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Bridget Dowling

Bridget Elizabeth Dowling Hitler (alternative Brigid) (1891-1969) was Adolf Hitler's sister-in-law via her marriage to Alois Hitler, Jr.. She was born and raised in Dublin, Ireland.

In 1909, when she was seventeen, she and her father, William Dowling, attended the Dublin Horse Show where they met Alois Hitler, Jr. who claimed to be a wealthy hotelier touring Europe when, in fact, he was a poor waiter at Dublin's Shelbourne Hotel. Alois courted Bridget at various Dublin locales and soon they were discussing marriage. On June 3, 1910 the couple eloped to London. Her father threatened to charge Alois with kidnapping but accepted the marriage after Bridget pleaded with him.

The couple settled at 102 Upper Stanhope Street in Toxteth, Liverpool and, in 1911 they had their only child, William Patrick Hitler. Alois went to Germany in 1914 to establish himself in business but the outbreak of World War I. Bridget refused to go with him, as he had become violent and started beating their son. He decided to abandon his family and sent word after the war that he was dead.

He was charged with bigamy in 1924 but escaped conviction due to Bridget's intervention.

Bridget raised her son alone with no support from her estranged husband. She set up a home in Hornsey, North London, and took in lodgers to make ends meet.

In 1939, she joined her son on a tour of the United States where he was invited to lecture on his famous uncle. They decided to stay and Bridget wrote a manuscript, My Brother-in-Law Adolf, in which she claimed that her famous brother-in-law had moved to Liverpool to live with Bridget and Alois from November 1912 to April 1913 in order to dodge conscription in his native Austria. She claims that she introduced Adolf to astrology, and that she advised him to trim off the edges of his moustache. She was unable to sell the manuscript and most historians dismiss the work as being a fabrication written in an attempt to cash in on her famous relation. There is no evidence that Hitler ever visited his relatives in Liverpool. Professor Robert Waite refutes her claims that Adolf Hitler had stayed with her as well as most of the rest of her book in the appendix to his The Psychopathic God Adolf Hitler. According to David Gardiner, Bridget's daughter-in-law has said that Bridget admitted to her that the book was fanciful.

After the war Bridget and her son settled in Long Island under assumed names. She died there in 1969.

External links

  • Hitler's Irish Relatives http://fp.dowling.f9.co.uk/i1910hit.htm
  • Getting to know the Hitlers http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2002/01/20/whit20.xml from the Daily Telegraph
  • Author talks about 'the Last of the Hitlers' http://www.cnn.com/2002/SHOWBIZ/books/02/05/last.hitlers.cnna/ CNN interview
  • The Last of the Hitlers http://www.suntimes.co.za/1998/10/18/news/news03.htm by David Gardiner



Last updated: 02-10-2005 15:53:05
Last updated: 05-03-2005 02:30:17