{"id":1844736,"date":"2025-06-11T16:00:54","date_gmt":"2025-06-11T16:00:54","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.wacoca.com\/anime\/1844736\/"},"modified":"2025-06-11T16:00:54","modified_gmt":"2025-06-11T16:00:54","slug":"hitlers-last-descendant-uncensored","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.wacoca.com\/anime\/1844736\/","title":{"rendered":"Hitler&#8217;s Last Descendant | UNCENSORED"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><iframe loading=\"lazy\"  width=\"580\" height=\"385\" src=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/embed\/_nwym7t-u7U\" frameborder=\"0\" allowfullscreen><\/iframe><br \/>\n<br \/>\nHitler&#8217;s Last Descendant | UNCENSORED<br \/>\n<br \/>\nA cemetery on Long Island<br \/>\nin the state of New York. There is a grave here,<br \/>\nlike many others around it, with nothing unusual or distinctive, yet it holds the key to one of the Second World War&#8217;s<br \/>\nbiggest mysteries. In capital letters, the gravestone bears a name<br \/>\nthat has masked the truth for historians, Stuart Houston. Rest in peace, Brigid Elisabeth and William Patrick. The family name<br \/>\ncarved in stone should be Hitler. Brigid Hitler, the wife of Alois Hitler,<br \/>\nAdolf Hitler&#8217;s brother, an unwanted legacy passed down to her son. In his later years, he attempted to escape<br \/>\nfrom his own patronymic because of his uncle Adolf Hitler,<br \/>\nwho died in a bunker in Berlin in 1945 and whose memory continues to haunt<br \/>\nthe nightmares of millions worldwide. William Patrick managed<br \/>\nto conceal his secret but could never avoid the reality<br \/>\nof being part of the Hitler dynasty. Is William Patrick Houston<br \/>\nthe last of the Hitlers? In order to find out, I shall have to delve into the past<br \/>\nof the most hated man in history. The story of William Patrick Hitler<br \/>\nbegins in Liverpool, where he was born on March 12th, 1911, the son of Brigid and Alois Hitler,<br \/>\nAdolf Hitler&#8217;s elder brother. The history of the British branch<br \/>\nof the Hitlers resides in this birth certificate and in a few lines written<br \/>\nby a civil service registrar. It&#8217;s testimony<br \/>\nto Alois Hitler&#8217;s life in the UK. The Hitlers were a complex family<br \/>\nwith multiple marriages and remarriages. Alois and his sister Angela<br \/>\nwere the eldest, half brother<br \/>\nand sister to Adolf and Paula. They all shared the same father,<br \/>\nAlois Senior, but did not have the same mother. Alois and Angela&#8217;s mother was Franziska. Adolf and Paula were born to Klara,<br \/>\nAlois Senior&#8217;s last wife. They were brought up together<br \/>\nover several years. Alois Senior was a customs official. He was authoritarian<br \/>\nand violent toward his children. He died in 1903, and Klara died in 1907. After moving to the UK and marrying an Irish woman,<br \/>\nBrigid Dowling, Alois settled in Liverpool, then one of England&#8217;s<br \/>\nbiggest industrial centers, with the world&#8217;s largest port and a haven for immigrants<br \/>\nfrom around Europe. Alois built up contacts<br \/>\nin the German community, and the future William Patrick&#8217;s father<br \/>\nattempted to make money by running a small restaurant<br \/>\nin Dale Street, a boarding house in Parliament Street,<br \/>\nand a hotel at Mount Pleasant, all of which failed. He was too eccentric<br \/>\nto succeed in business. Alois Hitler and his wife<br \/>\nlived in Toxteth, a working-class suburb of Liverpool. They lived here<br \/>\nat 102 Upper Stanhope Street. In 1913, Alois set up another project<br \/>\nin which he had high hopes, creating a safety razor company and commercializing its products<br \/>\nacross Europe. He explained<br \/>\nhis adventurous plans to Brigid. At the end of 1913,<br \/>\nAlois left Liverpool and went to Germany. A few months later, in the summer of 1914,<br \/>\nWorld War I broke out. Alois disappeared<br \/>\nwithout leaving an address. Florian Beierl is a historian<br \/>\nspecializing in the Hitlers. For years,<br \/>\nhe&#8217;s been tracking down clues and evidence relating to the family history. We don&#8217;t know what he did<br \/>\nduring the First World War. We do know<br \/>\nthat he was in Berlin at that time, but there is no strict record of what Alois Hitler was doing<br \/>\nin that period of time. Apparently,<br \/>\nAlois had no contact with his family, notably his brother Adolf,<br \/>\nabout whom we do have historical details. When the war was declared,<br \/>\nAdolf left Austria and was seen in Germany in this crowd photo<br \/>\ntaken in Munich city center in Bavaria. He was a simple army private,<br \/>\nbut after barely escaping death, he was promoted to corporal<br \/>\nand became a dispatch runner. At the end of the war in 1918,<br \/>\nhe stayed in the army, in the political chaos<br \/>\nof post-war Germany. Embittered by the country&#8217;s failure,<br \/>\nhe joined the German Workers&#8217; Party. In 1920, he helped transform the party into the National Socialist<br \/>\nGerman Workers&#8217; Party, and became its leader in 1921. Hitler himself chose the swastika<br \/>\nas the party&#8217;s emblem and created a paramilitary group,<br \/>\nthe SA Storm Troopers. Meanwhile, back in Liverpool, alone and with no news of her husband,<br \/>\nBrigid was trying to cope. She joined a dance troupe. William Patrick was growing up. He attended primary school in Toxteth,<br \/>\nan English schoolboy like any other. In 1919, Brigid finally received news<br \/>\nfrom her friend. Alois had died during the war. In reality, Alois Hitler met another woman<br \/>\nin Germany, Hedwig Heidemann, and they were married in 1916. Alois and Hedwig had a child in 1923,<br \/>\na boy named Heinz. Alois was a father for the second time. His English son, William Patrick,<br \/>\nwas already 13 years old. Alois&#8217; ruse was discovered<br \/>\nby the German authorities, and as a bigamist, he risked prison. British historian Mike Unger has closely studied the relations<br \/>\nbetween Alois and Brigid. He did ask Brigid. He wrote to Brigid,<br \/>\nasking her to divorce him. She said no. He wrote to her again and asked if she would give him<br \/>\na letter of credibility, saying that if she didn&#8217;t,<br \/>\nhe&#8217;d go to jail. She felt sorry for him<br \/>\nand didn&#8217;t want him to go to jail, so she