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Alois was born in the tiny farming village of Strones, Austria. Strones was in the Waldviertel, a hilly forested area in the northwest part of lower Austria, just north of Vienna.
It was in this rustic area that a forty-two year old unwed Catholic peasant woman named Maria Anna Schicklgruber, 1 , whose family had lived for generations in the area, gave birth to an illegitimate boy whom she named Alois. The identity of Alois' father was and still is a mystery. Maria either refused to reveal who her baby's father was, or simply didn’t know. On the day of his birth, when Alois was baptized in the nearby village of Döllersheim, on his baptismal certificate the space for his father's name was left blank, and the priest entered "illegitimate" into his certificate. Alois was then taken by his mother and raised as an infant in a house in Strones she shared with Alois' grandfather, Maria's elderly father Johannes Schicklgruber.
Sometime in the first five years of Alois' life, Johann Georg Hiedler moved in with the Schicklgrubers. Maria eventually married Georg, five years after Alois was born. Sometime after the marriage, again, it is unclear if it was soon after or up to five years after, Alois was sent to live with Georg's brother Johann Nepomuk Hiedler, who owned a farm in the nearby village of Spital. Alois was therefore somewhere between five and ten years old when he left his mother and went off to stay with his step-uncle’s family in Spital.
Alois spent his late childhood growing up on his step-uncle's farm. He attended elementary school, and took lessons in shoe-making from a local cobbler. When he was 13, he left Spital and went to Vienna, at first to be an apprentice cobbler, which he worked at for about five years. He then took advantage of a recruitment drive by the Austrian government, which sought to give those from rural areas employment in the civil service. Alois joined the frontier guards of the Austrian Finance Ministry in 1855, at the age 18.
Alois made steady progress in the semi-military profession of customs guard. His profession involved frequent re-assignments, so he served in a variety of places all across Austria. By 1860, after five years service, he had reached the rank of Finanzwach Oberaufseher, or basic non-commissioned officer, serving in the town of Wels, Austria. By 1864, after completing special training and examinations, he had advanced still further, now serving in Linz, Austria. By 1875, he had been promoted to inspector of customs, and posted at Braunau.
His personal life contrasted with the orderliness of his professional life. His profession involved strict attention and application to set rules; his personal life was a continual flaunting of society's rules, at least in regards to women and offspring. Smith(67) notes that in the late 1860s, his "romantic" adventures ended up in the birth of an illegitimate child, and no marriage to the woman he impregnated, whose first name was Thelka, and whose last name is lost to history. It was not until 1873, when Alois was 36, that he married, and it apparently was for money. He married 50 year-old Anna Glassl, a well-to-do daughter of an official. Anna was already sick when Alois married her, and was either an invalid, or became one shortly after the marriage.
Historian Ian Kershaw remarks: "The first of many strokes of good fortune for Adolf Hitler took place thirteen years before he was born. In 1876, the man who was to become his father changed his name from Alois Schicklgruber to Alois Hitler. Adolf can be believed when he said that nothing his father had done had pleased him so much as to drop the coarsely rustic name of Schicklgruber. Certainly, 'Heil Schicklgruber' would have sounded an unlikely salutation to a national hero." - Kershaw, p.3
As a rising young junior customs official Alois used his birth name, but in the summer of 1876, forty years old and well established in his career, he asked to take on his dead step-father's family name. He appeared before the parish priest in Döllersheim and asserted that his father was Johann Georg Hiedler, who had married his mother, and now had the desire to legitimize him. Alois gave the priest the impression that his father was still alive and wished to testify he was the birth father now. Along with Alois appeared three witnesses, all relatives, one of whom was Johann Nepomuk Hiedler's son-in-law. The priest agreed to amend the records, the civil authorities rubber-stamped the church's decision, and Alois had a new name. The official change, registered at the government office in Mistelbach on January 6, 1877 made "Aloys Schicklgruber" now "Alois Hitler." Exactly who decided on the spelling of "Hitler" instead "Hiedler" is not known, possibly it was the clerk in Mistelbach.