Hunt for Lost Prince
A
local legend which suggests the epileptic son of King George V had connections
with Norwood has been given fresh credence this week by a Shirley woman who
claims members of the Royal Family regularly visited a local masseur in the
early 1900's.
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Prompted
by last week's Heritage story on the 'Lost Prince' along with Sunday
night's broadcasting of the BBC drama about John, the youngest son of
the King, Christine Smith called the newsroom to offer her insight into
the mystery.
Shirley
resident Christine, 61, worked as a home help for the daughter of a
wealthy German born masseur named Ziter in the late 1970s who reportedly
massaged King George for a number of years at his Maberley Road home.
Christine
told Heritage: "I can't remember her Christian name but I know her
surname was Ziter-Harris, she was married to a famous English cricketer
in the 1920s.
"I
was her home help for about four years. She still lived in the family
home alone, there weren't any servants living there any more".
"She
was a cow to work for. For a long time she felt it was beneath her to
talk to me but as she became more and more dependant on me she started
to open up about her family history.
"Her
father was a very wealthy, successful man from Alsation in Germany. When
they moved to Maberley Road, he didn't want any neighbours so he bought
the two houses either side of him and let his servants live there".
"His
daughter was educated at a private school in Crystal Palace for £48 a
year and, according to her, Ziter was such a good masseur that he
counted King George V among his clients. |
"Apparently
he would regularly visit him and sometimes Queen Mary would come along too.
"So
they may have taken Prince John to a doctor round here for his autism and
epilepsy."
The
masseur. Ziter, was believed to have died in 1954 and his daughter died in 1982.
Christine
added: "Mrs Ziter-Harris was quite a character".
"She
drove a car, which was very unusual in those days, and was the first woman to
drive at the Broadlands Racecourse".
"She
used to tell me how, on her shopping trips to London in the 1920s, she would
drive up to Hyde Park and just park her car on the roundabout and leave it there
while she shopped".
"Could
you imagine doing that now?"
The
Duke of York, later King George V, and his family in 1906 with the Duchess
(Queen Mary) holding Prince I, John. I
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