Countess and the Nazis

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A01=Richard Jay Hutto
Adolf Hitler
Albania WWII
Albina Jenek
Americans in WWII
Arthur Lederer
Auschwitz
Author_Richard Jay Hutto
Benito Mussolini
Berlin 1936 Olympics
Category=DNB
Category=JBSF1
Category=NHK
Category=NHWR7
Count Galeazzo Ciano
Daisy Rutherfurd
declassified CIA memos
Dobrau Castle
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Geraldine of Albania
German citizens WWII
Germany WWII
Gestapo
Gilded Age families
Gilded Age heiresses
Henry White
Hermann Seherr-Thoss
Herstory
Hitler Youth
Holocaust
Italian invasion Albania
Jack White
Jewish refugees
Jews
Jolanta Ilnicka
Joseph Goebbels
King Zog I
Nazi Olympics
Nazi resistance

Product details

  • ISBN 9781493086566
  • Weight: 535g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Apr 2025
  • Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Muriel White was a scion of several “first families” of the U.S. Born into great wealth at the height of the Gilded Age, her mother was so famously beautiful that Edith Wharton and Henry James wrote about it. Muriel’s father, who signed the Versailles Peace Treaty on behalf of the U.S., was among the most brilliant and respected diplomats of his day and their daughter was reared at the courts of Europe among the social elite of the era.

Muriel, who spoke six languages fluently, ultimately married a Prussian count whose family held extensive estates and a hereditary seat in the Prussian House of Lords. She gave birth to three children, but the gathering clouds of World War II strained her relationship with her husband. He seemed to care only about protecting his family’s extensive estates, while Muriel plainly saw what Germany’s future was becoming. As she mentored her husband’s cousin, the future Queen Geraldine of Albania, through courtship, marriage, and the birth of the crown prince, Muriel witnessed firsthand the Italian Fascist invasion of Albania in 1939 and the royal family’s narrow escape from capture.

When war descended on Europe and her marriage failed, Muriel sent her children to safety abroad. Cut off from her funds in the United States, she and her husband divorced; he allowed her to remain in their palace only as an unpaid housekeeper, even though her fortune had restored the estate. Her U.S. passport was confiscated and she was virtually a prisoner. Nevertheless, she resisted the Nazis (in several verified incidents) and secured funding to save a Jewish family before she was forced to make the ultimate sacrifice rather than reveal the location of her sons to the Nazis.

Richard Jay Hutto served as White House Appointments Secretary to the Carter Family as well as Chairman of the Georgia Council for the Arts and is a Knight of Malta. A former attorney, he is an internationally recognized lecturer as well as the author of six critically acclaimed books. He has been featured as an on-air historical expert by Discovery Channel, National Geographic, Investigation Discovery, and Glenn Beck Television and is a regular contributor to Royalty Digest Quarterly and the European Royal History Journal. Hutto has written extensively about the marriage of America’s Gilded Age heiresses to titled husbands. He regularly lectures onboard high-end cruise ships, including the Queen Mary 2. Follow him online at www.TheCountess.net.

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