http://www.compura.com/hess/index3.htm

Newly Discovered Scottish Documents provide further proof that it was not
the real Rudolf Hess who died in Spandau prison.

In 1996, Walter Rudolf Hess's Iron Cross was auctioned at Bonhams in London.
With the cross was a box of documents including original eye witness
accounts, photographs of the landing strip at Dungavel, as well as the Duke
of Hamilton's original Statement.

These papers prove that Churchill knew of Hess's mission twenty-four hours
before Hess landed in Scotland.

These manuscript letters and papers became the key which opened the door to
other collections of undisclosed and secret documents pertaining to Rudolf
Hess, the deputy Fuhrer, and his peace flight to Scotland during World War
Two.

They have also revealed evidence that the prisoner who was kept and died in
Spandau was not Rudolf Hess. Official medical examination reports and x-ray
carried out on Rudolf Hess within 48 hours of his landing in Scotland
confirm Dr. Hugh Thomas, British military surgeon at Spandau, in his
conclusions that prisoner no.7 was not Walter Rudolf Hess.

The cache of papers which includes first-hand accounts, hitherto unpublished
material and photographs, adds a further dimension to the conspiracy for
peace that brought Hess to Scotland.

Further research also revealed documents belonging to the then Lord Provost
of Glasgow (1941), Polish papers, Swedish diplomatic documents and the diary
style notes of the wartime Air correspondent of the Glasgow Herald, Fred
Nancarrow, who died in mysterious circumstances in September 1942. He was
not the only person involved to meet untimely death.

The documents and photographs provide irrefutable proof that Hess intended
landing his aircraft at Dungavel airstrip, owned by the Duke of Hamilton,
and show an agreement existed that Hess would be refuelled and allowed to
return to Germany within three days, after the peace discussions. They also
reveal that the group suing for peace on the allied side encompassed most
European Royal households and that those delegated to meet Hess included
General Sikorsky, Guards Officer Colonel Pilcher, the Duke of Buccleuch, the
Earl of Suffolk, and the King's brother the Duke of Kent, who had been
offered the Polish throne after the war ended.

Had these negotiations been successful, millions of lives could have been
saved, Europe spared economic destruction, communism would have been
contained and the USA would not have emerged as the only Superpower.

The meeting was the culmination of a series which had taken place in Spain,
organised through the Swedish Royal family, by their representative Baron
Knut Bonde.

Winston Churchill learned of Hess's plans via spies working in the
Messcherschmitt factory, he cancelled all leave in the landing area and
arranged a light armoured exercise to take place, on the moor, surrounding
Dungavel.

A manuscript containing the above and many other undisclosed factors in the
Hess story is in preparation. It will at last reveal the true story of what
has become the greatest legend of the second World War, and perhaps the best
kept secret of this century. These revelations coincide with the 10th
anniversary of the death of the man who never was.



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For Further information contact :-

Jeffrey Simmons at Jeffrey Simmons Literary Agency.

10, Lowndes Sq. London SW1 X9H

Tel 44 (0)171 235 8852 Fax 44 (0)171 235 9733

email [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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Press Articles
The Herald Monday 18th August 1997

The Herald Monday 18th August 1997

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