wrote this letter. As Alois faced judicial problems<br \/>\nin Germany, his brother Adolf launched a coup d&#8217;etat<br \/>\nin Munich in November 1923. There were 16 casualties. Hitler was wounded by the police<br \/>\nand arrested two days later. The party was banned,<br \/>\nand he was accused of high treason. His trial was held<br \/>\nin Munich in early 1924, and he was sentenced<br \/>\nto five years in prison. Adolf Hitler was incarcerated<br \/>\nat Landsberg Prison but stayed there for barely nine months. It was here that he dictated<br \/>\nto his secretary Rudolf Hess the first draft of Mein Kampf. In just a few months,<br \/>\nHitler became a household name in Germany. Brigid and William Patrick<br \/>\nmoved to London, renting a small house in Highgate,<br \/>\na northern suburb. She soon found work<br \/>\nas a teacher at a dance school. William Patrick began<br \/>\nan apprenticeship as an accountant in a company in central London. It was here that the first public photo<br \/>\nof William Patrick appeared. The only known photo from the period. In Germany,<br \/>\nthe economic crisis of 1929 caused chaos. Nazi Party meetings attracted<br \/>\never larger audiences. Hitler chose Nuremberg<br \/>\nfor the party congress, and it wasn&#8217;t by chance. The medieval city was the perfect setting<br \/>\nto exalt Germany&#8217;s past glory and embody the project<br \/>\nfor the Nazi Reich to come. Frank McDonough is a historian<br \/>\nspecializing in the Hitler family. Hitler stages<br \/>\nthese grand Nuremberg rallies, where he appears<br \/>\nin front of 100,000 people. People who were at these rallies<br \/>\nhave left behind memoirs of how they felt. They say it looked as though<br \/>\nit was some kind of religious experience. The second Nazi Party Congress<br \/>\nin Nuremberg in August 1929 was the scene of the first Hitler reunion since the family separated<br \/>\nin the early days of the century. Alois and his family<br \/>\nwere invited by his brother to take part<br \/>\nin the Nazi&#8217;s first great rally. Alois invited his son,<br \/>\nWilliam Patrick, to attend. He was 18 years old, and it was the first time<br \/>\nhe&#8217;d seen his father since 1913. I found a letter<br \/>\nfrom William Patrick to his mother recounting his experience in Nuremberg. &#8220;I&#8217;d heard a great deal about Nuremberg,&#8221; &#8220;and I was looking forward<br \/>\nto seeing the city&#8221; &#8220;almost as much as Uncle Adolf.&#8221; &#8220;In fact, all I saw were flags.&#8221; &#8220;They were everywhere,<br \/>\nand they hid everything.&#8221; &#8220;I heard Uncle Adolf make a speech.&#8221; &#8220;There must have been<br \/>\n30,000 men there, all in uniform.&#8221; &#8220;Father went to talk to Adolf,&#8221; &#8220;and I hoped to get the chance<br \/>\nto talk to him too.&#8221; &#8220;When he returned,<br \/>\nfather said it was impossible,&#8221; &#8220;as Uncle Adolf didn&#8217;t want<br \/>\nto mix family and business.&#8221; I think when William Patrick Hitler<br \/>\ngoes to visit Hitler, he&#8217;s turned not just from this uncle, he&#8217;s turned into<br \/>\nan international celebrity who&#8217;s mesmerizing when he speaks. He&#8217;s charismatic, and he&#8217;s got hundreds<br \/>\nof thousands of people supporting him. Therefore, William Patrick Hitler<br \/>\nis mesmerized by this. He now knows he&#8217;s part of a family<br \/>\nwith an amazing member. Anyone would be amazed<br \/>\nto see Hitler at this time. I think he&#8217;s amazed too. He wants to go and join in<br \/>\nwhat&#8217;s happening in Germany. It seems as though it&#8217;s very exciting,<br \/>\nand of course, he is related to him. Adolf Hitler was now totally invested<br \/>\nin his pursuit of power. On January 30th, 1933, at around midday, he finally achieved his aim<br \/>\nand was appointed chancellor. The same evening, his militia paraded triumphantly<br \/>\nbefore their new leader. This dramatic ascension<br \/>\naffected every member of his family. In London, William Patrick was sacked<br \/>\nby the accounting firm Benham and Sons, as his surname was an embarrassment. Encouraged by his mother,<br \/>\nhe decided to try his luck in Germany. I think you can interpret<br \/>\neverything William Patrick Hitler does as opportunism, but remember,<br \/>\nhe is a family member. This is his uncle. Everybody has an uncle. Why shouldn&#8217;t he want to get closer to him<br \/>\nfrom a personal perspective? It&#8217;s easy to dismiss<br \/>\nWilliam Patrick Hitler, as he&#8217;s been dismissed by many historians,<br \/>\nas a young man on the make trying to latch onto a celebrity<br \/>\nto make money, but this might not be true. It might be that he did genuinely want<br \/>\nto join in what was happening in Germany, to get closer to his uncle, and maybe also to see his father, Alois,<br \/>\nwho did live in Germany as well. In Berlin,<br \/>\nhe received 500 marks from his uncle and the promise of a job<br \/>\nas a sales coordinator with Great Britain for the Berlin department store, DeFaKa. Otto Schlepper worked for the same store. The Nazi Party appointed him<br \/>\nas William Patrick&#8217;s chaperone. He is the only living witness to William Patrick&#8217;s life<br \/>\nin Berlin at the time. He recalls one episode in particular<br \/>\nwhich shows Hitler&#8217;s nephew&#8217;s behavior during that period. I saw him at a DeFaKa company party. William Patrick had been invited. The company organized fabulous receptions. This one took place in a grand hall at the Land Volker Casino<br \/>\nnear the Bahnhof Zoo. He danced with a number of women. The problem was<br \/>\nthat he used very inappropriate words when he said<br \/>\nwhat he wanted to do with them. Clearly, his knowledge of German<br \/>\nwas not up to scratch. The story spread quickly<br \/>\namong all the women in the company. For the next dance,<br \/>\nthe women chose their partners. An attractive department head,<br \/>\nwho was a little older, asked him to dance. She explained to him that the words<br \/>\nhe was using were very vulgar. William Patrick Hitler understood that it was improper<br \/>\nto use a certain word in German, which means both to kiss and to screw. He then asked the woman what to say,<br \/>\nand she, who was a bit of a bitch, gave him another word<br \/>\nwhich was even worse. The result was that William Patrick<br \/>\nwas persona non grata