
Heir to the Holocaust 
              Prescott Bush, $1.5 million, and Auschwitz:               how the Bush family wealth is linked to the  holocaust
            Toby Rogers 
             While the Enron scandal currently unfolds, another Bush family               business scandal lurks beneath the shadows of history that may             dwarf it.
             On April 19, 2001, President George W. Bush spent some of Holocaust               Remembrance Day in the Capital Rotunda with holocaust survivors,               allied veterans, and their families. In a ceremony that included               Jewish prayers and songs sung by holocaust victims in the camps,               Benjamin Meed, a survivor of the Warsaw ghetto uprising, movingly               described to the gathering what he experienced on April 19, 1943.
             "I stood outside a Catholic church, which faced the ghetto," Mr.               Meed said, "a young Jewish boy posing as a gentile. As I watched               the ghetto being bombarded by the German artillery, I could see               many of the Jews of my community jumping out of windows of burning               buildings. I stood long and mute."
             The survivor concluded his reminiscence saying, "We tremble               to think what could happen if we allow a new generation to arise               ignorant of the tragedy which is still shaping the future."
             President Bush, appearing almost uncomfortable, read a statement               that said that humanity was "bound by conscience to remember               what happened" and that "the record has been kept and               preserved." The record, Mr. Bush stated, was that one of the               worst acts of genocide in human history "came not from crude               and uneducated men, but from men who regarded themselves as cultured               and well schooled, modern men, forward looking. Their crime showed               the world that evil can slip in and blend in amid the most civilized               surroundings. In the end only conscience can stop it."
             But while President Bush publicly embraced the community of holocaust               survivors in Washington last spring, he and his family have been               keeping a secret from them for over 50 years about Prescott Bush,               the president's grandfather. According to classified documents               from Dutch intelligence and US government archives, President George               W. Bush's grandfather, Prescott Bush made considerable profits               off Auschwitz slave labor. In fact, President Bush himself is an               heir to these profits from the holocaust which were placed in a               blind trust in 1980 by his father, former president George Herbert               Walker Bush.
             Throughout the Bush family's decades of public life, the American               press has gone out of its way to overlook one historical fact – that               through Union Banking Corporation (UBC), Prescott Bush, and his               father-in-law, George Herbert Walker, along with German industrialist               Fritz Thyssen, financed Adolf Hitler before and during World War               II. It was first reported in 1994 by John Loftus and Mark Aarons               in The Secret War Against the Jews: How Western Espionage Betrayed               the Jewish People.
             The US government had known that many American companies were               aiding Hitler, like Standard Oil, General Motors and Chase Bank,               all of which was sanctioned after Pearl Harbor. But as The New               York Times reporter Charles Higham later discovered, and published               in his 1983 groundbreaking book, Trading With The Enemy; The               Nazi American Money Plot 1933-1949, "the government smothered               everything during and even after the war." Why?
             According to Higham, the US government believed "a public               scandal ... would have drastically affected public morale, caused               widespread strikes and perhaps provoked mutinies in the armed services." Higham               claims the government thought "their trial and imprisonment               would have made it impossible for the corporate boards to help               the American war effort."
             However, Prescott Bush's banks were not just financing Hitler               as previously reported. In fact, there was a distinct business               link much deeper than Mr. Higham or Mr. Loftus knew at the time               their books were published.
             A classified Dutch intelligence file which was leaked by a courageous               Dutch intelligence officer, along with newly surfaced information               from U.S. government archives, "confirms absolutely," John               Loftus says, the direct links between Bush, Thyssen and genocide               profits from Auschwitz.
             The business connections between Prescott Bush and Fritz Thyssen               were more direct than what has been previously written. This new               information reveals how Prescott Bush and UBC, which he managed               directly, profited from the Holocaust. A case can be made that               the inheritors of the Prescott Bush estate could be sued by survivors               of the Holocaust and slave labor communities. To understand the               complete picture of how Prescott Bush profited from the Holocaust,               it is necessary to return to the year 1916, where it all began.
             Post World War I: Thyssen Empire On The Ropes
             By 1916, August Thyssen could see the writing on the wall. The "Great               War" was spinning out of control, grinding away at Germany's               resources and economy. The government was broke and his company,               Thyssen & Co., with 50,000 German workers and annual production               of 1,000,000 tons of steel and iron, was buckling under the war's               pressure. As the main supplier of the German military, August Thyssen               knew Germany would be defeated once the US entered the war.
