The item below was first posted on Thursday 1st October, 2009, but I
think it might have a second outing.
Quote:
Lenin, Hitler, Liverpool, London ,
& Rorke’s Drift
An item has been for sale online, said to be an etching made in 1910 of
Lenin and Hitler playing chess together in a room in Vienna in the house of a mutual friend. Perhaps, what worries me is the etching. This is skilled, expensive, and takes time
and trouble. Anyone recording this event
would have been more likely to make a quick sketch of one sort or another.
Also, there must have been many more interesting people in Vienna playing chess or
talking together at the time. Hitler was
an unsuccessful artist, just turned 20, and going nowhere. Lenin was just another middle aged political
thinker and activist on the run from Tsarist Russia, ageing and seemingly with
no real future.
The other tale about the travels of Adolf that had attention in the past
is the one about his supposed visit to Liverpool
between November 1912 and April 1913. Based
on a suspect memoir by his sister-in-law, Bridget (born Dowling), whose husband
Alois Hitler, listed as Anton in the 1911 England Census; step brother of The
Fuhrer, was working as a waiter in Liverpool
at the time. It became the plot of an
imaginative and readable novel by Beryl Bainbridge that was became an
interesting TV item.
As ever the myth overtook the truth.
Detailed research in Vienna
suggests that such a visit was never made, and that Bridget was making up an
Irish whimsy later in life to help sell the copies of her life story. It is a great pity, in 1913 both my parents
and their hordes of families were roaming the streets in which Alois and
Bridget Hitler lived and worked. I could
have come up with all sorts of wild fantasies.
A much better prospect for men who might have met and talked is a
pairing that many would feel very unlikely.
It is Lenin and Hook, one of the 13 men who won the Victoria Cross at
Rorke’s Drift in 1879 when just over 100 men held off and defeated a Zulu Impi
with a force of up to 4,500. They were
certainly in the same place at the same time and for a year, and with interests
in common.
In April 1902 Lenin, born Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, was in London under the name of Jacob Richter, to avoid the
attentions of the Paris
agents of the Okhrana, the Tsarist Secret Police of Imperial Russia, and he
stayed until May 1903. At the British
Museum he was issued with ticket number A72453 to give him access to the
Library with its vast resources of books, and he spent a great deal of time
there researching and writing.
One minor speculation is where he preferred to sit, perhaps seats G7,
H9, R7, R8, but the favourite is L13 because of its nearness to the reference
shelves. Of the many attendants around,
one would have stood out.
Alfred Henry Hook, who had dropped the Alfred early in life, known as
Harry, was by then around 50, and perhaps already affected by the TB that was
to end his life in 1905. He had been
employed there since the 1880’s. After
earning his VC in 1879, and with permanent injuries he had bought out, and in
1881 was working as a groom to a General Practitioner in Monmouth named George Owen
Willis.
Not long after he was employed at the British Museum
as an attendant, and signed up additionally with the Royal Fusiliers, The
London Regiment, 1st Volunteer Battalion as an instructor, rising to
be Sergeant. The Volunteers were the
predecessors of the Territorial Army, and often functioned as feeder units to
the regular Army.
There are reasons for Lenin to check Hook out. One was that as a figure of authority he was
more likely than most to be asked his opinion about this “Mr. Richter” if the
Special Branch had been alerted by the Okhrana and were seeking information. The logic would have been to test the
possibility. Intellectually, however,
would anyone with such an enquiring mind and intelligence of Lenin, miss the
opportunity to have an occasional conversation with a man of this experience?
It would not have been difficult, because Hook was temperance, and as
busy men both may well have used one of the cheap tea rooms in the vicinity
before going on to meetings, as Lenin
would, or the Drill Hall, as Hook would.
Even fifty years later, it was surprising who you could bump into when
going into a Bloomsbury tearoom for a quick
cuppa and a sandwich.
Imagine, a foreigner with little income, but with a trained legal mind,
high academic qualifications, and a great breadth of knowledge, asking plain reasonable
questions to an older man to help him towards an understanding of this or that
in the news in Britain. The end of the
war in South Africa, a new Prime Minister, the crowning of the new King, the
British in Somaliland and West Africa, the troubles of agriculture in the
Atlantic Isles and more.
Hook was a countryman by birth, one of the many who joined the Army for
employment and training. As for Empire,
Hook had experienced the full reality of it at the end of his bayonet, and had
been involved with many men since who had seen its further shores. He would have been able to make informed and
incisive comments about the South African War of 1899-1902 and the business in Nigeria .
It is speculation, and no more, but what might Lenin have learned from
Hook? Lenin at the time was interested in agrarian issues, colonisation,
political structures, and the extent of financial interests.
In military terms, it would have been organisation, discipline, tactics,
the ability of a small well trained group with the motivation and leadership to
withstand and overcome what was in theory a vastly superior force. In 1914 the Old Contemptibles, the small regular British army, stopped the might
of the German Kaiser’s Imperial Army by its rifle skills, discipline, and
bayonets.
To understand Hook you need to forget the film “Zulu” and totally clear
it from your mind. It is “Hollywood
History”, not as bad or idiotic as most, but certainly with many adjustments to
the facts and in particular the portrayal of personalities.
Hook of the film is a travesty, as are other characters, notably Dalton , but to a lesser
extent Chard and Bromhead, both highly professional soldiers who at the end of
the battle shared a bottle of beer found in a burned out wagon.
Hook was a sober, capable man, probably with a Forest of Dean accent,
literate and able to communicate well enough.
He would have been a good man to talk to. I believe he always remained a country man,
because he returned to his home village, Churcham in Gloucestershire, to
die. There is no statue to him anywhere;
he has only a simple grave in a country churchyard.
If they did meet and talk a time or two, it might have been this quality
and a direct sense of purpose that may have impressed Lenin most of all.
Unquote.
What is intriguing is that that while Hook may have known Lenin, earlier
in the 1881 Census he is living in Monmouth as a groom to George Owen
Willis. On that same day Karl Marx has for
his next door neighbour Edwin Willis, the famed builder of organs.
All people that on earth do dwell.......
"To understand Hook you need to forget the film “Zulu” and totally clear it from your mind. It is “Hollywood History”"
ReplyDeleteThey just have to distort things don't they?