Engagement In 1909, Bridget and her father, William Dowling, attended the
Dublin Horse Show where they met Alois Hitler Jr., who claimed to be a wealthy hotelier touring Europe when, in fact, he was a poor kitchen porter at Dublin's
Shelbourne Hotel. Alois courted Bridget at various Dublin locales and soon they were discussing marriage. On 3 June 1910, the couple eloped to London, living in
Charing Cross Road for a while. Her father threatened to charge Alois with kidnapping but accepted the marriage after Bridget pleaded with him.
Early married life The couple settled at 102 Upper Stanhope Street, a boarding house kept by the John family, in
Toxteth, Liverpool and, in 1911 they had their only child,
William Patrick Hitler. The house was destroyed in the last German air raid of the
Liverpool Blitz on 10 January 1942.
Split Alois went to Germany in 1914 to establish himself in business but these plans were interrupted by the outbreak of
World War I. Bridget refused to go with him, as he had become violent and started beating their son. In addition, Alois Jr. was an adulterous husband, engaging in numerous extramarital affairs. Alois decided to abandon his family. He returned to Germany, remarried
bigamously, and sent word after the war that he was dead. His deception was later discovered, and he was charged with bigamy by the German authorities in 1924. He escaped conviction due to Bridget's intervention, with Bridget agreeing to a
legal separation; though Alois had requested a divorce, Bridget's stoutly Catholic father forbid her from taking that route at that time. Bridget raised her son alone with no support from her husband. She and Alois were eventually divorced (although as a
Roman Catholic she was religiously opposed to divorce). She set up a home in
Highgate,
North London, and took in lodgers to make ends meet. William was supported by Bridget's family in
Ireland. ==Emigration and claims==