Rudolph Hess - Mysteries of History - U.S. News Online
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From the 7/24/00 issue of USN&WR
A bumbled flight
Hitler's deputy crashed in Scotland. Why?
BY THOMAS K. GROSE
Shortly after 11 p.m. on May 10, 1941, 45-year-old plowman David McLean heard an explosion, looked out his window, and saw a parachutist float into a meadow of Floors Farm near Eaglesham, Scotland. He ran out to find a crashed and burning Messerschmitt and a slightly injured German officer–"Hauptmann" (Captain) Albert Horn. Horn turned out to be Rudolf Hess, Adolf Hitler's deputy. Fifty-nine years later, people still argue about one of the strangest episodes of World War II.
Imprisoned until he committed suicide in 1987 at Berlin's Spandau Prison, Hess never changed his story. He said he was on a solo mission to end the war between Britain and Germany and had hoped to land at the nearby estate of the Duke of Hamilton, whom he wrongly believed to be a leader of a "peace party." British and German authorities endorsed his claim. Others find it preposterous. "Germany's third-most-powerful man flew here on the off chance of meeting Hamilton?" says John Harris, author of a 1999 book, * Hess: The British Conspiracy* . "He would have had to have been an idiot."
Harris thinks Hess was snookered. In his book, he suggests that British military intelligence unit S-01 lured Hitler's deputy with the false notion he'd be greeted by a peace faction–a stalling move to delay a feared invasion by Germany. Harris bases his claim on letters from an elderly Englishwoman to German academics close to Hess, implying she was eager to be a conduit for peace talks. Her nephew was a central player in S-01. Hitler, who wanted peace with Britain so he could devote his energy to invading the Soviet Union, had blessed the trip, Harris writes. Once Hess bailed out, neither Churchill nor Hitler would own up to their plans.
No trick. Baloney, sneers Roy Conyers Nesbit, who last year coauthored The Flight of Rudolf Hess: Myths and Reality . Nesbit says the January 1999 release of Hess records by MI-5, Britain's FBI equivalent, proves he was a "lone flier." There's no evidence of S-01 trickery. MI-5 was not in on the ruse, counters Harris. Ah, says Nesbit, but the Royal Air Force tried to stop Hess's plane; it wouldn't have if the mission had been planned. Harris insists records show the RAF didn't try very hard to engage Hess.
Lacking proof of a plot, most academics side with Nesbit. "The only real mystery is why anyone still thinks it is a mystery," scoffs David Stafford, a University of Edinburgh historian who led a symposium on Hess in May. But the debate will go on at least until 2017, when some of the Hess papers locked in the British archives may finally be released.
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WEB SITES
The Rudolf Hess home page has an archive for new evidence that refutes the British government's account of his capture.
The History Place
features a Hess biography.
BOOKS
Read a review of the book The Flight of Rudolph Hess–Myths and Reality on the Web site for Lennoxlove , the home of the Duke of Hamilton.