arranged
the inhabitants were evacuated and the entire village
was demolished by heavy artillery. Even the graves
in the cemetery where his grandmother had been buried
were rendered unrecognisable.
When in 1942 he was informed
that a plaque had been set up for him in the village
of Spital, where he had spent some time as a youth,
he flew into one of his violent rages and demanded
its immediate removal. For some time his younger
sister Paula ran his household at Obersalzberg,
but he made her take another name.
His obsession for secrecy has
been explained as the strategy of a born propagandist.
A man of mystery arouses interest in himself. The
fact that at the beginning of his career he took
care that no pictures of himself were published
gives some credence to this theory. Perhaps Hitler
never lost a sense of the distance between his origins
and the elevated position he had attained. However,
there is a far simpler explanation for Hitler's
need to keep public attention away from his genealogy.
The Nazis were obsessed with 'racial purity'. An
essential requirement for membership of the elite
S.S was positive proof of Aryan descent from 1750.
Hitler would have failed this test. He did not know
who his paternal grandfather was.
Under these circumstances the
letter sent to Adolf Hitler towards the end of 1930
by his nephew William Patrick, must have had a devastating
effect. It referred to the 'very odd circumstances
in our family history', and went on to claim not
only that Hitler had a Jewish grandfather but that
documentary evidence existed which proved the connection.
Hans Frank was given the job
of confidentially investigating this very sensitive
affair. Frank did so and discovered, he said, that
Hitler's father had been the illegitimate son of
Maria Anna Schickelgruber, who had worked as a domestic
in Graz in the home of a Jewish family by the name
of Frankenberger. From the day that Alois, Hitler's
father, had been born until the boy was fourteen,
Frankenberger paid money for the support of the
child. According to Frank, Hitler did not deny that
his grandmother had been in receipt of money from
the Jew Frankenberger but he denied that Frankenberger
was his grandfather.
The blackmail story is based
entirely on the memoirs of Hans Frank. He was a
close associate of Hitler. As well as being his
personal lawyer, he was later given special powers:
President of the Academy of German Law, member of
the Reichstag, leader of the National Lawyers' Association
and Governor-General of Poland. At the time of writing
his memoirs he was awaiting execution in Nuremberg
for war crimes in Poland, where his activities had
earned him the name 'the Butcher of Poland'. Frank
had converted to Catholicism while under sentence
of death and he wrote his memoirs partly to expiate
his sins. He had no reason to misrepresent Hitler
or to invent the story. Frank said the evidence
was based on correspondence between Maria Anna Schickelgruber
and Frankenberger. He said that these letters were
for some time in the possession of a lady related
to Hitler by marriage. This evidence has never surfaced
and subsequent exhaustive investigations have failed
to clarify the situation.
| This episode does not appear
to have caused a total rift between William
Patrick and Adolf. William Patrick spent most
of the 1930s in Germany. He worked for most
of this period in the Reichskreditbank. Later
he worked in the Opel car factory and then became
a car salesman. He was disappointed that his
Uncle Adolf would not use his influence to pull
him into an important position. When he complained
to him Adolf is alleged to have said: 'I didn't
become Chancellor for the benefit of my family
. . . I can't have people saying I show favouritism
to my family. No one is going to climb on my
back'. The famous uncle was very beneficial,
though, as far as William Patrick's social life
was concerned. He always had his pick of three
or four dinner parties on any given day and
often had to decline half a dozen week-end invitations.
At this period of his life he took as much advantage
as possible from the connection as is clear
from an article in the Daily Express of 22 November
1937: 'As William Patrick Hitler said to me
"I am the only legal descendant of the
Hitler family", he crossed his arms in
characteristic Fuhrer fashion and added "That
gesture must be in the blood. I find myself
doing it more and more". |
 |
- The twenty-six-year-old son
of Alois Hitler, the Fuhrer's innkeeper brother,
is in England for a short holiday after nearly
five years in Germany. He talked to me in the
little back sitting-room of a modest six-roomed
house where his Irish mother lives in Highgate.
"I came back because I felt homesick for
England". He stumbled for a word,
- '"I find it difficult
speaking English again after so long, although
of course, it is my native language".
- 'Occasionally there is a
trace of German accent. William Hitler bears a
strong resemblance to the uncle who is his idol.
The moustache is copied almost to a hair, the
same parting but in black hair which is sleek,
but not unruly. He has the same height and build'.
William Patrick seems to have
changed his views about the Fuhrer. Two years later
he was earning his living in the United States by
lecturing about 'My Uncle Adolf'. His lectures were
probably similar in tone to the article he wrote
for Look magazine in January 1939 entitled 'Why
I Hate my Uncle'.
- William Patrick served in
the US Navy during the World War II and was honourably
discharged at the end of hostilities. He worked
for a while in an American hospital and then changed
his name and went into total obscurity. The historian
John Toland was able to confirm that he was still
alive in 1977.
- Has he been sighted lately?
This article has
been reproduced with the kind permission of the
author Tony McCarthy. It was originally published
in the Spring 1992 issue of Irish Roots.
This interesting magazine has its own web site at
http://www.iol.i.e./~irishrts/
Additionally it has
been discovered that William Patrick served in the
United States Army. Further, in an act of irony
one of the last houses in Liverpool bombed by the
Nazi bombers during the blitz of 1942 was in Upper
Stanhope Street ... where Bridget lived! (Source:
Jim Murphy - writer. 12 August 2007) |