with all the women at the party. After that, I lost touch with him. He didn&#8217;t last long in the company. The Nazis had him sacked for his behavior. William Patrick<br \/>\nwas behaving opportunistically. He took advantage<br \/>\nof his family connections and believed he could do as he liked, which greatly displeased his uncle<br \/>\nand the Nazi Party. In 1933, Adolf Hitler&#8217;s entire family<br \/>\ngravitated toward the seat of power. His sisters were in Bavaria. Alois opened a wine bar<br \/>\nin Berlin with his wife. William Patrick soon found a job<br \/>\nin a Berlin bank, the Reich Credit, where he was employed as an accountant. In Germany,<br \/>\nHitler&#8217;s rise to power boosted morale. Optimism returned. Berlin was once again<br \/>\na leading world capital and a scene of festivities, but they served as a smokescreen. The economy was reborn through rearmament,<br \/>\nthe cult of leadership, and Nazi ideology. All of German society was submitted<br \/>\nto mass indoctrination through the media. The first measures<br \/>\nof exclusion affected the Jews, who were designated<br \/>\nas the principal enemies. In this context came the violence<br \/>\nof the Night of the Long Knives. For several months, the SA,<br \/>\nso valuable in Hitler&#8217;s conquest of power, had been a thorn in his side. During the night of June 29th to 30th,<br \/>\nHitler and his new militia, the SS, brutally assassinated dozens<br \/>\nof SA members, including their leader. On the evening of June 29th, William Patrick was sitting<br \/>\non the terrace of the Kranzler caf\u00e9 when an SS patrol appeared. They controlled every customer,<br \/>\nclearly looking for someone. When William Patrick showed his ID papers,<br \/>\nan SS officer said: &#8220;The Fuhrer&#8217;s name<br \/>\nmust not be used for stupid games.&#8221; &#8220;I suppose you are pretending<br \/>\nto be related to the F\u00fchrer.&#8221; William Patrick replied<br \/>\nthat he was his nephew. He was arrested and taken to Lichterfelde,<br \/>\na prison camp in the Berlin suburbs. Here, he asked<br \/>\nif he could call Rudolf Hess to confirm his identity. Finally, the British Embassy<br \/>\nintervened for his release. William Patrick wrote: &#8220;I&#8217;m sure I was on a list.&#8221; &#8220;Otherwise,<br \/>\nI wouldn&#8217;t have been arrested,&#8221; &#8220;especially not in a caf\u00e9<br \/>\nwhere I went every day.&#8221; However, his problems were far from over. On several occasions, William Patrick attempted<br \/>\nto send money to his mother in London, who required his assistance. In October 1934,<br \/>\nhe was summoned to see Hitler. He wrote: &#8220;My uncle was in an ugly mood.&#8221; &#8220;He said my mother<br \/>\nwas an able-bodied woman,&#8221; &#8220;and that I could send<br \/>\nno money out of the Reich&#8221; &#8220;to her or anybody else.&#8221; &#8220;Then, with a curt Heil,&#8221; &#8220;he turned on his heel<br \/>\nand swept out of the room.&#8221; After these refusals, William Patrick decided<br \/>\nto send a threatening letter to his uncle. It was discovered among correspondence<br \/>\nbelonging to his Aunt Angela by historian Florian Beierl. Dated November 29th, 1934, it was addressed to Julius Schaub,<br \/>\nHitler&#8217;s right-hand man. One extract says: &#8220;I intend to make a declaration<br \/>\nto the British press&#8221; &#8220;so that my situation<br \/>\nbecomes more secure.&#8221; &#8220;I have to accept the idea&#8221; &#8220;that there is a conflict<br \/>\nbetween me and my uncle.&#8221; The very next day, William Patrick was summoned<br \/>\nto the chancellery and presented to his uncle. When he returned<br \/>\nto work the following morning, he discovered<br \/>\nthat his salary had been doubled and that he&#8217;d received<br \/>\na bank draft of 100 marks. What else was in the letter<br \/>\nthat could&#8217;ve been of concern to his uncle Adolf Hitler,<br \/>\nthe most powerful man in Germany? That is where it gets a little murky, because he is suggesting<br \/>\nthat he might bring out some kind of revelations<br \/>\nabout Hitler being Jewish, which would be a bombshell. The man who really hates the Jews, the man who&#8217;s built his reputation<br \/>\non anti-Semitism and was introducing<br \/>\na wide range of anti-Semitic laws, turns out to be Jewish. Obviously, there was a little bit<br \/>\nof a blackmail threat there, and he doesn&#8217;t like that. Did William Patrick really possess<br \/>\ncompromising information about the family, perhaps pertaining<br \/>\nto his uncle&#8217;s Jewish origins? Adolf Hitler feared any revelations<br \/>\nabout his family, which he kept in the background. He knew his nephew<br \/>\nhad led an investigation into the subject in Austria<br \/>\nseveral years earlier. Hitler commissions Hans Frank, who is a key legal lawyer<br \/>\nwithin the Nazi Party movement, to go and investigate this whole issue. Did Hitler have some Jewish ancestry? This was a highly secret report. Frank found nothing compromising<br \/>\nduring his thorough research, yet Hitler remained wary and preferred<br \/>\nto give in to his nephew&#8217;s blackmail. If you decided to blackmail Adolf Hitler, your chances of survival<br \/>\nwere very likely not very big. In the case of William Patrick Hitler,<br \/>\nit&#8217;s remarkable that Hitler refrained<br \/>\nfrom any dictatorial action that would have been typical<br \/>\nfor that period of time. William Patrick was a nuisance<br \/>\nto both Adolf Hitler and his father, Alois,<br \/>\nwho kept him at a distance. Alois opened a restaurant<br \/>\ncalled &#8220;Alois&#8221; in Wittenbergplatz, only a few minutes&#8217; walk<br \/>\nfrom various places frequented by his son. He&#8217;d bought the restaurant for a pittance<br \/>\nfrom a Jew he had evicted. Unable to join his uncle&#8217;s inner circle<br \/>\nand reap the benefits, William Patrick had to work. Between 1935 and 1937, he worked for Opel, first in a factory in Russelheim<br \/>\nfor several months and later in Berlin, where he was employed<br \/>\nby the prestigious Opel dealer, Eduard Winter. He was once again harassed<br \/>\nby the authorities. The Gestapo blocked his work permit<br \/>\nfor two months. Opel was obliged to fire him. The police accused him<br \/>\nof selling cars under the name of Hitler. He found work in a Berlin restaurant<br \/>\nuntil January 31st, 1939. The