William Stuart-Houston

Birthday March 12, 1911

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Liverpool, England

DEATH DATE 1987-7-14, Patchogue, New York, U.S. (76 years old)

Nationality Germany

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1909

The couple met in Dublin when Alois was living there during 1909; they married in London's Marylebone district in 1910 and relocated to Liverpool.

1911

William Patrick Stuart-Houston (born William Patrick Hitler; 12 March 1911 – 14 July 1987) was an English-born half-nephew of Adolf Hitler.

Born and raised in the Toxteth area of Liverpool to Adolf's half-Brother Alois Hitler Jr. and his Irish wife Bridget Dowling, he later relocated to Germany to work for his half-uncle before emigrating to the United States, where he received American citizenship (in addition to his British citizenship) and ended up serving in the United States Navy against his half-uncle and Germany during World War II, changing his surname after the war.

Stuart-Houston was born William Patrick Hitler in the Toxteth area of Liverpool, England on 12 March 1911, the son of Adolf Hitler's half-Brother Alois Hitler Jr. and his Irish wife Bridget Dowling.

1912

Dowling wrote a manuscript titled My Brother-in-Law Adolf, in which she claimed that Adolf had lived in Liverpool with her from November 1912 to April 1913 to avoid conscription in Austria.

The book is largely considered a work of fiction, as Adolf was residing in the Meldemannstraße dormitory in Vienna at the time.

1914

In 1914, Alois left Bridget and William for a gambling tour of Europe.

He later returned to Germany.

Unable to rejoin his family due to the outbreak of World War I, he abandoned them, leaving William To be brought up by his mother.

1920

He remarried bigamously, but wrote to Bridget during the mid-1920s to ask her to send William To Germany's Weimar Republic for a visit.

1929

She finally agreed in 1929, when William was 18.

By this time, Alois had another son named Heinz with his German wife.

1930

Adolf, who was now chancellor, found him a job at the Reichskreditbank in Berlin, a job that he held for most of the 1930s.

He later worked at the Opel automobile factory and as a car salesman.

Dissatisfied with these jobs, he again asked his half-uncle for a better job, writing to him with blackmail threats of selling embarrassing stories about the family to the newspapers unless his "personal circumstances" improved.

1933

In 1933, William travelled to what had become Nazi Germany in an attempt to benefit from his half-uncle's growing power.

1938

In 1938, Adolf asked William To relinquish his British citizenship in exchange for a high-ranking job.

Suspecting a trap, William fled Nazi Germany and again tried to blackmail his uncle with threats.

This time, William threatened to tell the press that Adolf's alleged paternal grandfather was actually a Jewish merchant.

He returned to London, where he wrote the article "Why I Hate My Uncle" for Look magazine.

1939

In January 1939, the newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst brought William and his mother to the United States for a lecture tour.

He and his mother were stranded when World War II began.

1942

The family lived in a flat at 102 Upper Stanhope Street, which was later destroyed during the last German air raid of the Liverpool Blitz on 10 January 1942.

Heinz, in contrast to William, became a committed Nazi, joined the Wehrmacht, and died in Soviet captivity in 1942.

1944

After making a special request to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, William was eventually approved to join the United States Navy in 1944; he relocated to the Sunnyside neighbourhood of Queens, New York.

1947

William was drafted into the United States Navy during World War II as a pharmacist's mate (a designation later changed to hospital corpsman) until he was discharged in 1947.

On reporting for duty, the induction officer asked his name.

He replied, "Hitler."

Thinking he was joking, the officer replied, "Glad to see you, Hitler. My name's Hess."

It is claimed William was wounded in action during the war and awarded the Purple Heart.

After being discharged from the Navy, William changed his surname to "Stuart-Houston".

In 1947, he married Phyllis Jean-Jacques, who had been born in Germany in the mid-1920s.

After their relationship began, William and Phyllis, along with Bridget, tried to live a life of anonymity in the United States.

They moved to Patchogue, New York, where William used his medical training to establish a business that analyzed blood samples for hospitals.

His laboratory, which he called Brookhaven Laboratories, was located in his home, a two-story clapboard house at 71 Silver Street.

1949

Stuart-Houston and his wife had four sons: Alexander Adolf (b. 1949), Louis (b. 1951), Howard Ronald (1957–1989), and Brian William (b. 1965).

None of his sons had children of their own.

1989

His third son, Howard Ronald Stuart-Houston, worked as a Special Agent with the Criminal Investigation Division of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and died in a car accident on September 14, 1989 while driving on Route 25, New York, near to Dietz Avenue, in a double frontal impact, while en route to subpoena for a money laundering investigation.

2001

In his 2001 book The Last of the Hitlers, journalist David Gardner speculated that the four brothers had made a verbal pact not to sire children.

Eldest son Alexander denied this claim, stating that before his death Howard Ronald had been engaged and intending to have children, while another brother had been engaged once, but family notoriety had destroyed the relationship.