Adolf Hitler is still the most hated man in the world 73 years after his death — but his three closest surviving relatives are living on New York’s Long Island as peaceful, flag-waving Americans! Alexander, Louis and Brian Stuart-Houston are sons of the German fiend’s nephew William “Willy” Patrick Hitler, whose dad was Alois Hitler Jr. — Adolf’s half-brother. Now middle-aged men, they’ve not had offspring and shied away from the limelight until recently, when Alexander (inset) suddenly surfaced with an interview to a German newspaper about overseas politics and Chancellor Angela Merkel. “I like her. She’s good,” says Alexander, whose middle name is Adolf. “She seems to be an intelligent and smart person.” Read on for details of Hitler’s American descendants, and click here for more Nazi news….
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The brothers’ bizarre odyssey started when Alois left Germany at age 14 for Ireland, where he worked as a waiter, and then returned to his homeland, abandoning son Willy to grow up in England. Later, Willy visited estranged dad Alois in Germany in 1929 and attended his great-uncle Adolf’s notorious Nuremberg rally.
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But the Nazi führer was furious when Willy returned to Britain and leaked family secrets in interviews where he was billed as Hitler’s English nephew. The dictator demanded Willy return to Germany, where the hopping-mad Hitler screamed at him.
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“What did you tell the newspaper," Hitler demanded. "Who gave you permission to appoint yourself an authority on my private affairs? No one must drag my private affairs into the newspapers. I have never said one word they can use. And now there is a ‘nephew’ to tell them all the
miserable little details they want to know.”
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Willy stayed in England before heading to New York, where he joined the U.S. Navy in 1944 and fought against his crazed great-uncle. Later, he and his German wife settled in Patchogue, N.Y., where they changed their name to Hiller — and then Stuart-Houston.
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Willy died at 76 in 1987, leaving the Hitler bloodline to his sons (left to right) Alexander, Louis and Brian, who have tried to live under the radar until Alexander blabbed. A neighbor who knows of the brothers’ and their horrific roots calls them “excellent people,” noting: “You can’t be blamed for your relatives.”
The brothers’ bizarre odyssey started when Alois left Germany at age 14 for Ireland, where he worked as a waiter, and then returned to his homeland, abandoning son Willy to grow up in England. Later, Willy visited estranged dad Alois in Germany in 1929 and attended his great-uncle Adolf’s notorious Nuremberg rally.
But the Nazi führer was furious when Willy returned to Britain and leaked family secrets in interviews where he was billed as Hitler’s English nephew. The dictator demanded Willy return to Germany, where the hopping-mad Hitler screamed at him.
Photo credit: Getty Images
“What did you tell the newspaper," Hitler demanded. "Who gave you permission to appoint yourself an authority on my private affairs? No one must drag my private affairs into the newspapers. I have never said one word they can use. And now there is a ‘nephew’ to tell them all the
miserable little details they want to know.”
Willy stayed in England before heading to New York, where he joined the U.S. Navy in 1944 and fought against his crazed great-uncle. Later, he and his German wife settled in Patchogue, N.Y., where they changed their name to Hiller — and then Stuart-Houston.
Photo credit: Getty Images
Willy died at 76 in 1987, leaving the Hitler bloodline to his sons (left to right) Alexander, Louis and Brian, who have tried to live under the radar until Alexander blabbed. A neighbor who knows of the brothers’ and their horrific roots calls them “excellent people,” noting: “You can’t be blamed for your relatives.”