The Mysterious House on
Fuerteventura
By Alan Hayes
"The most beautiful thing we can experience is
the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and science."
- Albert Einstein
Aliens and Adolf Hitler might not seem to have much in common. But lying in
isolated mountainside in one of the most secluded areas of the Canary Islands lies
an spacious villa that has given birth to mysterious legends about both

This spacious villa lies hidden from the world nestling between the mountains and
the wild Atlantic ocean on Fuerteventura. It can only be reached after a hair raising
drive along a dirt track in the mountain borders. The sheer isolation of Villa Gustav
Winter holds a mystery which has yet to be explained.

This mystery starts with the appearance and position of the villa itself. It is
surrounded by land which has exactly the same shape and proportions of the island
of Fuerteventura itself. And the villa’s location within this enclosed replica
corresponds geographically to its true position…

Was this location and shape the result of exact mathematical positioning, a signal to
some alien life form or just sheer fluke? The truth will probably never come to light
but theories abound.

German-born Gustav Winter arrived on Fuerteventurain the 1930s. He worked for a
large company that had just acquired a great expanse of land in the south of the
island – the peninsula of Jandia.

Winter became known for his mysterious dark glasses and accompanying black
dog and was responsible for building the first port at Morro Jable. However, it is not
for these reasons that he is best remembered. His name will always be connected
to the small isolated hamlet of Cofete where he built the villa that later gave birth to
countless myths.

Originally, the villa was said to have been built to establish agriculture in the region.
It was modelled on a villa built in the Black Forest in 1893. But rumours began
spreading after the appearance of armed guards accompanied by large dogs
started guarding the walls of what was becoming more of a fortress than a villa.

Anyone trying to get to the villa had to first identify themselves to the guards who
would then call Winter. If they were granted permission to enter, they then had to
travel along a dirt track road which, according to urban legend, was built by political
prisoners held captive at a concentration camp at Tefia. An airport runway was also
built there and put at Gustav’s disposal.

Rumours were flamed after accounts from people allowed into the villa described
the five rooms in the attic as being completely tiled over, of a large kitchen and of
vast dark cellars and caves stretching under the villa and into the mountainside.
Were the tiles to stop any radio signals being picked up by eavesdroppers?

And why would such an important engineer as Gustav, who held the rank of Colonel
and who was at the forefront of an important shipyard in Bordeaux, hide himself in
the middle of nowhere to practice farming while his country was at war? He was a
man of considerable importance – at a time when his country needed him most,
would he really hide himself away in a fortress in a remote island with its close
proximity to the sea and an airport runway?  Would he really shelter in a fortress
built of solid walls with ample cellars and a kitchen large enough to feed a small
army?

Allied ships were frequently attacked by German submarines that surrounded and
protected this small island from prying eyes.

Historical accounts now tend to suggest that Villa Winter acted as a safe house for
top escaping Nazis most probably heading to America. It’s isolated location next to
the Atlantic and its natural mountain shelter would have been an ideal rendezvous
point for Nazi leaders arriving by submarine and seeking a safe haven until they
could slip into anonymity after the war.

Another myth that has grown is that the villa was a halfway house not only providing
safe haven but also a hospital where plastic surgeons operated to give their
overlords new faces to match their new identities.

In an interview shortly before her death, the widow of Gustav Winter firmly denied
the allegations levelled at her late husband over the years. She denied that the villa
had ever had connections to the Nazis or that it was built as a hideaway for Adolf
Hitler – she said the infamous villa was built for the simple reason of exploiting
agriculture in the area.

But the sheer size of Villa Winter, its isolation and the constant guard patrols would
tend to suggest that this was never destined to be a family home ringing with the
sound of laughter from happy children.

____________________________________________________________


For more information on the villa, visit the Fuerteventura information web site
Holiday Fuerteventura. To find out more myths and legends from the Canary
Islands, visit Fuerteventura Holidays and Homes

____________________________________________________________
Alan Hayes runs Fuerteventura Holiday Homes – a holiday rentals, property
management and property sales business with holiday villas, apartments and
houses for rent on Fuerteventura in the Canary Islands. He also runs Holiday
Fuerteventura, an information web site about the island. Visit http://www.geocities.
com/fuerteventuraholidayhomes or http://www.geocities.com/holiday_fuerteventura

Article source:
ArticleFever.com
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