GracieG

By GracieG

Well, I Never Knew That!

Another gloomy day here, but although there was a grey sky, grey sea and a grey beach, B and I still enjoyed our walk along the Sheringham seafront and I was surprised to come across a painting on the sea wall of Albert Einstein, so I carried out a bit of research and found that he had sheltered in Norfolk in 1933, hiding from the Nazis, if you wish to know more read below:
 
Albert Einstein, the genius who revolutionised human understanding lived in a wooden hut in Roughton, near Cromer, for the best part of a month.
It’s certainly one of the stranger stories associated with his eventful life.
It was 1933 and Adolf Hitler’s Nazi party had just taken power in Germany.
Life became increasingly difficult for the country’s Jews, including Einstein, who had developed the special and general theories of relativity.
Hitler attacked what he called Einstein’s “Jewish physics” and put a bounty of £1000 on his head.  The great scientist escaped by accepting a position at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, New Jersey, USA.
But en-route to America he stopped off in Norfolk, for a few weeks’ rest and recuperation, courtesy of Conservative MP, Commander Oliver Locker-Lampson.
He had hired a strip of farmland on Roughton Heath and built three wooden huts, to which Old Locker, as he was known locally, could retreat. Locker-Lampson, who was a fluent German speaker, is thought to have met the scientist at a lecture in Oxford, and they began exchanging letters, hence the offer of hospitality.
The scientist was guarded in Norfolk by Locker-Lampson and two secretaries, all armed with rifles in case the Germans came looking for the refugee.

It was all cloak and dagger stuff for fear of exposing Einstein to Nazi bounty hunters, but the press had already been invited to meet him shortly after he arrived from where he had been hiding in Belgium. And his presence in Norfolk was reported in the Eastern Daily Press in September 1933. Clearly moved by his reception in Norfolk, Einstein later told a journalist: “No matter how long I live I shall never forget the kindness which I have received from the people of England.”

The extra is a photo of one of the Groynes at Sheringham, edited with Silver fx Silhouette filter, (and a bit of faffing).

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