             At 74, "King" August Thyssen knew he was also running               out of time. His first born "prince" Friedrich (Fritz)               Thyssen, had been groomed at the finest technical business schools               in Europe and was destined to inherit his father's estimated $100,000,000               fortune and an industrial empire located at Muehhlheim on the Ruhr.
             In addition to Fritz, plans were also made for the second son               Heinrich. At the outbreak of the war, Heinrich Thyssen discreetly               changed his citizenship from German to Hungarian and married the               Hungarian aristocrat Baroness Margrit Bornemisza de Kaszon. Soon               Heinrich Thyssen switched his name to Baron Thyssen Bornemisza               de Kaszon.
             Near the end of World War I, August Thyssen opened the Bank voor               Handel en Scheepvaart in Rotterdam. The neutral Holland was the               perfect location outside of Germany to launder assets from the               August Thyssen Bank in Berlin when the financial demands of the               Allied forces surfaced. But the war ended much sooner than even               Thyssen calculated and what developed caught the "Rockefeller             of the Ruhr" off guard.
             On November 10, 1918, German socialists               took over Berlin. The following morning at 5 a.m., what was left               of Germany surrendered to the Allies, officially ending World War               I. "At the time of the Armistice and the signing of the Treaty   of Versailles, my Father and I were deeply saddened by the spectacle of Germany's   abject humiliation," Thyssen recalled later in his autobiography, I   Paid Hitler.
             After the war, chaos descended on Germany as food ran short. Winter               was looming over a starving nation when on Dec. 7, 1918, the socialist               Spartacists League came knocking on the Thyssen Villa with armed               militia. August and Fritz were arrested and dragged from jail to               jail across Germany for four days. Along the way, they were lined               up in staged executions designed to terrorize them.
             It worked. When released, the two Thyssens were horrified at the               new political climate in their beloved Germany. They could not               accept that Germany was responsible for its own demise. All Germany's               problems, the Thyssens felt, "have almost always been due               to foreigners." It was the Jews, he and many others believed,               who were secretly behind the socialist movement across the globe.
             Meanwhile Fritz's younger brother Baron Thyssen Bornemisza de               Kaszon moved to Rotterdam and became the principal owner of the               Bank voor Handel en Scheepvaart. All the Thyssens needed now was               an American branch.
             1920s: The Business Ties That Bind
             Railroad baron E.H. Harriman's son Averell wanted nothing to do               with railroads, so his father gave him an investment firm, W.A.               Harriman & Company in New York City. E.H. hired the most qualified               person in the country to run the operation, George Herbert Walker.               Averell hired his little brother Edward Roland "Bunny" Harriman               as a vice president.
             By 1920, George Herbert Walker had already built a fortune in               Missouri. Walker, a charismatic former heavyweight boxing champion,               was a human pit bull. He lived life to the fullest, owning mansions               around the east coast and one of the most extravagant apartments               in Manhattan. His hobbies were golf, hunting, drinking scotch and               beating his sons to a pulp. Elsie Walker, one of Walker's grandchildren               described Walker as a "tough old bastard" whose children               had no love "for their father." He was also a religious               bigot who hated Catholics, although his parents raised him to be               one. According to other sources, he also did not like Jews.
             In 1922, Averell Harriman traveled to Germany to set up a W.A.               Harriman & Co. branch in Berlin. The Berlin branch was also               run by Walker. While in Germany, he met with the Thyssen family               for the first time. Harriman agreed to help the Thyssens with their               plan for an American bank.
             The following year, a wounded Germany was growing sicker. The               government had no solution and froze while Germany rotted from               within. With widespread strikes and production at a near standstill,               Fritz Thyssen later recalled, "We were at the worst time of               the inflation. In Berlin the government was in distress. It was               ruined financially. Authority was crumbling. In Saxony a communist               government had been formed and the Red terror, organized by Max               Hoelz, reigned through the countryside. The German Reich ... was               now about to crumble."
