Search the archive:
YaBB - Yet another Bulletin Board
 
   
 
Page Index Toggle Pages: 1
Send Topic Print
The Strange Case of Rudolf Hess (Read 615 times)
Jun 20th, 2011 at 11:30pm

Webb   Offline
Colonel
Go 'Noles!
Morningwood Golf Resort

Posts: 1068
*****
 
The Flight of Rudolf Hess

Just to the north west of Stonehouse, Lanarkshire lies open moorland and here was played out one of the few unresolved mysteries of the Second World War, which still continues to generate huge controversy. On the night of May 10th 1941, Hitler's deputy, Rudolf Hess, bailed out of his aircraft, a Messerschmitt 110, after a five hour, 900 mile flight and parachuted into a field at Floors farm, near the village of Eaglesham on Fenwick Moor.

He surrendered to a ploughman named David McClean, armed with a pitchfork and told him in English, "I have an important message for the Duke of Hamilton". Hess was then offered tea at McClean's cottage before being taken into custody by the local Home Guard. The motive for this seemingly bizarre event still serves to baffle military and political experts to this day ...

During interrogation in a British Army barracks, Hess proposed that if the British would allow Nazi Germany to dominate Europe, then the British Empire would not be further molested by Hitler. He insisted that German victory was inevitable and even threatened that the British people would be starved to death by a Nazi blockade around the British Isles unless they accepted his generous peace offer.

But Hess also displayed signs of mental instability to his British captors and they concluded he was half mad and represented only himself. Churchill, realizing this, and somewhat infuriated by his statements, ordered Hess to be imprisoned for the duration and treated like any high ranking POW. Hess was declared insane by a bewildered Hitler, and effectively disowned by the Nazis. His flight ultimately caused Hitler and the Nazis huge embarrassment as they struggled to explain his actions ...

In spite of his mental condition he was sentenced to life in prison. The Soviets blocked all attempts at early release. He served his sentence in Spandau prison in Berlin, where from 1966 he was the sole inmate. Officially Hess died by suicide on 17th July 1987 aged 93, the last of  the prisoners to be tried at Nuremberg.
 

A bad day at golf is better than a good day at work.

...

Jim
IP Logged
 
Reply #1 - Jun 21st, 2011 at 3:10am

Hagar   Offline
Colonel
My Spitfire Girl
Costa Geriatrica

Posts: 33159
*****
 
I've just finished reading this. http://www.amazon.co.uk/Flight-Rudolf-Hess-Myths-Reality/dp/0750947578

Sadly I found it disappointing & have to agree with the two customer reviews.
 

...

Founder & Sole Member - Grumpy's Over the Hill Club for Veteran Virtual Aviators
Member of the Fox Four Group

Need help? Try Grumpy's Lair

My photo gallery
IP Logged
 
Reply #2 - Jun 27th, 2011 at 10:40pm

Webb   Offline
Colonel
Go 'Noles!
Morningwood Golf Resort

Posts: 1068
*****
 
The penultimate inmate at Spandau was Albert Speer, sentenced to 20 years in prison for his use of slave labor while Minister of Armaments.

While in prison he wrote Inside The Third Reich, as massive a work as The Gulag Archipelago but more coherent because TGA is more like a bunch of stories stuck together without any internal consistency.  Solzhenitsyn needed a better editor.  Speer was a pretty good writer.

As I recall he thought that Hess was nuts - capable of carrying on a conversation but that was about it.
 

A bad day at golf is better than a good day at work.

...

Jim
IP Logged
 
Reply #3 - Jul 3rd, 2011 at 5:39pm

C   Offline
Colonel
Earth

Posts: 13144
*****
 
Hagar wrote on Jun 21st, 2011 at 3:10am:
I've just finished reading this. http://www.amazon.co.uk/Flight-Rudolf-Hess-Myths-Reality/dp/0750947578

Sadly I found it disappointing & have to agree with the two customer reviews.


I haven't read any contemporary works on the matter, but last year I read an old copy of The Loneloest Man in the World that I'd picked up somewhere for about 10p. It's written by one of the postwar Governors of Spandau prison, and hence the author had access to the inmates (Hess, Speer for a time), and later, Hess' (now late) son, who had been a infant when his father went to Scotland, and IIRC, who he reintroduced to his father. It was an interesting insight into the mental state of the man.
 
IP Logged
 
Page Index Toggle Pages: 1
Send Topic Print