A retreat into a little
bit of history here. It is an article
published on pages 193 to 195 with pictures in an American magazine. The dating and content is interesting in this
context.
Make of it what you will. As the heading suggests it was not to my
taste.
HOMES & GARDENS, November
1938
Page193 "Hitler's Mountain Home" - A
visit to 'Haus Wachenfeld' in the Bavarian Alps, written and illustrated by
Ignatius Phayre
It is over
twelve years since Herr Hitler fixed on the site of his one and only home. It
had to be close to the Austrian border, barely ten miles from Mozart's own
medieval Salzburg. At first no more than a hunter's shack, "Haus
Wachenfeld" has grown until it is to-day quite a handsome Bavarian chalet,
2,000 feet up on the Obersalzburg amid pinewoods and cherry orchards.
Here, in the
early days, Hitler's widowed sister, Frau Angela Raufal, kept house for him on
a "peasant" scale. Then, as his famous book Mein Kampf ("My
Struggle") became a best-seller of astonishing power (4,500,000 copies of
it have been sold), Hitler began to think of replacing that humble shack by a
house and garden of suitable scope. In this matter he has throughout been his
own architect.
There is
nothing pretentious about the Führer's little estate. It is one that any
merchant of Munich or Nuremberg might possess in these lovely hills.
The entrance
hall is filled with a curious display of cactus plants in majolica pots. Herr
Hitler's study is fitted as a modern office, and leading out of this is a
telephone exchange.
From here it
is possible for the Führer to invite friends or Ministers to fly over to
Berchtesgaden, landing on his own aerodrome just below the chalet lawns. The site commands the fairest view of all
Europe. This is to say much, I know. But in these Bavarian Alps there is a
softness of greenery, with snow-white cascades and forest-clad pinnacles, like
the Schönfeldapitae and Tuefelshörmer.
Hitler's
home looks out upon his native Austria.
Meals are
often served on the terrace on little tables shaded by big canvas umbrellas.
From this viewpoint a chain of drowsy lakes is seen far below, with ancient
shrine-chapels hidden in ferny folds of towering rocks. And since the
Reichsführer settled here as "Squire of Wachenfeld" the whole region
has been starred with motor speedways, even as far as Oberammergau.
The colour
scheme throughout this bright, airy chalet is light jade green. In outside
rooms, like the sun-parlour, chairs and tables are of white, plaited cane. Here
Hitler will read the home and foreign papers which his own air pilot, Hansel
Baur, brings him every day from Berlin before lunch.
At this
altitude, the Bavarian sun is at its most genial. Even at Christmastime when
deep snows are out, Haus Wachenfeld basks in warmth like the Engadine's. The
effect of light and air in the house is heightened by the rolling and trilling
of many Hartz mountain canaries in gilded cages which hang or stand in most of
the rooms.
The curtains
are of printed linen or fine damask in the softer shades. The Führer is his own
decorator, designer and furnisher, as well as architect. He is constantly
enlarging the place, building on new guest annexes, and arranging in these his
favorite antiques- chiefly German furniture of the eighteenth century, for
which agents in Munich are on the lookout.
It is a
mistake to guess that week-end guests are all, or even mainly, State officials.
Hitler delights in the society of brilliant foreigners, especially painters,
musicians and singers. As host, he is a droll raconteur; we all know how
surprised were Mr. Lloyd George and his party when they accepted an invitation
to Haus Wachenfeld.
The guest
bedrooms are hung with old engravings. But more interesting than any of these
to the visitor are the Führer's own water-colour sketches. Time was when a
hungry Hitler was glad to raise a few marks by selling these little works; none
measures more than about eight inches square, and each is signed "A.
Hitler" - unmistakably, if also illegibly!
The gardens
are laid out simply enough. Lawns at different levels are planted with flowering
shrubs as well as roses and other blooms in due season. The Führer, I may add,
has a passion about cut flowers in his home, as well as for music.
Every morning at nine he
goes out for a talk with the gardeners about their day's work. These men, like
the chauffeur and air-pilot, are not so much servants as loyal friends. A
life-long vegetarian at table, Hitler's kitchen plots are both varied and heavy
on produce. Even in his meatless diet, Hitler is something of a gourmet - as
Sir John Simon and Mr. Anthony Eden were surprised to note when they dined with
him at the Presidential Palace at Berlin.
His.Bavarian chef, Herr Kannenberg, contrives an imposing array of
vegetarian dishes, savoury and rich, pleasing to the eye as well as to the
palate, and all conforming to the dietic standards which Hitler exacts. But at
Haus Wachenfeld he keeps a generous table for guests of normal tastes.
Here bon viveurs
like Field-Marshals Göring and von Blumberg and Joachim von Ribbentrop will
forgather at dinner. Elaborate dishes will then be served with fine wine and
liquors of von Ribbentrop's expert choosing. Cigars and cigarettes are duly
lighted at this terrace feast - though Hitler himself never smokes, nor does he
take alcohol in any form.
All visitors
are shown their host's model kennels, where he breeds magnificent Alsatians.
Some of his pedigree pets are allowed the run of the house, especially on days
when Herr Hitler gives a "Fun Fair" to the local children. On such a
day, when State affairs are over, the Squire himself, attended by some of his
guests, will stroll through the woods into hamlets above and below.
There
rustics sit at cottage doors, carving trinkets and toys in wood, ivory and
bone. It is then the little ones are invited to the house. Coffee, cakes,
fruits and sweets are laid out for them on trestle tables in the grassy
orchards. The Frauen Goebbels and Göring, in dainty Bavarian dress, arrange
dances and folk-songs while the bolder spirits are given joy-rides in Herr
Hitler's private aeroplane.
Nor must I
forget to mention the archery-butts at the back of the chalet. It is strange to
watch the burly Field-Marshal Göring, as chief of the most formidable air force
in Europe, taking a turn with the bow and arrow at straw targets of twenty-five
yards range. There is as much to-do about those scarlet bulls-eyes as though
the fate of nations depended on a perfect score!
But I have
said enough to convey the idea of a sunny sub-alpine home, hundreds of miles
from Berlin's uproar, and set amid an unsophisticated peasantry of carvers and
hunters. This is the only home in which Hitler can laugh and take his ease - or
even "conduct tours" by means of the tripod telescope which he
himself operates on the terrace for his visitors.
"This
place is mine." He says, simply. "I built it with money that I
earned." Then he takes you into his library where you note that quite half
of the books are on history, painting, architecture and music. When it is fine
enough to dine in the open air, one sees a piano made ready for the
after-dinner concert.
Local talent
will provide violin and cello for pieces by Mozart or Brahms. But at the piano
itself, it is always that English-speaking giant (he is 6ft.4 ins.), Dr. Ernest
"Putzi" Hanfatarangl who presides as composer of all-German reknown.
That's just so inspirational for our glorious European leaders. The United States of Europe must produce an exact copy for Barroso & Merkel - they deserve it!
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