             In October, 1923, an emotionally desperate Fritz Thyssen went               to visit one of his and Germany's great military heroes, General               Erich Ludendorff. During the 1918 socialist rule in Berlin, Ludendorff               organized a military resistance against the socialists and the               industrialists were in great debt to him. When Thyssen met with               Ludendorff, they discussed Germany's economic collapse. Thyssen               was apocalyptic, fearing the worst was yet to come. Ludendorff               disagreed. "There is but one hope," Ludendorff said, "Adolph               Hitler and the National Socialist party." Ludendorff respected               Hitler immensely. "He is the only man who has any political               sense." Ludendorff encouraged Thyssen to join the Nazi movement. "Go               listen to him one day" he said to Thyssen.
             Thyssen followed General Ludendorff's advice and went to a number               of meetings to hear Hitler speak. He became mesmerized by Hitler. "I               realized his orator gifts and his ability to lead the masses. What               impressed me most however was the order that reigned over his meetings,               the almost military discipline of his followers."
             Thyssen arranged to meet privately with Hitler and Ludendorff               in Munich. Hitler told Thyssen the Nazi movement was in financial               trouble, it was not growing fast enough and was nationally irrelevant.               Hitler needed as much money as possible to fight off the Communists/Jewish               conspiracy against Europe. Hitler envisioned a fascist German monarchy               with a nonunion, antilock national work force.
             Thyssen was overjoyed with the Nazi platform. He gave Hitler and               Ludendorff 100,000 gold marks ($25,000) for the infant Nazi party.               Others in the steel and coal industries soon followed Thyssen's               lead, although none came close to matching him. Many business leaders               in Germany supported Hitler's secret union-hating agenda. However,               some donated because they feared they would be left out in the               cold if he actually ever seized power.
             Most industry leaders gave up on Hitler after his failed coup               in 1923. While Hitler spent a brief time in jail, the Thyssens,               through the Bank voor Handel en Scheepvaart, opened the Union Banking               Corporation in 1924.
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             Union Banking Corporation
             Early in 1924, Hendrick J. Kouwenhoven, the managing director               of Bank voor Handel en Scheepvaart, traveled to New York to meet               with Walker and the Harriman brothers. Together, they established               The Union Banking Corporation. The UBC's headquarters was located               at the same 39 Broadway address as Harriman & Co.
             As the German economy recovered through the mid to late ‘20s,               Walker and Harriman's firm sold over $50,000,000 worth of German               bonds to American investors, who profited enormously from the economic               boom in Germany. In 1926, August Thyssen died at the age of 84.               Fritz was now in control of one of the largest industrial families               in Europe. He quickly created the United Steel Works (USW), the               biggest industrial conglomerate in German history. Thyssen hired               Albert Volger, one of the Ruhr's most influential industrial directors,               as director General of USW.
             Thyssen also brought Fredich Flick, another German family juggernaut,               on board. Flick owned coal and steel industries throughout Germany               and Poland and desperately wanted to invest into the Thyssen empire.               One of the primary motivations for the Thyssen/Flick massive steel               and coal merger was suppressing the new labor and socialist movements.
             That year in New York, George Walker decided to give his new son               in law, Prescott Bush, a big break. Walker made Bush a vice president               of Harriman & Co. Prescott's new office employed many of his               classmates from his Yale class of 1917, including Roland Harriman               and Knight Woolley. The three had been close friends at Yale and               were all members of Skull and Bones, the mysterious on-campus secret               society. Despite the upbeat fraternity atmosphere at Harriman & Co.,               it was also a place of hard work, and no one worked harder than               Prescott Bush.
             In fact, Walker hired Bush to help him supervise the new Thyssen/Flick               United Steel Works. One section of the USW empire was the Consolidated               Silesian Steel Corporation and the Upper Silesian Coal and Steel               Company located in the Silesian section of Poland. Thyssen and               Flick paid Bush and Walker generously, but it was worth every dime.               Their new business arrangement pleased them all financially, and               the collective talents of all four men and their rapid success               astonished the business world.
             In the meantime Hitler and the Nazi party were broke. Since the               German economic recovery, members and donations had dried up, leaving               the Nazi movement withering on the vine. In 1927, Hitler was desperate               for cash; his party was slipping into debt. Hitler told his private               secretary Rudolf Hess to shake down wealthy coal tycoon and Nazi               sympathizer Emil Kirdorf. Kirdorf paid off Hitler's debt that year               but the following year, he too had no money left to contribute.
