Adolf Hitler had a British Nephew Who Joined the U.S. Navy During WWII

Today I found out Adolf Hitler had a British nephew who joined the U.S. navy during WWII.

Hitler’s nephew, who he would come to call “my loathsome nephew”, was originally named William Patrick Hitler, but he later changed it to William Patrick Stuart-Houston to distance himself from his uncle’s name after WWII.  William was born in Liverpool, the son of Adolf Hitler’s half brother, Alois Hitler, Jr., and an Irish woman named Bridget Dowling.

Prior to WWII, William moved from England to Germany where Adolf Hitler got him a job in a bank, which he subsequently left after convincing Hitler to get him a job at an automobile factory, as a salesman. At this point, Hitler began calling him “my loathsome nephew” and began publicly calling him out, stating, “I didn’t become Chancellor for the benefit of my family … No one is going to climb on my back.”

Getting nowhere further with his uncle, William then returned to London for a time and attempted to capitalize on his uncle’s fame there.  He later returned to Germany where Hitler eventually offered William a top ranking position with the Nazis if William would renounce his British citizenship.  William turned down the offer, fearing he’d be trapped in Germany in the coming conflict.

No longer caring to ask for a job or high ranking position, William subsequently began trying to blackmail his uncle, threatening to tell the media stories about Hitler and his family, including threatening to confirm a rumor that Hitler was the illegitimate grandson of the Jewish merchant, Leopold Frankenberger, if Hitler wouldn’t give him money. As you might imagine, this didn’t sit well with Hitler and William was forced to flee back to England, though some reports say he was given a sizable sum before being forced to leave.

Just before the start of WWII, William and his mother were invited to the United States at the invitation of famed publisher William Randolph Hearst.  Hearst then sponsored William on a nationwide lecture tour titled “My Uncle Adolf”, where William would tell stories about Hitler and the Nazis to audiences.

Once the war broke out, William tried to join the British forces, but was denied.  When the U.S. eventually entered the war, William appealed to President Roosevelt to be allowed to join the U.S. forces, stating why he felt he wasn’t being allowed to serve in the British forces: “The British are an insular people and while they are kind and courteous, it is my impression, rightly or wrongly, that they could not in the long term feel overly cordial or sympathetic towards an individual bearing the name I do.”

Roosevelt turned the matter over to the F.B.I. who eventually decided to allow William to join the U.S. navy, despite being a British citizen and the nephew of Hitler.    He served in the navy as a Hospital Corpsman and was discharged in 1947 after three years of service.

Bonus Facts:

  • After the war, William married and moved to Long Island where he set up his own blood sample analysis business.
  • William had four sons: Alexander, Louis, Howard, and Brian. Three of them live in Long Island today.  The fourth son, Howard, died in a car accident in 1989, two years after William died.  Two of his remaining sons live together and own a landscaping company and the third is a social worker.
  • The apartment William Hitler and his family lived at in Liverpool was destroyed in a German air raid on January 10, 1942.
  • William’s mother, Bridget Dowling, once wrote a manuscript, My Brother-in-Law Adolf, to try to capitalize on Hitler’s fame.  Most of the content of the manuscript has been dismissed by historians including allegations that Hitler spent nearly six months living in Liverpool with her family in 1912 and into 1913.  She also claimed she was the one who convinced him to cut his mustache the way he did, rather than the more traditional handlebar style and claims to have introduced Hitler to astrology, which is something he is said to have taken great stock in while planning some of his military strategies.
  • William’s father, Alois Hitler, left the family to return to Austria in 1914.  Bridget and William did not go with him, though the two did not divorce.  After WWI began, Alois Hitler married Hedwig Weidemann, which subsequently got him in a lot of trouble once authorities discovered he was already married. Alois had a son with his new wife in Austria, Heinz Hitler, who served as a Nazi in WWII and was captured, tortured, and killed by the Soviet Union in 1942.
  • Interestingly, Alois Hitler only managed to escape punishment for getting married while he was already married when his first wife Bridget Dowling intervened with the authorities, claiming she had separated from him before he left for Austria.
  • When Alois Hitler first met Bridget Dowling, he claimed to be a wealthy hotel owner, when, in fact, he was just a waiter at a hotel.  He then eloped with Dowling, despite her father’s threats against him.
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5 comments

  • Another historic anomaly was Reichmarschall Hermann Goering’s nephew. Captain Werner Goering, USAAF, was a B-17 command pilot in the Eighth Air Force. He flew a complete 25 mission tour of duty, and volunteered to fly a second. He wasn’t especially heroic, just one of many B-17 jockeys; but he qualified as a pathfinder pilot and earned a DFC for valor in combat for bringing his badly damaged Flying Fortress home with two engines shot out in November, 1944. By the end of the war, he had been promoted to Major and was in command of a squadron of his own.

    • anyone who completed 25 missions in a B-17 during the allied bombing raids, much less bringing back a crippled ship…..was a hero period. doubt you have done anything remotely heroic!

      • Thank You for Your Service to America, You are Greatly Appreciated! Roy Jaruk, not so much.

  • I agree. Anyone who flew 25 missions over Germany, and when that was a full tour (later increased to 30 and 35 missions) the defenses were truly horrific, is a complete hero. The Luftwaffe was still strong then. My uncle flew 20 missions and was offered a 5-mission credit if he would volunteer for the Aphrodite missions. They could tell him only that it was dangerous. As Uncle Fain (Fain H. Pool) had lost four B-17s assigned to him when he was not flying them, he felt like nothing could be as dangerous as five more missions. He may have been wrong about that. He flew the first Aphrodite mission and was one of the few survivors. Joe Kennedy Jr. died on one of those missions. Uncle Fain much later retired a colonel, and said the scariest flying of his life was the Berlin Airlift missions.