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Tuesday, September 15, 2009 - 6:47 PM
William Patrick Hitler
He is a young man of thirty-two, the son of Alois, Jr., who has not amounted to much.
Before his uncle came to power he worked as a bookkeeper in London. When his uncle became
famous he obviously expected that something would be done for his family. He gave up his
job in London and went to Germany where he had some contact with Adolph Hitler. The
latter, however, was chiefly interested in keeping him under cover and provided him with a
minor job in the Opal Automobile Company. It is my impression that William Patrick was
quite ready to blackmail both his father and his uncle but that things did not work out as
planned. He returned to England and, as a British subject, came to this country where he
is a professional speaker. He is also engaged in writing a book about his associations and
experiences in Hitler Germany. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
Angela
She is an elder half-sister of Adolph. She seems to be the most normal one in the
family and from all reports is rather a decent and industrious person. During her
childhood she became very fond of Adolph despite the fact that she had the feeling that
his mother was spoiling him. She is the only one of the family with whom Adolph has had
any contact in later years and the only living relative Hitler ever mentioned. When his
mother died in 1907 there was a small inheritance which was to be divided among the
children. Since the two girls had no immediate means of earning a livelihood the brothers
turned over their share to help the girls along. Adolph turned his share over to Angela
while Alois turned his over to a younger sister, Paula. Angela later married an official
named Raubal in Linz who died not long afterwards. She then went to Vienna where, after
the war, she was manager of the Mensa Academica Judaica. Some of our informants knew her
during this time and report that in the student riots Angela defended the Jewish students
from attack, and on several occasions beat the Aryan students off the steps of the dining
hall with a club. She is a rather large, strong peasant type of person who is well able to
take an active part.
After Adolph was discharged from the army at the close of the last war, it is alleged
that he went to Vienna and visited Angela with whom he had had no contact for ten years.
While he was confined in Landsberg she made the trip from Vienna to visit him. In 1924 she
moved to Munich with her daughter, Geli, and [Page
106] kept house for Adolph. Later, she took over the management of Berchtesgaden. In
1936 friction developed between Adolph and Angela and she left Berchtesgaden and moved to
Dresden where she married Professor Hamitsch. It is reported by William Patrick that the
cause of the break was the discovery by Hitler that she was in a conspiracy with Goering
to purchase the land adjoining Hitler' s house at Berchtesgaden. This enraged Hitler to
the extent that he ordered her from the house and has had little contact with her since.
In any case, Adolph did not attend her second wedding.
Geli Raubal
Hitler's relationship with Geli, Angela's daughter, has already been described in the
previous section. She died in 1930.
Leo Raubal
It has been generally assumed that Geli was the only child of Angela. William Patrick
Hitler, however, reports that there is also a son named Leo. Not much is known of him
except that he refused to have anything to do with his uncle Adolph after the death of
Geli. He had a job in Salzburg and frequently came to Berchtesgaden to visit his mother
when Hitler was in Berlin, but would leave again just as soon as word was received that
Hitler was on his way there. According to William Patrick, he openly accused Hitler of
causing Geli's death and refused to speak to him again as long as he lived. Word has been
received that he was killed in 1942 while in the Balkans.
Paula Hitler
Paula Hitler, or Hiedler, is Adolph's real sister and is seven years younger. What
happened to her after her mother's death is a mystery until she was discovered living very
poorly in an attic in Vienna where she has a position addressing envelopes for an
insurance company. She now lives under the name of Frau Wolf (Hitler's nickname is Wolf)
and is alleged to be very queer and to receive no one in her home. Dr. Bloch went to visit
her in the hope that she might intercede with her brother and obtain permission for him to
take some money out of the country when he was exiled. He rapped on her door a number of
times but received no answer. Finally, the neighbor on the same landing came to the door
and asked who he was and what he wanted. The neighbor explained that Frau Wolf never
received anyone and intimated that she was very queer (other writers have also reported
this). She promised, however, to deliver any message he might give her. Dr. Bloch
explained his predicament in detail. The next day when he returned, hoping that he would
have an opportunity of speaking to Paula Hitler personally, the neighbor reported that
Paula was very glad to hear from him and that she would do everything she could to help
him. Nothing more.
During her childhood, according to William Patrick Hitler, she and Adolph did not get
on very well together. There seems to have been considerable friction and jealousy between
them, particularly since Alois Jr. was always taking her side. As far as is known, Hitler
had no contact with her whatever from the time his mother died until 1955 when he became
Chancellor. He has never mentioned her anywhere, as far as can be determined. It is
alleged that he now sends her a small allowance each month to alleviate her poverty and
keep her out of the limelight. According to William Patrick Hitler, his uncle became more
interested in her as the friction with Angela increased. It is said that he has had her
visit him at Berchtesgaden and William Patrick met her at the Bayreuth Festival in 1939
where she went by the name of Frau Wolf, but Hitler did not mention to anyone that it was
his sister. He said she is a little on the stupid side and not very interesting to talk to
since she rarely opens her mouth.
