World War II memorials and cemeteries in the Netherlands

During World War II, the Netherlands was the scene of five years of continuous air warfare between the Allied and the Nazis as the Netherlands lies en route from England to Germany and was designated and built up as the foremost line of Nazi air defence of Germany. Also, in 1944 there was heavy land fighting during the largest Allied airborne attack of the WWII in the south and east of the country in 1944–45. Thousands of airmen, soldiers and others of many nations were killed, and their war graves in some 4,000 locations are in the care of the Dutch War Cemetery Organisation (Dutch: Oorlogsgravenstichting).

The Netherlands has over 3,900 cemeteries and memorials, the highest in absolute numbers and in density in the whole of Europe, according to the official national government committee for remembrance.[1] Many of the memorials are dedicated many of the over 3,000 crashed Allied warplanes and their crews.[2] The largest memorial and cemetery is the Netherlands American Cemetery with over 8,000 graves.

The largest WW-II-related cemetery in Europe and also the most controversial, is the Nazi cemetery of Ysselsteyn, that describes itself as "German military war cemetery", with almost 32,000 graves, only about 70% of them military, the rest SS and also Dutch traitors. The designation "German" is incorrect because about 20 other nationalities are buried there, among others Dutch members of the Waffen-SS, Dutch torturers and executioners, and also Austrians, Georgians, Poles, Czechs.

In addition to cemeteries, the Netherlands has constructed eight carillons (musical instruments of bells) to memorialize the destruction of bells during the war and ring out world peace.

List of World War II memorials and cemeteries in the Netherlands

Dutch war graves

In the Netherlands, about 9,000 war graves are located.[3]

Australian, British and Canadian war graves

U.S. war graves

With few exceptions, all American war graves are located at the U.S. Military Cemetery Margraten.

Belgian war graves

  • Belgian Field of Honour 1940 (Maastricht) – 43 soldiers
  • Belgian Military Field of Honour 1940 (Willemstad) – 153 soldiers
  • Bergen op Zoom War Cemetery – 2 Belgian graves
  • Dokkum Roman Catholic Cemetery – 1 Belgian grave
  • Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery – 3 Belgian graves
  • Harlingen General Cemetery – 3 Belgian graves
  • Holten Canadian War Cemetery – 1 Belgian grave
  • Nijmegen Jonkerbos War Cemetery – 4 Belgian graves
  • Vlissingen Noorder begraafplaats – 1 Belgian grave

French war graves

  • France Military Field of Honour (Kapelle) – 229 soldiers
  • Beilen General Cemetery – 1 soldier
  • Schiermonnikoog Drenkelingenkerkhof Vredenhof – 9 soldiers [6]
  • Soesterberg – 15 soldiers of World War One[7]
  • Swartbroek (gem. Weert) Churchyard – 1 soldier
  • Vlissingen Noorder Cemetery – 2 soldiers

Soviet war graves

Georgian war graves

  • Field of Honour of the Georgians under Loladse (Texel) – 476 soldiers

Polish war graves

About 500 Polish war graves are located in the Netherlands.[8]

German war graves

Cemeteries with Commonwealth War Graves

If Allied war graves are present at a cemetery, a green identification plate is placed at the entrance carrying the text: Oorlogsgraven van het Gemenebest (Commonwealth War Graves)

Memorial carillons

After launching Operation Barbarossa, the supply chain of metal from the Soviet Union to Nazi Germany collapsed. The German regime orchestrated the systematic confiscation of bells across Europe, starting with Germany itself. Bells were categorized by historical value and confiscated from youngest to oldest until the country ran out. It then looked to seize bells from the occupied Netherlands, which fought to preserve as many of its swinging bells and its carillons (musical instruments of bells) as possible.[11] Between 1938 and 1945, 175,000 European bells were stolen and stored in "bell cemeteries" (German: Glockenfriedhöfe). Some 150,000 were sent to foundries and melted down for their copper. British investigators claimed every single bell was taken out of the Netherlands, with only 300 surviving their stay in the bell cemeteries.[12] As a result of the destruction of this cultural heritage, many chose to memorialize the war with a carillon, often as a replacement for the one lost. The musical instrument became associated with world peace following World War I. The Network of War Memorial and Peace Carillons tracks carillons that where built in the name of peace and as a memorial for World Wars I and II.[13] In the Netherlands, it identifies 8 installations as World War II memorials:

