Adolf Hitler
by Alois Hitler
[Page 1]
Adolph Hitler by Alois Hitler - New York American,
November 30, 1930
Alois left home when Adolph was eleven years old.
Up to that time Adolph had been his mother's favorite.
He was a very likable boy and the soul of generosity.
He was always a dreamer and was as far removed free
anything practical as the sun is from the moon. He always
kept to himself a great deal and spent most of his time
reading, drawing or painting. It is not true that his father
opposed his becoming an artist. Both his father and mother
wanted him to be an artist if that is what he really
wanted and they helped him as much as their limited
means allowed.
Adolph and Paula (his younger sister) were the children
of his father's cousin. Adolph's father died when he was
about thirteen years old. After the death of his mother
Adolph could have continued his education at the expense
of the State by virtue of being the orphan of a customs
Official. But he never cared for school and while he was
there he never mixed much with the other children. He
preferred to sit apart with his books rather then to
join in the boisterous games with other boys. When his
mother died he took his younger sister Paula and want
to Vienna. "He had been accustomed to a comparatively
easy life; it had become a grim struggle against pitiless
poverty." He swept streets, etc., in order to earn enough
money to buy food for Paula and himself.
He left Vienna early in 1912 and obtained work in
Munich as a house painter and decorator. During the
war, he was gassed which resulted in his being blind
for about three months.
"His faith in humanity was shattered by his friends'
betrayal in the Munich Putsch."
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