             In 1928, Hitler had his eyes on the enormous Barlow Palace located               in Briennerstrasse, the most aristocratic section of Munich. Hitler               wanted to convert the palace into the Nazi national headquarters               and change its name to the Brown House but it was out of his price               range. Hitler told Hess to contact Thyssen. After hearing the Hess               appeal, Thyssen felt it was time to give Hitler a second chance.               Through the Bank voor Handel en Scheepvaart, Thyssen said he "placed               Hess in possession of the required funds" to purchase and               redesign the Palace. Thyssen later said the amount was about 250,000               marks but leading Nazis later claimed that just the re-molding               cost over 800,000 marks (equivalent to $2 million today).
             Regardless of the cost, Hitler and Thyssen became close friends               after the purchase of the Brown House. At the time, neither knew               how influential that house was to become the following year when,               in 1929, the great depression spread around the world. With the               German economic recovery up in flames, Hitler knew there was going               to be a line out the door of industrialists waiting to give him               cash.
             1930s: Hitler Rises – Thyssen/Bush Cash In
             Thyssen would later try to claim that his weekends with Hitler               and Hess at his Rhineland castles were not personal but strictly               business and that he did not approve of most of Hitler's ideas,               but the well-known journalist R.G Waldeck, who spent time with               Thyssen at a spa in the Black Forest, remembered quite differently.               Waldeck said when he and Thyssen would walk through the cool Black               Forest in 1929-30, Thyssen would tell Waldeck that he believed               in Hitler. He spoke of Hitler "with warmth" and said               the Nazis were "new men" that would make Germany strong               again. With the depression bleeding Europe, Thyssen's financial               support made Hitler's rise to power almost inevitable.
             The great depression also rocked Harriman & Co. The following               year, Harriman & Co. merged with the London firm Brown/Shipley.               Brown/Shipley kept its name, but Harriman & Co. changed its               name to Brown Brothers, Harriman. The new firm moved to 59 Wall               St. while UBC stayed at 39 Broadway. Averell Harriman and Prescott               Bush reestablished a holding company called The Harriman 15 Corporation.               One of the companies Harriman had held stock in was the Consolidated               Silesian Steel Company. Two thirds of the company was owned by               Friedrich Flick. The rest was owned by Harriman.
             In December 1931, Fritz Thyssen officially joined the Nazi party.               When Thyssen joined the movement, the Nazi party was gaining critical               mass around Germany. The charismatic speeches and persona of Hitler,               the depression and the Thyssen's Bank voor Handel en Scheepvaart               all contributed to Hitler's sudden rise in popularity with the               German people.
             In September 1932, Thyssen invited a group of elite German industrial               tycoons to his castle to meet with Hitler. They spent hours questioning               Hitler, who answered all their questions with the'"utmost               satisfaction," Thyssen remembered. The money poured in from               the industrial circles mostly due to Hitler's "monarchistic               attitude" towards labor and issues of class.
             But by November, German voters grew weary of Hitler's antidemocratic               tendencies and turned to the Communist party, which gained the               most seats in the fall election. The Nazis lost a sweeping 35 seats               in the Reichstag, but since the Nazis were already secretly negotiating               a power sharing alliance with Hindenberg that would ultimately               lead to Hitler declaring himself dictator, the outcry of German               voters was politically insignificant.
             By 1934, Hindenberg was dead and Hitler completely controlled               Germany. In March, Hitler announced his plans for a vast new highway               system. He wanted to connect the entire Reich with an unprecedented               wide road design, especially around major ports. Hitler wanted               to bring down unemployment but, more importantly, needed the new               roads for speedy military maneuvers.
             Hitler also wanted to seriously upgrade Germany's military machine.               Hitler ordered a'"rebirth of the German army" and contracted               Thyssen and United Steel Works for the overhaul. Thyssen's steel               empire was the cold steel heart of the new Nazi war machine that               led the way to World War II, killing millions across Europe.
             Thyssen's and Flick's profits soared into the hundreds of millions               in 1934 and the Bank voor Handel en Scheepvaart and UBC in New               York were overflowing with money. Prescott Bush became managing               director of UBC and handled the day-to-day operations of the new               German economic plan. Bush's shares in UBC peaked with Hitler's               new German order. But while production rose, cronyism did as well.