next day, he left Germany. It would appear<br \/>\nthat his departure was sudden. World War II had not yet broken out, but Germany had been<br \/>\ngearing up for war since 1938, with the annexation<br \/>\nof Austria and the Sudetenland. Historians have several theories<br \/>\nregarding possible threats and pressure applied to William Patrick. By 1939,<br \/>\ncertain dynamics must have evolved that prompted William Patrick Hitler<br \/>\nto take off and leave Germany. Maybe he knew something<br \/>\nabout the war preparations. Maybe he was threatened by members<br \/>\nof the regime, the Gestapo. He must have been advised<br \/>\nby people around him that what he was doing<br \/>\nwas ultimately going to lead to a bad end. The version he gives<br \/>\nfor his departure is connected to the blackmail of his uncle Adolf. If he wanted to stay in Germany,<br \/>\nhe would have to change nationality, become German,<br \/>\nor leave the country for good. He chose the latter option. William Patrick had just signed a contract with an American agent<br \/>\nrepresenting the Hearst Media Group. He and his mother<br \/>\nleft London for Le Havre, where they set sail<br \/>\non board the Normandie in March 1939. William Patrick and his mother<br \/>\nenjoyed a luxurious crossing on the period&#8217;s finest ocean liner, a six-day first-class cruise<br \/>\npaid for by his agent. He arrived in New York<br \/>\nat dawn on March 30th, 1939, and was enchanted. At the time, the USA was isolationist, but the Americans were curious<br \/>\nabout the Hitler phenomenon, widely covered in the nation&#8217;s press. In the days following his arrival, numerous articles were devoted to him<br \/>\naround the country. William Patrick and his mother<br \/>\nwere also filmed in a very rare document<br \/>\nof just a few seconds, but it reveals something<br \/>\nof his personality. I hope that the American people<br \/>\nin this country will not be kidded by my moustache because, after all,<br \/>\nmy heart is in the right place, not to mention. He became a curiosity<br \/>\nin a country hungry for novelties. His joke about his mustache<br \/>\nimmediately endeared him to the public. He and his mother<br \/>\nwere taken under the wing of the prestigious William Morris Agency and installed in the Buckingham Hotel<br \/>\nnear Central Park. Hitler&#8217;s nephew signed a contract<br \/>\nfor a lecture tour lasting several months around the USA,<br \/>\nfocusing on his uncle and the Nazi regime. William Patrick was relying<br \/>\non his newfound fame to find a lasting place<br \/>\nin the American Dream. In Europe,<br \/>\nwidespread conflict had been imminent since Hitler invaded Poland. This only increased the appeal<br \/>\nof the F\u00fchrer&#8217;s nephew&#8217;s presence on American soil. For three years,<br \/>\nhe gave many lectures across the country. He spoke of Adolf Hitler,<br \/>\nthe Nazis, Rudolf Hess, and the other dignitaries he had met<br \/>\nduring his stay in Germany. His name became his stock in trade. Some of his lectures became famous,<br \/>\nsuch as the one in Boston, where his presence caused a riot. Over the months, the interest dwindled. After speaking in prestigious halls, he had to make do with colleges<br \/>\nand reading clubs. At the end of 1941,<br \/>\nhis constant movements around the country and a request<br \/>\nto prolong his and his mother&#8217;s visas aroused the attention of the FBI. The FBI archives contain a file<br \/>\non William Patrick and one on his mother. They were declassified and made available<br \/>\nto the public in the mid-1990s. They reveal that J. Edgar Hoover,<br \/>\nthe FBI director, closely followed the movements<br \/>\nand declarations of Hitler&#8217;s nephew. With addresses, profiles,<br \/>\nand biographical details, the files are succinct but very precise. Apparently, in mid-November 1941, there was no reason<br \/>\nto refuse a visa extension. Since Great Britain entered the war<br \/>\nin September 1939, William Patrick and his mother<br \/>\nled a media support campaign. Brigid Hitler joined<br \/>\nthe British Red Cross in New York. William Patrick talked<br \/>\nof joining the Canadian Army. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor<br \/>\non December 7th, 1941, changed the course of the war<br \/>\nand the life of Hitler&#8217;s nephew. The American fleet<br \/>\nwas partially wiped out. The day after the attack,<br \/>\nPresident Roosevelt declared war on Japan. On the 11th, Germany and Italy<br \/>\ndeclared war against the USA. The war was now worldwide. William Patrick and his mother decided<br \/>\nto stay in their new home country. On March 14th, 1942,<br \/>\nJ. Edgar Hoover received a priority memo from President Roosevelt&#8217;s cabinet<br \/>\nat the White House. It contained astonishing news. William Patrick Hitler<br \/>\nhad written to the president, expressing his desire<br \/>\nto join the American Army. In a letter,<br \/>\nnever mentioning his uncle&#8217;s name, he explained to Roosevelt that he wanted to fight<br \/>\nunder the American flag but that it was impossible<br \/>\ndue to his British nationality. Due to his name, neither Canada nor Great Britain<br \/>\nwere willing to accept him in their armed forces. He, therefore, pleaded with the president<br \/>\nto help him enlist in the US Army. The letter immediately triggered<br \/>\na major FBI investigation, mobilizing several agents<br \/>\nfrom the New York Bureau. The inquiry took a certain amount of time. In March 1942, William Patrick<br \/>\nwas interviewed by agents from New York as this document shows. He then took part<br \/>\nin a top-secret investigation carried out in 1942<br \/>\nand 1943 by Bill Donovan, the director of the OSS,<br \/>\nthe forerunner of the CIA. This investigation,<br \/>\nled by psychiatrist Walter Langer, aimed to establish<br \/>\na psychological profile of Adolf Hitler. Marc Sageman, a former CIA profiler,<br \/>\nknows the case well. His knowledge of his uncle<br \/>\nbecame a national priority. I think Walter Langer volunteered<br \/>\nto do a study of Hitler. At the time,<br \/>\nit was the height of psychoanalysis. People believed it was a science<br \/>\ncapable of predicting behavior. They thought it was worthwhile<br \/>\nand allocated some money for this project. Walter Langer went around<br \/>\nand interviewed quite a few people who knew Hitler. Also, he