
Shooting Nazis
A notorious ancestor leads to a family history quest.
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"Most families
have some dark secret, this is ours; my grandfather shot Rudolf Hess. In 1933
he shot the Prince of Wales while he was playing golf at Gleneagles. He tried
several times to shoot Queen Mary, but she was having none of it."
Curiosity about the life, work and notoriety of his grandfather has led Nick Rowswell
on a quest to uncover his Scottish roots. Rowswell's investigations uncovered
the dynamic character of George Alexander Simpson, photographic pioneer and one
of the earliest paparazzi. Grandpa George got the scoop of his career when he
secured the first pictures of the top Nazi on his ill-fated peace mission in 1941.
The flight of Rudolf Hess at the height of the Second World War was one of the
oddest diplomatic missions in history and has become a favoured topic of conspiracy
theorists. It is believed that when Hess set off across the North Sea towards
Scotland on the 10th May 1941, he was heading for Dungavel, the seat of the 14th
Duke of Hamilton. Forced to bale out from the unfortunate plane 6,000 feet above
Renfrewshire, Hess landed in a field at Eaglesham, his aspirations of brokering
a peace with Britain vanishing with the crash of his Messerschmitt. Hess had met
the Duke, a fellow keen aviator, at the 1936 Berlin Olympics.
If he hadn't broken his ankle on crash landing, Hess might have managed to get
to Dungavel. It is believed that Hess wished to convince the British government,
in the midst of the heavy assault of the Blitz, that the Nazis did not wish to
destroy Britain, but gain "lebensraum", or living space, for the German nation.
However, Grandpa George, a one-legged former railway clerk from Bo'ness, was about
to intervene and assist with the propaganda coup of capturing Hess - on film.
Born in the county of Linlithgow and disabled in an accident at Bo'ness railway
station as a youngster, George Simpson's burgeoning photographic career was boosted
when he was the first photographer to get pictures of the German Fleet scuttled
in Scapa Flow in 1919. In the early '20s, Simpson moved from the Daily Record
to become chief photographer at the Daily Mail. "Grandpa George was a 'paparazzo'
long before the word had been invented. He thought nothing of climbing trees,
scaling walls or hiding in bushes when it came to an exclusive". Simpson was also
a pioneer of aerial photography in Scotland, and was twice a passenger in planes
that crash landed, once in the North Sea. A similar emergency landing inextricably
linked the adventurous snapper with the Nazi leader. By May 1941, France, the
Low Countries and Norway had already fallen to the Germans, leaving Britain isolated
and exposed to sustained bombings by the Luftwaffe. Glasgow and Clydebank were
attacked night after night in bombing raids at this dark time. Hess was taken
in by a local farmer in Eaglesham, having abandoned his plane and broken his ankle.
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Instead of informing
the Duke of Hamilton, the farmer chose to alert his photographer contact, George
Simpson, who navigated his way through blacked-out Glasgow to Eaglesham, where
"after a few questions to confirm the deputy Fuhrer's identity, my grandfather
finished his tea and shot him." The following day, Simpson's world exclusive hit
the front page of the Daily Mail. His photographic coup triggered a propaganda
war between Churchill, who suggested dissent among leading Nazis, and Hitler,
who decreed that Hess was insane and had been suffering from "hallucinations".
Hess spent the rest of the war as a POW; he was tried at Nuremburg and spent the
rest of his life at Spandau prison in Berlin. Simpson eventually retired from
journalism in 1960. Following the theft of the Stone of Destiny, George Simpson
was one of the first on the scene when the stone was discovered at Forfar in 1951.
His grandson Nick Rowswell, now resident in France, continues to look for further
details from his Grandpa George's life. His quest began when seeking the infamous
photograph of Hess. "Originally, I just wanted to find the photo of Hess, but
now I'd like to write down my family history, if only for my daughter. My father
died when I was 6, and I know very little about his family. If ever anything happens
to me, I'd like my daughter to know something about her ancestors".
Listen to Nick talking about his grandfather on Home
Truths, BBC Radio 4, on September 6th 2003. Click on the "Grandad who
shot Hess" link on the Home
Truths page.
Memories of Hess's flight in wartime are recalled in Scotland on Film. Click on
the Scotland's
Home Service: Rudolf Hess link on the page.
Find out more
about Hess's
role in the Second World War on BBC History.
Next in the Histories series here.
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