This is Adolph Hitler's family, past and present. It is possible that there is another
sister, Ida, an imbecile, who is still living, but if so we have no knowledge of her
whereabouts. On the whole, it is nothing to be proud of and Hitler may be wise in keeping
it well under cover.
If we let our imaginations carry us back into the early '90s it is not difficult to
picture what life was like for Adolph in his earliest years. His father was probably not
much company for his mother. Not only was he twenty-three years older but, it seems, he
spent most of his spare time in the taverns or gossiping with the neighbors. Furthermore,
his mother knew only too well the past history of her husband, who was also her
foster-father, and one can imagine that for a twenty-five year old woman this was not what
might be called a romantic marriage. Moreover, Klara Hitler had lost her first two
children, and possibly a third, in the course of three or four years. Then Adolph arrived.
Under these circumstances, it is almost inevitable that he became the focal point in her
life and that she left no stone unturned to keep him alive. All of the affection that
normally would have gone to her husband and to her other children now became lavished on
this newly born son.
It is safe to assume that for five years little Adolph was the center of attraction in
this home. But then a terrible event happened in Adolph' s life - another son was born. No
longer was he the center of attraction, no longer was he the king of the roost. The
new-comer usurped all this and little Adolph, who was on his way to growing up, was left
to shift more or less for himself - at least, so it probably seemed to him. Sharing was
something he had not learned up to this time, and it was probably a bitter experience for
him as it is for most children who have a sibling born when they are in this age period.
In fact, in view of the earlier experiences of his parents it is reasonable to suppose
that it was probably more acute in his case than it is with the average boy.
For two years he had to put up with this state of affairs. Then matters went from bad
to worse - a baby sister was born. More competition and still less attention for the baby
sister and the ailing brother were consuming all of his mother' s time while he was being
sent off to school and made to take care of himself. Four years later tragedy again
visited the Hitler household. When Adolph was eleven years old (in 1900) his baby brother,
Edmund, died. Again we can imagine that Adolph reaped an additional harvest of affection
and again became the apple of his mother's eye.
This is certainly an extraordinary series of events which must have left their mark on
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire Adolph' s immature personality. What probably went on in his mind during these years we
shall consider later on. It is sufficient at the moment to point out the extraordinary
sequence of events and the probably [sic] effects they had on the members of the family
and their relations with each other.
When Adolph was six years old he was sent off to school. The first school was a very
small Volkschule where three grades met in the same room and were taught by the same
teacher. In spite of the fact that he had to change schools several times in the course of
the next few years, due to the fact that his father kept buying and selling his.property
and moving from one place to another, he seems to have done quite well in his studies.
When he was eight years old he attended a Benedict Monastery in Lamback. He was very much
intrigued with all this - it gave him his first powerful impression of human achievement.
At that time his ambition was to become an abbot. But things did not work out very well.
He was dismissed from the monastery because he was caught smoking in the gardens. His last
year in Volkschule was in Leonding where he received high marks in all his subjects with
the occasional exception of singing, drawing and physical exercises.
In 1900, the year his brother Edmund died, he entered the Realschule in Linz. To the
utter amazement of all who knew him his school work was so poor that he failed and had to
repeat the class another time. Then there was a gradual improvement in his work,
particularly in history, free-hand drawing and gymnastics. In these subjects he was marked
"excellent" several times. Mathematics, French, German, etc., remained mediocre,
sometimes satisfactory, sometimes unsatisfactory. On "Effort" he was frequently
marked "irregular". When he was fourteen years of age his father died suddenly.
The following year he left the Realschule in Linz and attended the one in Steyr. We do not
know why this change was made. Dr. Bloch is under the impression that he was doing badly
toward the end of the year in the Linz school and was sent to Steyr because it had the
reputation of being easier. But his performance there was very mediocre. The only two
subjects in which he excelled were in free-hand drawing, in which he was marked
"praise-worthy" and gymnastics, in which he received the mark of
"excellent". In the first semester "German Language" was
"unsatisfactory" and in "History" it was "adequate".