             On March 19, 1934, Prescott Bush handed Averell Harriman a copy               of that day's New York Times. The Polish government was applying               to take over Consolidated Silesian Steel Corporation and Upper               Silesian Coal and Steel Company from'"German and American               interests" because of rampant "mismanagement, excessive               borrowing, fictitious bookkeeping and gambling in securities." The               Polish government required the owners of the company, which accounted               for over 45% of Poland's steel production, to pay at least its               full share of back taxes. Bush and Harriman would eventually hire               attorney John Foster Dulles to help cover up any improprieties               that might arise under investigative scrutiny.
             Hitler's invasion of Poland in 1939 ended the debate about Consolidated               Silesian Steel Corporation and Upper Silesian Coal and Steel Company.               The Nazis knocked the Polish Government off Thyssen, Flick and               Harriman's steel company and were planning to replace the paid               workers. Originally Hitler promised Stalin they would share Poland               and use Soviet prisoners as slaves in Polish factories. Hitler's               promise never actually materialized and he eventually invaded Russia. 
             1940s: Business As Usual
             Consolidated Silesian Steel Corporation was located near the Polish               town of Oswiecim, one of Poland's richest mineral regions. That               was where Hitler set up the Auschwitz concentration camp. When               the plan to work Soviet prisoners fell through, the Nazis transferred               Jews, communists, gypsies and other minority populations to the               camp. The prisoners of Auschwitz who were able to work were shipped               to 30 different companies. One of the companies was the vast Consolidated               Silesian Steel Corporation.
             "Nobody's made the connection before between Consolidated               Silesian Steel Corporation, Auschwitz and Prescott Bush," John               Loftus told Clamor.
             "That was the reason why Auschwitz was built there. The coal               deposits could be processed into either coal or additives for aviation               gasoline."
              Even though Thyssen and Flick's Consolidated Steel was in their               possession, Hitler's invasions across Europe spooked them, bringing               back memories of World War I. Thyssen and Flick sold Consolidated               Steel to UBC. Under the complete control of Harriman and management               of Bush, the company became Silesian American Corporation which               became part of UBC and Harriman's portfolio of 15 corporations.               Thyssen quickly moved to Switzerland and later France to hide from               the terror about to be unleashed by the Nazi war machine he had               helped build.
             A portion of the slave labor force in Poland was "managed               by Prescott Bush," according to a Dutch intelligence agent.               In 1941, slave labor had become the lifeblood of the Nazi war machine.               The resources of Poland's rich steel and coal field played an essential               part in Hitler's invasion of Europe.
             According to Higham, Hitler and the Fraternity of American businessmen "not               only sought a continuing alliance of interests for the duration               of World War II, but supported the idea of a negotiated peace with               Germany that would bar any reorganization of Europe along liberal               lines. It would leave as its residue a police state that would               place the Fraternity in postwar possession of financial, industrial,               and political autonomy."
             Six days after Pearl Harbor and the US declaration of war at the               end of 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Secretary of the               Treasury Henry Morgenthau and US Attorney General Francis Biddle               signed the Trading With the Enemy Act, which banned any business               interests with US enemies of war. Prescott Bush continued with               business as usual, aiding the Nazi invasion of Europe and supplying               resources for weaponry that would eventually be turned on American               solders in combat against Germany.
             On October 20, 1942, the U.S. government had had enough of Prescott               Bush and his Nazi business arrangements with Thyssen. Over the               summer, The New York Tribune had exposed Bush and Thyssen, whom               the Tribune dubbed "Hitler's Angel." When the US government               saw UBC's books, they found out that Bush's bank and its shareholders "are               held for the benefit of ... members of the Thyssen family, [and]               is property of nationals ... of a designated enemy country." The               list of seven UBC share holders was:
                            E. Roland Harriman – 3991 shares
    Cornelis Lievense – 4 shares
    Harold D.Pennington – 1 share
    Ray Morris–– 1 share
    Prescott S. Bush – 1 share
    H.J. Kouwenhoven – 1 share
    Johann G. Groeninger – 1 share
             
             The UBC books also revealed the myriad of money and holding companies               funneled from the Thyssens and the government realized UBC was               just the tip of the iceberg. On November 17, 1942, The US government               also took over the Silesian American Corporation, but did not prosecute               Bush for the reasons Higham noted earlier. The companies were allowed               to operate within the Government Alien Property custodian office               with a catch – no aiding the Nazis. In 1943, while still owning               his stock, Prescott Bush resigned from UBC and even helped raise               money for dozens of war-related causes as chairman of the National               War Fund.
