Adolph Schwarzenberg's stance against the
Nazis and the Third Reich was clear even before the occupation of the Czech Lands and the outbreak of WWII: in 1937 he invited
Edvard Beneš to
Český Krumlov castle, where he gave him breakfast, as well as a million crowns, at the time a very considerable sum, for the defense of Czechoslovakia against Germany. He ordered black flags to be flown After the German occupation of the Czech Lands, he refused All this inevitably made him a target for persecution and arrest. Adolph Schwarzenberg left occupied Czechoslovakia and settled temporarily at his house in
Bordighera, Italy. He gave his adoptive son Heinrich responsibility for his property and emigrated via Switzerland to the United States of America. Heinrich Schwarzenberg, representing his adoptive father, proved no more inclined to the new rulers and on 17 August 1940 the
Gestapo confiscated all of Adolph Schwarzenberg's property within the reach of the
Third Reich. however, other sources point to Adolph Schwarzenberg's general attitude and actions as a decisive factor. Heinrich Schwarzenberg was arrested on direct orders of
Heinrich Himmler During his stay in the United States, Adolph Schwarzenberg supported the resistance and was an outspoken opponent of the Nazi regime, as confirmed by both
Jan Masaryk and Consul General Karel Hudec. He enrolled at
Columbia University to study for his second doctorate. His dissertation, a biography of
Felix, Prince Schwarzenberg, was published in 1946. Adolph also worked with the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, producing the report mentioned above and carrying out various activities in support of the organisation. ==Return to Europe and post-war period==