The myth surrounding Hitler's visit was not helped by the novel Young Adolf by Beryl Bainbridge. This was a work of fiction where Bainbridge took the idea of Adolf visiting Liverpool, as recounted in the memoir, and developing the idea further. Later it was made into a two part television drama, thus reaching an even wider audience. Although she made it clear at the time that it was a product largely of her own imagination, many observers, especially Liverpudlians, accept the visit as historical fact. Talking to the Washington Post in 1979 about non-fiction, Bainbridge said, "I haven't really got the education for that sort of thing. The bit of what I laughingly call research that I did on young Adolf I quite enjoyed. I felt rather educated rushing around looking in libraries... the part of them [the memoirs] that seems the most real is the part about Adolf coming to Liverpool. It's the most understated, whether it’s true or not. There's no proof that he came, but there's no proof that he didn't.”
2006-12-02 05:46:32
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answer #1
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answered by thecat 4
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He did hate jews, yet you should keep in mind that he did not purely come to hate jews out of vacuum. Anti-semiticism change into an really regular and regularly occurring fact throughout Europe contained in the 19th Century. Even the English and American were thinking recommendations for dealing with their Egyptian challenge. Why do you imagine that the English approved the Balfour statement after WWI... it change into to make effective that the jews in uk and in Europe have a reason to leave their international places and bypass decrease back to Palestine. Hitler, change into ant-semitic and a rascist, yet so were many germans, English, Russians and different Europeans decrease back than. He purely acted on what others purely theory about (the terrific answer). unhappy!
2016-11-23 12:47:49
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answer #2
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answered by fette 4
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Adolf didnt his half brother Alois Junior lived in Dublin and Liverpool though
There are claims Adolf lived with them in liverpool but historians rarely take this as true
2006-12-02 05:37:55
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answer #3
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answered by mintycakeyfroggy 6
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Liverpool
2006-12-02 05:36:40
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answer #4
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answered by Roy S 3
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Did he ever visit St Helier on Jersey? It's hardly an English city but it might count
2006-12-02 05:43:49
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Liverpool;
2006-12-02 09:33:30
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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He tried to visit in 1940 but sadly he could get past neither customs of the RAF. upon hearing this sad news we decided to pay him a visit in 1944 to repay the complement
2006-12-03 04:47:30
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Adolph Hitler never crossed the sea.He was frightened of water.
2006-12-02 09:50:42
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answer #8
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answered by Boris 6
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He visited Germany and Berlin
2006-12-02 05:47:00
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Definitely Liverpool,he had a relative there,I think it was a cousin
2006-12-02 05:45:37
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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