  • In 1949, a committee of residents was created to memorialize the suffering of the people of Meppel during the war and to celebrate its liberation on 13 April 1945. The committee fundraised donations for a "resistance monument" in Wilhelmina Park and carillon in the Tower of Meppel; the city funded the rest. Both monuments were dedicated on 13 April 1949. The carillon consisted of 40 bells that were cast by the Van Bergen bellfoundry, several of which had the names of the donors inscribed onto them. Due to their suboptimal quality, the instrument underwent several renovations and replacements over the next 30 years.[14]
  • Shortly before the end of the war, a North Brabant historical society began working to convert part of St. Willibrord Church in Waalre and its tower into a memorial for Brabant soldiers and resistance fighters. A fundraising campaign for a memorial carillon began in 1949, and a 35-bell instrument was dedicated in 1950. It is played every year during memorial services in May and September. In 2007, the carillon was enlarged with two additional bells.[15]
  • While not in the country of the Netherlands but rather within the Kingdom of the Netherlands, the city of Willemstad in Curaçao installed a 47-bell memorial carillon on the roof of the Curaçao Museum in 1951. Several bells were dedicated to Curaçaoans: Charles Debrot, who was killed by German paratroopers; Boy Ecury, a member of the Dutch resistance who was captured by the Gestapo; Jan Haayen, who died at the Java Sea during actions against Japan; George Maduro, who died in a Nazi concentration camp. Three bells were named after Dutch ships that sank: Dutch ships Leticia, Lucrecia and Rosalia.[16]
  • In 1949, Dutch journalist and politician Gerrit Jan van Heuven Goedhart put forward the idea to create a "Freedom Carillon" through the National Remembrance Committee of which he was a part. Donations were solicited from all Dutch people and a 23-bell carillon was constructed by Van Bergen bellfoundry in 1952. The city of Amsterdam was selected as its home, and it was inaugurated by Queen Juliana in 1961. It was enlarged to 31 bells in 1995. The carillon was initially intended to play music of the Dutch resistance on a daily basis, but this was not carried out.[17]
  • St Eusebius' Church in Arnhem had a 32-bell Hemony carillon hanging in its tower since 1652. It and the church were largely destroyed in 1944 during the Battle of Arnhem. Petit & Fritsen constructed a new, 49-bell carillon for the reconstructed church between 1958 and 1964. Since then, the carillon became associated with the yearly war memorial services held each May. In 1994, 50 years after the Battle of Arnhem, four bass bells were added to the instrument, with the largest funded by several English organizations. One of the 1994 bells features a quote from the book and film A Bridge Too Far.[18]
  • The Martinikerk in Doesburg had a small, two-octave Hemony carillon hanging in its tower since 1655. On 15 April 1945, German forces blew up the tower, destroying the carillon. Only 8 of the 23 bells survived the blast, and were later included in a new carillon of 49 bells, which was constructed in 1965. The lowest four bass bells, all new, each were cast with the name of a person who contributed to world peace after the war – Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands, Pope John XXIII, U.S. president John F. Kennedy, and European statesman Robert Schuman – and one of their significant quotes on peace. It was dedicated on May 5, 1965 (Dutch Liberation Day). In 2015, the carillon was expanded with another bass bell, this time dedicated to South African activist and political leader Nelson Mandela.[19]
  • In 1967, a committee formed to explore the possibilities of installing a carillon in Bergen, and it chose to have Petit & Fritsen construct a new, 26-bell instrument in the village's Ruïnekerk [nl]. The bells were dedicated to 250 soldiers from the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Poland, Czechoslovakia, and those of unknown origin, who were buried at Bergen General Cemetery. They also purchased a 27th bell, which does not ring and instead functions as a time capsule. The carillon was inaugurated on May 5, 1970, the 25th anniversary of Dutch Liberation Day.[20]
  • In 1965, the village of Oosterbeek established a committee to raise funds for a memorial carillon. Donations were raised locally from British military units who fought in and around Oosterbeek during the Battle of Arnhem. By 1966, the village dedicated a small, automatic carillon of 23 bells decorated with the insignia of the British Airborne Forces. Fundraising continued for several years to upgrade the carillon to 37 bells and include a manual keyboard. It was inaugurated on September 21, 1974, the 30th anniversary of the Battle of Arnhem. Since 2017, the bell tower is frequently lit up with the colors of the British Airborne Forces.[21]