had a team of researchers<br \/>\nlooking at all kinds of documents, newspapers, and articles about Hitler. One of the people interviewed<br \/>\nwas William Patrick Hitler. After two interminable years of waiting,<br \/>\nkeen to do battle against his uncle, William Patrick Hitler finally got<br \/>\nwhat he wanted. The American authorities<br \/>\ngave the dictator&#8217;s nephew the go-ahead. He could join the US Navy. On March 6th, 1944, he was called<br \/>\nto the Manhattan recruitment office at 85 Vanderbilt Avenue for enlistment. Exceptionally, cinema newsreels<br \/>\nwere present to record the scene as if William Patrick were a star. He swore allegiance<br \/>\nand became the object of US propaganda. I&#8217;m the only living descendant<br \/>\nof the Hitler family bearing that name, and I expect shortly<br \/>\nto enter the United States Navy. As a member of the armed forces, I hope to take an active part<br \/>\nin the liquidation of this man, my uncle, who has unleashed<br \/>\nsuch misery upon the world. It was a declaration of war<br \/>\nagainst his uncle. Adolf Hitler&#8217;s reaction is unknown, but such images<br \/>\nwould have warranted the firing squad for high treason against his family. William Patrick was posted<br \/>\nto a medical unit until 1946. On April 30th, 1945, Uncle Adolf committed suicide<br \/>\nin his bunker at the chancellery. Germany capitulated<br \/>\nunconditionally on May 8th. William Patrick&#8217;s father, Alois,<br \/>\nbarely survived the chaos in Berlin. Japan signed its surrender<br \/>\non September 2nd, 1945. The Second World War was over, and the world discovered the horrors<br \/>\ncommitted by the Nazi regime, the millions of dead and the final solution decreed<br \/>\nby Hitler and his SS. This photo, taken in 1946<br \/>\nduring a demobilization ceremony, is the last image<br \/>\nof William Patrick in public. Now an American citizen, he disappeared. The name Hitler was a thing of the past. After the war, Adolf Hitler&#8217;s name<br \/>\nwas synonymous with evil, death, war, and destruction. You name what&#8217;s negative,<br \/>\nand he was associated with it. Nobody would like<br \/>\nto be associated with Adolf Hitler. Where did William Patrick Hitler go? Did he stay in the USA<br \/>\nafter taking American citizenship? Did he return to Great Britain<br \/>\nor go to Germany to look for his father? A series of articles<br \/>\nin the post-war British press supplied details of his father&#8217;s life. Arrested in Hamburg in August 1945<br \/>\nby the British Military Police, Alois Hitler was released the same day<br \/>\nas he was not a member of the Nazi Party. After the war,<br \/>\nAlois and his wife changed identity. The Hitlers became the Hillers. For the British,<br \/>\nAlois&#8217; case was finally closed after an investigation in 1946<br \/>\nwhen he was de-Nazified. His second son, Heinz,<br \/>\nhad died on the Eastern Front in 1942. Alois spent his latter days in Hamburg<br \/>\nand died there in 1956. He is buried in the vast Ohlsdorf Cemetery<br \/>\non the outskirts of the city in a grave still identified<br \/>\nas number 209.75. However, there is no tomb<br \/>\nat this reference address. The concession exists in his name<br \/>\nbut there is no gravestone. A film found in German archives<br \/>\nprovides a further clue, a film in which Alois&#8217; grave appears. Buried here are Alois<br \/>\nand his wife, Hedwig, and two other unknowns, Erna and Hans. Research reveals<br \/>\nthat they were Hitlers too. Hans was a cousin of Alois and Adolf. Erna, his wife,<br \/>\nworked in a restaurant in Berlin. Erna had a daughter called Margot,<br \/>\nwho is today deceased. Margot had a son called Michael,<br \/>\nwho is still alive. He&#8217;s a cousin of William Patrick Hitler. The discovery of his home address<br \/>\nwas a complete surprise. Michael, Erna&#8217;s grandson,<br \/>\nhas been in Israel since the 1970s. He lives with his family in Jerusalem. A Hitler living in Israel is surreal. He and his mother both knew Alois, and above all,<br \/>\nHans and Erna Hitler, his grandparents. He must certainly know<br \/>\nthe history of his family and perhaps have information<br \/>\nabout his cousin, William Patrick Hitler. A few other children of Nazi dignitaries and Nazis have followed<br \/>\nthe same path to Israel. The Jewish state was born<br \/>\nfrom the ashes of the Holocaust horrors, and for some, going to live there<br \/>\nis a form of repentance. Michael converted to Judaism<br \/>\nand became an Israeli national. Over the years, he has become<br \/>\na leading specialist in Hebrew studies at the University of Tel Aviv. This is the marriage contract<br \/>\nof Erna and Hans. When did it take place? That was in 1942. The Reichsgesundheitsf\u00fchrer was there,<br \/>\nas well as Alois Hitler. The interesting thing in the second part is that it gives you<br \/>\nthe names of both of their parents. You see here that Hans Hitler<br \/>\nwas the son of Johann Hitler, who must be an uncle of Alois. He claims his grandfather Hans<br \/>\nwas a cousin of Alois and Adolf Hitler, which would make him<br \/>\nWilliam Patrick&#8217;s cousin, a cousin he never met. Michael grew up in post-war Germany<br \/>\nbefore seeking exile in Israel. Living here in this country<br \/>\nis not influenced by any relationship. What can I do for a drunken grandmother<br \/>\nwho married a man with that name? Even if he has put the past behind him, he offers some precious details<br \/>\nabout his grandparents&#8217; lives after the war. He was not killed<br \/>\nlike other Hitler family members who had been killed by the Russians<br \/>\nwhen they occupied a part of Austria. He stayed safe after the war. I wasn&#8217;t interested<br \/>\nin the precise relationship, how he came to be. I knew that my grandmother<br \/>\nwas very proud to be Mrs. Hitler. Let that be. They changed the name officially<br \/>\nto Hiller after the war, but everybody knew that Hiller was Hitler. Michael has heard<br \/>\nof his cousin William Patrick but knows nothing<br \/>\nabout his life after the war. Back in Germany,<br \/>\nanother witness perhaps has information about Alois&#8217; elder son. She claims to be<br \/>\nAlois&#8217; adopted granddaughter and to have spent<br \/>\nher childhood days with him. Packages arrived from America, and they came from William Patrick,<br \/>\ngranddad&#8217;s