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HITLER

Hitler’s Spanish fighter planes go on sale in US

Five Spain-made fighter planes licensed by der Fuhrer during WWII have been rescued from a dusty warehouse and go on sale in Texas on Monday, each expected to reach at least €600,000 ($800,000).

Hitler's Spanish fighter planes go on sale in US
Hitler licensed Spain to build the «Hispano Aviación HA-1112 “Buchon” fighter plane but changed his mind at the last minute. Photo: AFP/Platinum Fighter Sales

Spain may not have taken part in in the fighting in World War II, stricken by its own deadly Civil War, but it did supply military weaponry to its fascist associate Germany.

Using the design of the Nazi Messerschmitt Bf 109, one of the most agile and modern fighter planes of the time, Hitler licensed Spain to build the Hispano Aviación HA-1112 or “Buchon” fighter plane.

Unfortunately for Spain’s Royal Air Force, in desperate need of an overhaul despite the post-war turmoil it was going through, Hitler pulled out of the deal at the last minute.

The Fuhrer was by that stage more concerned about ensuring the German Luftwaffe aerial warfare branch has a ready supply of components to continue fighting during the final months of the war, thus deciding he wouldn’t supply Spain with the engines for their fighter planes.

RED ALSO: MI6 kept Spain from Hitler with bribes 

Sixty-five out the 200 aircraft planned were finally built.

They were never used by either German or Spanish forces during the WWII period, ending up instead as Hollywood ‘show’ planes in movies such as Battle of Britain, directed by Guy Hamilton in 1969.

The film’s producers couldn’t afford to pay the head of the stunt pilots, Connie Edwards, once shooting had finished, deciding instead to reward him with all the Spanish planes as gifts.

Edwards kept them in a dusty warehouse for over half a century before he decided to start selling them at auction.

Texan company Platinum Fighter Sales is now organizing the commercial sale of the last six aircraft, telling Spanish daily ABC they hope the grounded Spain-made planes return home. 

Although Spain was neutral during WWII, Spanish dictator Francisco Franco and Adolf Hitler met on several occasions, the Fuhrer at one point trying to convince Franco to help Germany seize Gibraltar from Britain (Operation Felix). 

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NAZIS

Austria: Newly discovered letters from Hitler’s father reveal dictator’s ‘genius complex’

Letters found stashed in an Austrian attic sent by the father of Adolf Hitler have shed light on the tyrant's upbringing.

Austria: Newly discovered letters from Hitler's father reveal dictator's 'genius complex'
Photo: Alex Halada/AFP

When he was first contacted by a woman claiming to have discovered letters written by Adolf Hitler’s father, Roman Sandgruber was understandably wary.

“Given all the forgeries and self-proclaimed ‘eyewitnesses’ who’ve come forward in the past, you think: ‘There can’t be much to it’,” the Austrian historian says.

“But then when I went down there and actually had a look at them, I realised straight away: ‘This is a sensation’.”

The original seals, the vintage postmarks, the authentic signature — left him with little doubt the letters were genuine.

Before the accidental discovery, sources about Hitler’s father Alois had been so scarce that, to Sandgruber’s knowledge, no biography of him has ever been published.

Along with other new sources, these 31 letters have helped Sandgruber write the first such volume — “Hitler’s Father: How The Son Became A Dictator” — and bring new insights into the milieu the Nazi tyrant grew up in.

The letters were written by Alois Hitler to a road maintenance official called Josef Radlegger, concerning the latter’s sale of a farmhouse in the village of Hafeld to Alois in 1895, when Adolf was six years old.

“They aren’t just letters about business, there’s a very familiar atmosphere between the two correspondents and there’s a lot of family gossip,” Sandgruber tells AFP in the University of Linz’s history library, while carefully removing the letters from the bundle they were kept in for decades.

Though Alois was known to be a “very tyrannical head of the family”, Sandgruber says the letters also offer an occasional glimpse at congeniality in his home life.

To Alois, his wife Klara was more than the “silent housewife” later described by Adolf in Mein Kampf.

One of the few people Alois had anything positive to say about, Sandgruber believes her to have been “a thoroughly emancipated woman, as we would put it today”.

“One can assume that she certainly had a say in the household,” Sandgruber notes, and particularly when it came to money matters.

“My wife… has the necessary enthusiasm and understanding for finances,” Alois writes in one of the letters.

Moreover, the letters are testament to Alois’s rise through Austrian society and his dream of becoming a country gentleman with his own farm. 

‘Genius’ complex 

The new treasure trove of documents may never have seen the light of day had pensioner Anneliese Smigielski not decided to clear-out and insulate her attic a few years ago.

She had always known that her great-great-grandfather Radlegger had sold property to Alois Hitler, and wasn’t particularly surprised to find the letters among more than 500 others, all meticulously kept in boxes.

But after a few attempts to follow Alois’s irritable messages — “he seemed to get annoyed about everything” — Smigielski found the sloping Kurrent script too hard to decode and thought it needed the attention of an expert.

Smigielski knew of Sandgruber’s previous work on the history of Upper Austria and got in touch with him in 2017, thinking he would be able to make some use of them.

While Alois is known to have made anti-Semitic statements when he himself dabbled in politics later in life, Sandgruber is wary of making too many direct connections between the father’s politics and those of his son.

He says the important influence on Adolf was the racist and anti-Semitic currents of thought which were present more generally in the Austria of his childhood.

However, Sandgruber says the one trait which undoubtedly united the two of them was “the very strong influence of being self-taught”.

“The result of that is as with the father, the son despised all those who had been through a regular school career — academics, notaries, judges, and later even military officers,” he says.

“He thinks that he alone is the genius,” Sandgruber adds.

He has been taken aback by the international attention his book from an Austrian publisher has received, garnering press coverage as far afield as Peru and China.

Smigielski herself also confesses to being a little overwhelmed by the press attention which has followed her attic discovery, saying it feels like “being a hare in the middle of the hunt”.

“But it will die down,” she says hopefully.

Perhaps not anytime soon though, such is the interest in the book that it entered its second print run just one week after publication on February 22.

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