Other memorials

References

  1. ^ "Oorlogsmonumenten".
  2. ^ "Lossregister 19391945 – Studiegroep Luchtoorlog 1939–1945".
  3. ^ "Oorlogsgravenstichting". Oorlogsgravenstichting.
  4. ^ www.grebbeberg.nl, Stichting De Greb. "Het Militair Ereveld Grebbeberg – De Slag om de Grebbeberg en Betuwestelling in mei 1940". www.grebbeberg.nl.
  5. ^ "Dutch Honorary Cemetery Bloemendaal".
  6. ^ "Vredenhof Schiermonnikoog". www.vredenhof.org.
  7. ^ "Diepgeroerd door vondst graf opa in Soesterberg". www.ad.nl.
  8. ^ "Polish War Graves". www.polishwargraves.nl.
  9. ^ "Alphen". www.polishwargraves.nl. Retrieved 9 March 2018.
  10. ^ "German War Cemetery Ysselsteyn – Ysselsteyn – TracesOfWar.com". www.tracesofwar.com.
  11. ^ Rombouts, Luc (2014). Singing Bronze: A History of Carillon Music. Translated by Communicationwise. Leuven University Press. ISBN 978-9058679567.
  12. ^ Thorne, Stephen J. (21 November 2018). "The Seizing of Europe's Bells". Legion. OCLC 1120054332. Archived from the original on 26 January 2021. Retrieved 14 April 2021.
  13. ^ "Carillons and Peace". Network of War Memorial and Peace Carillons. Archived from the original on 18 December 2020. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  14. ^ "Meppel, Meppeler Carillon (The Netherlands)". Network of War Memorial and Peace Carillons. Archived from the original on 31 March 2022. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  15. ^ "Waalre, Provincial Memorial Monument (the Netherlands)". Network of War Memorial and Peace Carillons. Archived from the original on 15 June 2021. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  16. ^ "Willemstad, Carillon 'The Four Royal Children' (Curaçao, The Netherlands)". Network of War Memorial and Peace Carillons. Archived from the original on 1 April 2022. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  17. ^ "Amsterdam Slotermeer, Freedom Carillon (The Netherlands)". Network of War Memorial and Peace Carillons. Archived from the original on 29 October 2020. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  18. ^ "Arnhem, Carillon of the Eusebius Tower (the Netherlands)". Network of War Memorial and Peace Carillons. Archived from the original on 31 March 2022. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  19. ^ "Doesburg, Carillon St. Martin's Church (the Netherlands)". Network of War Memorial and Peace Carillons. Archived from the original on 15 June 2021. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  20. ^ "Bergen, Carillon of the Ruïne Kerk (The Netherlands)". Network of War Memorial and Peace Carillons. Archived from the original on 15 June 2021. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  21. ^ "Oosterbeek, Carillon in the Town Hall (The Netherlands)". Network of War Memorial and Peace Carillons. Archived from the original on 1 April 2022. Retrieved 19 April 2022.

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