son. There were lots of sweets<br \/>\nand brightly colored clothes. I remember some red shoes. I also remember there being<br \/>\nsome tinned corned beef, but especially candy. Apparently, in the United States,<br \/>\nthey had candies shaped like pebbles. They were very good. Papy never talked about his American son. William Patrick stayed<br \/>\nin the United States after the war. In New York, his mother Brigid Hitler<br \/>\napparently wrote a family biography. The book was deposited<br \/>\nat the Manhattan Municipal Library. An archivist there supplies us<br \/>\nwith further details. Hello. Here is your book by Brigid Hitler. My brother-in-law, Adolf. It came as part of the collection<br \/>\nof Edmund Packer, who was a literary agent<br \/>\nand Czechoslovakian-born playwright. His papers came to the library in 1959. It was only later that this manuscript<br \/>\nor typescript was found among his papers. He acquired it from Brigid Hitler. I&#8217;m not sure if he actually wrote it. Does that make sense? He was a literary agent, so he was trying to get this book<br \/>\nand sell it to find a publisher. The unfinished book contains<br \/>\na good deal of information about William Patrick<br \/>\nand Brigid&#8217;s lives before the war, with documents and photos too,<br \/>\nbut nothing about the post-war period, nothing that could help locate them. Did they stay on the East Coast, or did they head west<br \/>\nor elsewhere in the vastness of the USA? However, what is certain<br \/>\nis that their lives changed radically, as if their disappearance<br \/>\nhad been organized. American Social Security records show<br \/>\nthat Brigid died on Long Island in 1969. On her card, there is an address. It&#8217;s a small suburb,<br \/>\nlike so many others in the United States. Long Island is something<br \/>\nof a dormitory for New York City. Wooden houses in neat rows and lines,<br \/>\nproudly sporting American flags. At the address indicated,<br \/>\nthere is a small house. It was here that Brigid Hitler,<br \/>\nWilliam Patrick&#8217;s mother, lived until she died. The new owners wish to remain anonymous,<br \/>\nbut they do reveal something of value. In the house next door,<br \/>\nlived her son, William Patrick. The second surprise<br \/>\nis that he raised a family. This house also has a new owner, and the new inhabitants<br \/>\nwish to remain anonymous too. No one knows what became of the family, although they believe they stayed close<br \/>\nto this small Long Island town. Further discussion reveals that the family<br \/>\ndidn&#8217;t use the name &#8220;Hitler.&#8221; They changed their name to Stuart Houston, a name chosen<br \/>\nby William Patrick Hitler to hide behind. It&#8217;s an odd name, and one that proves<br \/>\nto be rather ambiguous. After the war,<br \/>\nthey decided to change their name, choosing &#8220;Stuart Houston,&#8221; which clearly refers<br \/>\nto Stuart Houston Chamberlain, who was a renowned anti-Semite. He&#8217;d regarded Hitler<br \/>\nas the future of Germany. Chamberlain wrote<br \/>\nthat if there were more men like Hitler, Germany would be saved. Choosing this name or pseudonym<br \/>\nreveals a certain ambivalence, and that within him, there was an element of allegiance<br \/>\nto National Socialist ideology and, in part, to anti-Semitic ideology. I can&#8217;t understand<br \/>\nhow he could imagine that even in America, where not everyone knew<br \/>\nabout European history, no one would notice<br \/>\nthe obvious reference to his uncle that he was making<br \/>\nby choosing the name &#8220;Chamberlain.&#8221; The Hitler line was therefore continued and even extended<br \/>\nafter William Patrick arrived in America. However, checking through<br \/>\nevery directory possible, there are no traces<br \/>\nof any Hitler or Stuart Houston. That means, ex-directory,<br \/>\nthey&#8217;re impossible to find. If the children grew up<br \/>\nin this part of Long Island, they must have gone to school. Municipal libraries are often<br \/>\na good source of information. They notably keep school yearbooks,<br \/>\na sort of precursor to Facebook, published every year by colleges<br \/>\nand high schools throughout the US. The highlights in the students&#8217; lives<br \/>\nand careers are featured along with photos. The yearbooks surprisingly reveal that William Patrick Hitler<br \/>\nhad four children, four boys. Alexander, Louis, Brian, and Howard. The one with the most photos is Howard,<br \/>\nindicating a lot of friends. Notes show that he was a member<br \/>\nof the school band. One of the easiest of his friends to find<br \/>\nis Joseph Silhan, Howard&#8217;s best friend, but he is the bearer of bad news. Howard died at the age of 32<br \/>\non September 14th, 1989 in a terrible car accident. He had just gotten married to Marie,<br \/>\na girl from Quebec. Joseph and Howard met<br \/>\nin the high school band. Joseph has videos of his friend,<br \/>\nwith Howard conducting the band. The video was shot<br \/>\nat a high school football game. Howard is the young man<br \/>\ndressed in white and yellow, dancing in the foreground. He&#8217;s wearing a white hat. At the end of the game, we can see him laughing<br \/>\nwith his friends in the stands. He was the life and soul of the group as this other footage reveals<br \/>\nat a private party. What&#8217;s with you and this camera? It&#8217;s a mirror. Howard also told him<br \/>\nof the terrible secret this apparently ordinary,<br \/>\nmiddle-class American family was hiding. At the time I knew Willy,<br \/>\nI didn&#8217;t know about his history, because that was a well-guarded secret,<br \/>\neven from me. No outsiders knew about that, nobody. That&#8217;s the way it had to be. Howard, his son, said: &#8220;I have a little something<br \/>\nI&#8217;d like to tell you.