All this is beautifully glossed over in Hitler's description of these years. According
to his story he was at odds with his father concerning his future career as artist and in
order to have his own way he sabotaged his studies - at least those he felt would not
contribute to an artist's career, and History - which he says always fascinated him. In
these studies, according to his own story he was always outstanding. An examination of his
report cards reveals no such thing. History, even in his last year in Realschule is
adequate or barely passing, and other subjects which might be useful to an artist are in
the same category. A better diagnosis would be that he was outstanding in those subjects
which did not require any preparation or thought while in those that required application
he was sadIy lacking. We frequently find report cards of this type among our patients who
are very intelligent but refuse to work. They are bright enough to catch on to a few of
the fundamental principles without exerting themselves and clever enough to amplify these
sufficiently to obtain a passing-grade without ever doing any studying. They give the
impression of knowing something about the subject but their knowledge is very superficial
and is glossed over with glib words and terminology.
This evaluation of Hitler's school career fits in with the testimony of former fellow
students and teachers. According to their testimony he never applied himself and was bored
with what was going on. While the teacher was explaining new material, he read the books
of Karl May (Indian and Wild West stories) which he kept concealed under his desk. He
would come to school with bowie knives, hatchets, etc., and was always trying to initiate
Indian games in which he was to be the leader. The other boys, however, were not greatly
impressed by him and his big talk or his attempts to play the leader. On the whole, they
preferred to follow the leadership of boys who were more socially-minded, more realistic
in their attitudes - and held greater promise of future achievements than Hitler who gave
every indication of being lazy, uncooperative, lived in a world of fantasy, talked big but
did nothing of merit.
He probably did not improve his standing with the other boys when, in his twelfth year,
he was found guilty of a "Sittlichkeitsvergehen" in the school. Just what the
sexual indiscretion consisted of we do not know but Dr. Bloch, who remembers that one of
the teachers in the school told him about it, feels certain that he had done something
with a little girl. He was severely censured for this and barely missed being expelled
from school. It is possible that he was ostracized by his fellow students and that this is
the reason he changed schools the following year.
In September, 1905, he stopped going to school altogether and returned to Leonding
where he lived with his mother and sister. According to his biographers, he was suffering
from lung trouble during this period and had to remain in bed the greater part of the
time. Dr. Bloch, who was the family doctor at this time is at a loss to understand how
this story ever got started because there was no sign of lung trouble of any sort. Adolph
came to his office now and then with a slight cold or a sore throat but there was nothing
else wrong with him. According to Dr. Bloch, he was very quiet boy at this time, rather
slight in build but fairly wiry. He was always very courteous and patiently waited for his
turn. He made no fuss when the doctor looked into his throat or when he swabbed it with an
antiseptic. He was very shy and had little to say except when spoken to. But there was no
sign of lung trouble.
During this time, however, he frequently went with his mother to visit his aunt in
Spital, Lower Austria where he also spent vacations. The doctor who treated him there is
alleged to have said to the aunt: "From this illness Adolph will not recover."
It is assumed that he referred to a lung condition but it seems that it must have been
very slight because it was not reported to Dr. Bloch when he returned to Leonding a few
months later and his records show no entry which would even suggest such an ailment.
Although the mother's income was extremely modest, he made no attempt to find work.
There is some evidence that he went to a Munich art school for a short time during this
period. Most of his time was evidently spent in loafing around and daubing paints and
water colors. He took long walks into the hills, supposedly to paint, but it is reported
that he was seen there delivering speeches to the rocks of the country in a most energetic
tone of voice.
In October, 1807, he went to Vienna to Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire prepare himself for the State examinations for
admission as student to the Academy of Art. He qualified for admission to the examination
but failed to be accepted as a student. On the first day of the examination the assignment
was: "The Expulsion from Paradise" and on the second day: "An Episode of
the Great Flood". The comment of the examiners was "Too few heads".
He returned home to Linz but there is no indication that he communicated to anybody the
results of the examination. It was undoubtedly a severe blow to him for he tells us
himself that he couldn't understand it, "he was so sure he would succeed." At
this time his mother had already undergone an operation for cancer of the breast. She was
failing rather rapidly and little hope was held for her recovery. She died on December 21,
1907 and was buried on Christmas Eve. To preserve a last impression,.he sketched her on
her deathbed. Adolph, according to Dr. Bloch, was completely broken: "In all my
career I have never seen anyone so prostrate with grief as Adolph Hitler." Although
his sisters came to Dr. Bloch a few days after the funeral, and expressed themselves
fully, Adolph remained silent. As the little group left, he said: "I shall be
grateful to you forever." (29) After the funeral he stood at her grave for a long
time after the sisters had left. The bottom had obviously fallen out of his world. Tears
came into Dr. Bloch's eyes as he described the tragic scene. "His mother would turn
over in her grave if she knew what he turned out to be." (21) This was the end of
Adolph Hitler's family life.
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