             After the war, the Dutch government began investigating the whereabouts               of some jewelry of the Dutch royal family that was stolen by the               Nazis. They started looking into books of the Bank voor Handel               en Scheepvaart. When they discovered the transaction papers of               the Silesian American Corporation, they began asking the bank manager               H.J. Kounhoven a lot of questions. Kouwenhoven was shocked at the               discovery and soon traveled to New York to inform Prescott Bush.               According to Dutch intelligence, Kouwenhoven met with Prescott               soon after Christmas, 1947. Two weeks later, Kouwenhoven apparently               died of a heart attack.
                
  1950s: Bush Sells UBC Stock
             By 1948, Fritz Thyssen's life was in ruins. After being jailed               by the Nazis, he was jailed by the Allies and interrogated extensively,               but not completely, by US investigators. Thyssen and Flick were               ordered to pay reparations and served time in prison for their               atrocious crimes against humanity.
             On February 8, 1951, Fritz Thyssen died bitterly in Argentina               at the age of 78. Thyssen was angry at the way he was treated by               Europe after the war and how history would remember him as Hitler's               most important and prominent financier.
             When Thyssen died, the Alien Property Custodian released the assets               of the Union Banking Corporation to Brown Brothers Harriman. The               remaining stockholders cashed in their stocks and quietly liquidated               the rest of UBC's blood money.
             Prescott Bush received $1.5 million for his share in UBC. That               money enabled Bush to help his son, George Herbert Walker Bush,               to set up his first royalty firm, Overby Development Company, that               same year. It was also helpful when Prescott Bush left the business               world to enter the public arena in 1952 with a successful senatorial               campaign in Connecticut. On October 8th, 1972, Prescott Bush died               of cancer and his will was enacted soon after.
             In 1980, when George H.W. Bush was elected vice president, he               placed his father's family inherence in a blind trust. The trust               was managed by his old friend and quail hunting partner, William "Stamps" Farish               III. Bush's choice of Farish to manage the family wealth is quite               revealing in that it demonstrates that the former president might               know exactly where some of his inheritance originated. Farish's               grandfather, William Farish Jr., on March 25th, 1942, pleaded "no               contest" to conspiring with Nazi Germany while president of               Standard Oil in New Jersey. He was described by Senator Harry Truman               in public of approaching "treason" for profiting off               the Nazi war machine. Standard Oil, invested millions in IG Farben,               who opened a gasoline factory within Auschwitz in 1940. The billions "Stamps" inherited               had more blood on it then Bush, so the paper trail of UBC stock               would be safe during his 12 years in presidential politics.
             It has been 60 years since one of the great money laundering scandals               of the 20th century ended and only now are we beginning to see               the true historical aspects of this important period of world history,               a history that the remaining Holocaust survivors beg humanity to "never               forget."
             Loftus believes history will view Prescott Bush as harshly as               Thyssen. "It is bad enough that the Bush family helped raise               the money for Thyssen to give Hitler his start in the 1920s, but               giving aid and comfort to the enemy in time of war is treason.               The Bush bank helped the Thyssens make the Nazi steel that killed               Allied solders. As bad as financing the Nazi war machine may seem,               aiding and abetting the Holocaust was worse. Thyssen's coal mines               used Jewish slaves as if they were disposable chemicals. There               are six million skeletons in the Thyssen family closet, and a myriad               of criminal and historical questions to be answered about the Bush               family's complicity."
             There is no question that the Bush family needs to donate at least               $1.5 million to the proper holocaust reparation fund. Since Prescott               Bush is dead, the only way to compensate is for the main inheritors               of his estate to make amends with surviving slaves and the families               of slaves who died in Bush and Thyssen's coal mines. If the Bush               family refuses to contribute the money to compensate for Prescott               Bush's involvement in the Holocaust, it is like denying the Holocaust               itself and their role in one of the darkest moments in world history.
               
                Special thanks to John Loftus, Emmy winning journalist, author             and current president of the Florida Holocaust Museum.