&#8221; We were outside,<br \/>\nI remember it like it was yesterday. I couldn&#8217;t believe it. It was just too fantastic to believe that the man I&#8217;d known<br \/>\nfor these many years was a relative of Adolf Hitler. The more it settled in,<br \/>\nthe more a lot of things made sense as to why they were<br \/>\nso guarded and secretive. I thought that&#8217;s the way the family was. They minded their own business. Thanks to Joseph, it is finally possible<br \/>\nto complete the Hitler family tree. After the war, William Patrick married<br \/>\na young German girl, Phyllis Jean-Jacques. They had four children, Alexander, Howard, Louis, and Brian. They are the last in the Hitler line, the last to bear a name<br \/>\ndefamed by history. During our interview, Joseph also provided valuable information<br \/>\nabout the life of William Patrick. He was great with his kids. He was an older father. He treated me like one of his sons,<br \/>\nand he loved talking to me. He was very heavily into the zodiac, into astrology, knowing your sign, and telling you what your fortune may be<br \/>\nand what&#8217;s ahead of you. He was accurate too,<br \/>\nand believe it or not, his accent hit me. He always reminded me<br \/>\nof Michael Caine, the actor. He had the same voice. William Patrick led two lives, one in the spotlight,<br \/>\nwhere his name was an asset, and the other in secret. William Patrick worked at home. Phyllis was a telephonist. They lived a life<br \/>\nof discretion and isolation, the main idea being<br \/>\nto protect their children. How&#8217;d they live with such a secret? Was it not too big a burden for them, especially for the children<br \/>\nas they grew up? The Hitler&#8217;s secret weighed heavy<br \/>\non all the children. Of the three surviving brothers, Brian and Louis chose to live together<br \/>\nin the family home on Long Island, staying with their mother<br \/>\nuntil she died in 2004. The two brothers created<br \/>\na gardening business together. Brian and Louis lived<br \/>\na cloistered existence. I&#8217;m sure a paranoia does exist for at least two<br \/>\nof the remaining brothers, because they still live together,<br \/>\nstill very guarded. They have a business together,<br \/>\nand that&#8217;s all they do. They do their business, and they go home. Brian and Louis<br \/>\nhave reinforced their isolation, building a wooden fence around their house<br \/>\nagainst any prying eyes, a barrier against any curious visitors. There have been no photos taken<br \/>\nof the last Hitlers since they left high school, but during our preparatory work, we managed to get some unique shots<br \/>\nof all three surviving descendants. In this photo, we can see Brian,<br \/>\nthe youngest, at 49 years old. This is Louis, 63,<br \/>\nputting away his gardening tools. The third and eldest brother<br \/>\nis Alexander, who is 65. He has chosen to live alone. Alexander also has<br \/>\na terrible secret to conceal. William Patrick and Phyllis&#8217; eldest child<br \/>\nhas a middle name, a name with an ambiguous,<br \/>\ndespicable significance. His parents baptized him Adolf. Alexander Stuart Houston<br \/>\nis also called Adolf Hitler, yet, of the last three Hitlers,<br \/>\nhe seems to lead the most normal life, if still discreet. Alex was more like Howard. He found humor in everything,<br \/>\nand he was very laid back. He was a social worker, for Pete&#8217;s sake. You can&#8217;t work with other people<br \/>\nand be paranoid yourself. In my opinion, I believe he took<br \/>\nthe lineage of his history or the Hitler thing,<br \/>\nand he put it on the shelf. &#8220;All right, that&#8217;s part of my life.<br \/>\nIt had nothing to do with me.&#8221; &#8220;I didn&#8217;t do it.<br \/>\nI didn&#8217;t do anything wrong.&#8221; That&#8217;s how he lived his life. Whether or not he had other things<br \/>\nto keep from people, I don&#8217;t know. It&#8217;d appear<br \/>\nthat William Patrick Stewart Houston cut all ties with his uncle<br \/>\nand his own past, but appearances can be deceptive. Certain indications<br \/>\ncontradict this notion. The first clue is this book,<br \/>\nco-written with his mother, now available<br \/>\nat the world&#8217;s biggest library. The second,<br \/>\nthe first name of his first son is in homage<br \/>\nto the uncle he claimed to hate. The third indication<br \/>\nis the ambiguous family name he chose. Why so much mystery? Did he want us to find traces<br \/>\nof the Hitler family&#8217;s past? Did he perhaps hope his own story<br \/>\nwould not be forgotten? Wherever you start penetrating<br \/>\nthis family history, you always see some hidden hints, which makes it easier<br \/>\nfor us historians nowadays to look at the whole matter, but it doesn&#8217;t make it easier for us<br \/>\nto profile him psychologically because William Patrick Hitler<br \/>\nappears as an individual who was continuously drawn back and forth into different ways of thinking<br \/>\nand perceiving the country he was born in, the country he decided to go to, Germany, and the country he ended up living in,<br \/>\nand where he died, the United States. We will never get an answer. William Patrick died<br \/>\nafter a long illness in 1987. His will has remained secret,<br \/>\nmuch like the second part of his life. The only clause we can guess at<br \/>\nis his request to be buried in the US, on Long Island, next to his mother. Did William Patrick die<br \/>\nas Stuart Houston or as Hitler? Apparently, there was a great dilemma<br \/>\nwhen William Patrick died because they felt very awkward and uncomfortable burying him<br \/>\nunder the name he&#8217;d made up. It wasn&#8217;t his real name. There was a strong feeling<br \/>\nwithin the family that perhaps this was the time<br \/>\nto bury him as William Patrick Hitler. I think at the end of the day, they decided<br \/>\nthat would negate everything they&#8217;d done to keep their lives private. I think that had he successfully<br \/>\nleft that old life behind, then he would have been<br \/>\nWilliam Patrick Stewart Houston, but he didn&#8217;t really. The fact that we&#8217;re still talking<br \/>\nabout it today, I think he kind of failed, if you like. His children are still living<br \/>\nwith that name. His wife lived with it<br \/>\nuntil the day she died. Thinking about it, I think he was buried<br \/>\n&#8220;William Patrick Hitler.