Leo Raubal Jr. was born in
Linz,
Austria-Hungary on 2 October 1906. He was the son of Leo Raubal Sr. and his wife
Angela, Adolf's half-sister. In August 1910, when he was only 3 years old, he lost his father to
tuberculosis. Raubal Jr. worked as an engineer and became a manager of the Linz Steelworks. He visited his mother sporadically while she was living in
Berchtesgaden. Like his younger cousin
Heinz Hitler but unlike his other younger cousin
William Patrick Hitler, Leo Raubal was a "favorite nephew of the leader", and Adolf liked to spend his time with him. However, William claimed that Raubal did not like their uncle Adolf and blamed him for the death of his sister
Geli. This contrasts with Raubal himself saying in 1967 that Adolf was "absolutely innocent" of Geli's death, according to historian
Werner Maser.
World War II and detention in Moscow In October 1939, Raubal was drafted into the
Luftwaffe and was a lieutenant in the engineering corps. He looked similar to Adolf Hitler and sometimes served as his uncle's double during the war. He was injured in January 1943 during the
Battle of Stalingrad, and
Friedrich Paulus asked Adolf for a plane to evacuate Raubal to Germany. Adolf refused and Raubal was captured by the Soviets on 31 January 1943. Adolf gave orders to examine the possibility of a prisoner exchange with the Soviets for Stalin's son
Yakov Dzhugashvili, who had been captured by the Germans on 16 July 1941. Stalin refused to exchange him either for Raubal or for Friedrich Paulus, and said "war is war". Raubal was detained in
Moscow's jails and was released by the Soviets on 28 September 1955, and returned to
Austria.
Post-detention career Raubal lived and worked in
Salzburg as a teacher of chemistry. He died of
tuberculosis during a vacation in Spain. He was buried on 7 September 1977 in Linz. Leo Raubal Jr. had a son Peter (born 1931) who along with Elfriede Raubal's son, Heiner Hochegger (born 1945), and
William Patrick Hitler's four sons, Alexander Adolf (born 1949), Louis (born 1951), Howard Ronald (1957–1989), and Brian William (born 1965), were the closest living relatives to Adolf Hitler. However, unlike Raubal, William Patrick, who fought with the United States during World War II and changed his last name to Stuart-Houston, was not on good terms with Adolf Hitler, publicly denouncing him by 1938. Peter Raubal, never married or had children, and is a retired engineer who lives in Linz, Austria. ==See also==