Sometimes
odd connections turn up in history which are meaningless but can be intriguing. One, stumbled on today, began as a search for
a house in Liverpool in the early years of the
20th Century.
The
Spitfire fighter plane is one of the iconic symbols of World War II and amongst
those who know little or nothing about that war if anything occurs to them it
might be that airplane. In the air war
against Adolf Hitler and Germany
it played an important part.
The
Spitfire was developed by the Supermarine company in the 1930’s with the
leading designer being R.J. Mitchell. It
owed much to the work done on the Supermarine entries in the Schneider Trophy
air races for seaplanes. The trophy was
won outright by Supermarine in 1931, having also won in 1919 and 1927.
This nearly
did not happen because in 1931 during severe government cuts in spending the
support for the Supermarine entry and co-operation was withdrawn by the
National Government under Ramsay MacDonald.
There was a fine old political row and a major press campaign against
the decision.
At the
heart of it was Lady Lucy Houston who donated £100,000 of her own money to
allow Supermarine to enter and host the race and led the attack on Government
short sightedness and meanness of spirit.
That she was somewhat Right Wing and hated MacDonald added spice to the
business.
Lady Lucy
Houston, see Wikipedia, was quite a girl in her way. She had done well by her talents, not least
marrying Sir Robert Paterson Houston in 1924, also in Wikipedia, she a double
divorcee with added income from a previous arrangement and he a bachelor ship
owner and Member of Parliament.
The upshot
of the marriage and his demise in 1926 was that she picked up £5 million plus
on the proceeds of probate, the product of his years of business and effort and
so could afford the odd £100,000 for national prestige.
He was said
to be a “hard, ruthless, unpleasant bachelor” echoing John Maynard Keynes
comment on the House of Commons in 1919 consisting of “a lot of hard faced men
who have done rather well out of the war”.
Houston from 1892 to 1924 had been the
Member for the constituency of West Toxteth in Liverpool .
In the 1911
Census one name that appears in Toxteth is that of Alois Hitler, albeit listed
as Anton, the elder half brother of Adolf Hitler, who would not have had the
vote. He left Liverpool in May 1914 to
return to Austria and had a
chequered history before running a restaurant in Berlin popular with Nazi Stormtroopers.
His son,
William Patrick Hitler, who moved to America in 1934, served with the US
Navy and after the war changed his surname to Stewart-Houston.
The world
turns.
Beryl Bainbridge wrote a novel (Young Adolf), also a flight of fancy based on the possibility that Adolf visited Alois for a while in Toxteth.
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