&#8221; Unbelievably,<br \/>\nat the death of their father, the four brothers,<br \/>\nAlexander, Louis, Howard, and Brian are believed to have taken an oath<br \/>\nto never have children, a pact to put an end<br \/>\nto the Hitler lineage. A close family friend has confirmed this, a reliable source<br \/>\nwhose identity cannot be revealed. In order to verify this, we would have to meet<br \/>\nthe last three surviving Hitlers, but it is impossible to talk to<br \/>\nor even see Louis and Brian. They don&#8217;t want to talk. That leaves Alexander Adolf. By chance, heavy snows the day before meant William Patrick&#8217;s eldest son<br \/>\nwas clearing the driveway in front of his house on Long Island. With a hidden camera in my glasses, I approached Alexander<br \/>\nand tried to talk to him. Hello? Are you Alexander Stuart Houston? Yes, who are you? My name is Emmanuel. I&#8217;m a French film director. Oh, I don&#8217;t want to talk to you. I won&#8217;t talk to you. I know what you&#8217;re here for,<br \/>\nand I&#8217;m not talking to you. I just wanted to let you know<br \/>\nthat I&#8217;m making a film on your father. Nobody knows anything about my father,<br \/>\nbut thank you very much. It&#8217;s nice, I&#8217;m glad. Do you know what?<br \/>\nOur policy is&#8230; My brothers and I had a talk, and we said<br \/>\nnot to talk about it to anybody. Okay. It&#8217;s not important to us,<br \/>\nand we don&#8217;t know anything anyway. Okay. I haven&#8217;t said anything to anybody yet,<br \/>\nand I don&#8217;t intend to. I read the book<br \/>\nthat your grandma and your father wrote. Why?<br \/>\nWhat good did it do us? Nothing, he wrote a book about it,<br \/>\nand it was mostly made up. Do you mean what he wrote isn&#8217;t true? No. We&#8217;re not going to say<br \/>\nanything that&#8217;s going to&#8230; We&#8217;ll not change the story. His book is one of the only sources\u2026 I would say at least 50% of it is wrong. -Really, is it that bad?<br \/>\n-More than that. That&#8217;s what writers do. They recoup, rewrite,<br \/>\nand change the way they want to. Do you want to know something?<br \/>\nHave fun. Not you directly,<br \/>\nbut your family is part of history. Yes, I know, unfortunately. It&#8217;s not a good part either. To have the story told once and for all&#8230; Do you want to know something?<br \/>\nI only had 1,000 calls. If I wanted to tell it,<br \/>\nI could talk to anyone. To avoid people coming<br \/>\nfrom time to time&#8230; I can&#8217;t stop people from coming,<br \/>\nbut I can choose not to talk to them. I don&#8217;t want to talk. Did you make a pact with your brothers<br \/>\nnot to have any children? My brothers and I have a policy of not talking<br \/>\nto any kind of filmmakers or reporters&#8230; Okay. That&#8217;s what you want,<br \/>\nso that&#8217;s what you&#8217;ll get, not much. No, that&#8217;s okay. Why did your father call you Adolf? You do your story,<br \/>\nI hope it comes out good. That&#8217;s it, the end of the story. Okay, all right. I&#8217;ll see you. To this day, Alexander, Lewis,<br \/>\nand Brian have no children, and that situation<br \/>\nlooks likely to continue. They&#8217;re getting older. We may never know<br \/>\nwhy they would have taken this oath. Perhaps one day they will say,<br \/>\nbut they grew up with secrets. Secrecy is part of their lives, yet there is a certain paradox. Their father grew up as a Hitler and founded a family<br \/>\ndespite the burden of his background. Why do the other Hitlers<br \/>\nnot grant themselves the right to live like ordinary people? Is it a form of punishment? Are they the victims<br \/>\nof their own bloodline? It&#8217;s difficult to imagine<br \/>\na generation of family deciding to put an end to the lineage. It wasn&#8217;t William Patrick Hitler&#8217;s choice. He felt quite legitimately<br \/>\nthat he could have a family and continue the lineage,<br \/>\nregardless of the name. The idea that the next generation<br \/>\nalmost deliberately decided to refrain from having children is possible to imagine. It&#8217;s a hypothesis that makes you think since it means they believed<br \/>\nthere was something rotten in their family&#8217;s blood. It means that within themselves, they were convinced<br \/>\nby Adolf Hitler&#8217;s pre-genetic theories, which goes to show<br \/>\nthat bad ideas can sometimes live on.<br \/>\n<br \/>\nAdolf Hitler\u2019s nephew, William Patrick, fled Germany, settled in the U.S. under a false name, and raised a secretive family\u2014struggling between rejecting and exploiting his connection to history\u2019s most notorious dictator.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Hitler&#8217;s Last Descendant | UNCENSORED A cemetery on Long Island in the state of New York. There is a gra<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":1844737,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[593415],"tags":[948239,948240,948241,951165,135,924317,951171,21690,646780,951167,951170,951168,15842,104277,951173,951172,951166,951169,4514,9,948286,30213],"class_list":{"0":"post-1844736","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-2025-summer","8":"tag-2025-summer","9":"tag-2025-summer-anime","10":"tag-948241","11":"tag-adolfhitler","12":"tag-anime","13":"tag-documentaire","14":"tag-documentario","15":"tag-documentary","16":"tag-dokumentarfilm","17":"tag-familysecrets","18":"tag-hiddenhistory","19":"tag-historicallegacy","20":"tag-history","21":"tag-identity","22":"tag-nazism","23":"tag-secret-legacy","24":"tag-williampatrickhitler","25":"tag-worldwarii","26":"tag-ww2","27":"tag-9","28":"tag-948286","29":"tag-30213"},"share_on_mastodon":{"url":"https:\/\/wakoka.com\/@anime\/114668340868495286","error":""},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wacoca.com\/anime\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1844736","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wacoca.com\/anime\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wacoca.com\/anime\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wacoca.com\/anime\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/4"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wacoca.com\/anime\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1844736"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.wacoca.com\/anime\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1844736\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wacoca.com\/anime\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/1844737"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wacoca.com\/anime\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1844736"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wacoca.com\/anime\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1844736"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wacoca.com\/anime\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1844736"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}