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Adolf Hitler's nephew, William Patrick Hitler, is said to have served in the US Navy as a medical officer, where he was wounded. Does anyone know what theatre he served in and what was the nature of his wound?

2007-10-27 00:04:33 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities History

5 answers

He did fight for the United States. Military records were destroyed in a fire. See below.

2007-10-27 01:10:19 · answer #1 · answered by staisil 7 · 1 0

I believe he was stationed in the atlantic. Hitler's half-brother emigrated to Ireland and became an Irish citizen. Hitler's sister passed away in germany a few years ago. He really did have a lot of relatives; almost like everybody else in that respect.

2007-10-27 12:07:24 · answer #2 · answered by acmeraven 7 · 1 0

The operating theatre!

No sorry, It was probably in the pacific i should imagine, keep him away from uncle adolf?

2007-10-27 07:33:56 · answer #3 · answered by Proper Gander 4 · 1 0

sparks.

if you are going to copy and paste wikipedia, shouldn't you acknowledge it?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Patrick_Hitler

2007-10-27 12:03:37 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

William Patrick Hitler was the only son of Alois Hitler, Jr., and his Irish-born wife Bridget Dowling. They had met in Dublin when Alois was living there in 1909, and eloped to Liverpool where William was born in 1911. Hitler's nephew is recalled by elderly former neighbors, and in Liverpool folklore variously as "Billy" or "Paddy" Hitler. The family lived in a flat at 102 Upper Stanhope Street, which was destroyed in the last German air raid of the Liverpool Blitz on January 10, 1942. It has remained a bomb site ever since. Dowling wrote a manuscript called My Brother-in-Law Adolf, in which she claimed Adolf Hitler had moved to Liverpool with her and Alois from November 1912 to April 1913, in order to dodge conscription in Austria. The story has been popular, but is dismissed by most historians as fanciful.

In 1914 Alois returned to Germany, but Bridget refused to join him, as he had become violent. Unable to reconnect due to the outbreak of World War I, Alois abandoned the family, leaving William to be raised by his mother. He remarried, bigamously, but re-established contact in the mid-1920s when he wrote to Bridget asking her to send William to Weimar Republic Germany for a visit. She finally agreed in 1929, when William was 18. Alois had another son with his German wife, Heinz Hitler, who, in contrast to his half-brother, became a true-believing Nazi and died in Soviet captivity.

In 1933, William Patrick Hitler returned to Nazi Germany in an attempt to benefit from his uncle's rise to power. His uncle found him a job in a bank. Later, he worked at the Opel car factory and then as a car salesman. Unsatisfied, William Patrick persisted in asking his uncle for a better job, and there were rumors he might sell embarrassing stories about the family to the press if he did not receive one; among the rumors would have been his father's bigamous marriage. In 1938, Adolf asked William to relinquish his British citizenship in exchange for a high-ranking job. Fearing a trap, William panicked and fled Germany and then tried to blackmail Hitler with threats to allege to the press that Hitler's alleged paternal grandfather was actually a Jewish merchant. Returning to London he wrote an article for Look magazine titled "Why I Hate my Uncle."

In 1939, William and his mother went to the United States on a lecture tour[1] on the invitation of William Randolph Hearst, and were stranded there when World War II broke out. After making a special request to President Franklin Roosevelt, William was cleared to join the United States Navy in 1944; according to a story printed in newspapers at the time of his enlistment, when he went to the draft office and introduced himself, the recruiting officer replied, "Glad to see you Hitler, my name's Hess."

William Patrick Hitler served in the US Navy and the Naval Medical Corps before being discharged in 1947, after being wounded during the course of the war.[1] After leaving the service he changed his last name to Stuart-Houston,[2] married a German woman, moved to Patchogue on Long Island, New York, and had four sons. He used his medical training to establish a business analysing blood samples for hospitals.

He was married to Phyllis Jean-Jacques, born in Germany in 1923, whose sister had kept in correspondence with William via mail. After their relationship had begun, Patrick, Phyllis, and Bridget sought anonymity in the U.S. In 1949 they had their first son, who was given the name Alexander Adolph by Patrick. They would later have three more sons, by the names of Louis, Howard, and Brian William.

William died in 1987 and was buried alongside his mother, Bridget, at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Coram, New York. [3] Phyllis passed away on November 2, 2004.

Howard, a Special Agent with the Criminal Investigation Division of the Internal Revenue Service, died in an automobile accident on September 14, 1989] without having had any children, leaving his brothers Alexander Adolph, Louis and Brian William as the last three members of Adolf Hitler's paternal bloodline. It has been said that these three have vowed not to have children themselves and none of them have married, but Alex, now a social worker, has said that he knows of no such pact, and that if it had been made, it was made by the other two brothers without his involvement.

Despite his public disapproval of his uncle's ideology, not only did William Patrick give his eldest son (born in 1949) the middle name of Adolph, but it has been pointed out that his adopted name Stuart-Houston is remarkably similar to that of famous British anti-Semitic ideologist Houston Stewart Chamberlain, often cited by Nazi sympathizers at the time. The family, however, says that William had rejected Nazi beliefs and had embraced the American Dream and had been wounded fighting for the US during World War I

2007-10-27 08:46:52 · answer #5 · answered by sparks9653 6 · 2 2

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