Hadley had been teaching in
Berlin for three or four years, but decided to move to Paris following Germany's declarations of war against Russia on 1 August 1914 and then France on 3 August, and its ultimatum to
Belgium, in the preceding days. Hadley was taken by ambulance to the in
Gelsenkirchen, and died there at 3:15 am local time on 5 August – just three hours after the UK declared war on Germany. Elizabeth Pratley was interrogated as a potential spy, at a military prison in
Münster, but was eventually released, without charge, to the in Münster, and finally allowed to return home in November 1914. She then informed the British government of Hadley's death, on 26 November 1914. ==Legacy==