Locations
3481 to 3504 of 5534 results
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Tea garden and mini campsite De Dille
Tea garden and mini campsite De Dille
Easterwierrum
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Heiligeweg 28a
Heiligeweg 28a
Harlingen
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E-bike oplaadpunt - Camping De Finne
E-bike oplaadpunt - Camping De Finne
Reahûs
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Ambush at Oldeholtpade
Ambush at Oldeholtpade
On 12 April, the bridge over the Tjonger in Mildam fell into the hands of the Royal Canadian Dragoons reconnaissance regiment. Because the occupier had blown up many other bridges, the Canadians attached great importance to preserving this bridge for the crossing of other Canadian units. That is why dozens of armoured cars, mobile artillery guns and numerous other vehicles were sent to Mildam that day to reinforce the bridgehead over the Tjonger.
In one of those armoured cars, a Staghound, was 24-year-old Trooper Wilfred Robert George Berry from Ontario. The young Canadian had volunteered for military service in Europe. And had already fought with the Royal Canadian Dragoons in Italy. At the end of February 1945, they were transferred to Northwest Europe.
For Berry, the war ended in Friesland. In Oldeholtpade, on the road to Wolvega, his vehicle drove into an ambush along with at least one other Staghound. In the vicinity of a broken-down German car, German soldiers had hidden with Panzerfausts. The Panzerfaust was a very powerful and easy-to-use anti-tank weapon. The first shot missed, but the second projectile hit the front Staghound, on the side where driver Wilfred Berry was sitting at the time.2 The Staghound went off the road and overturned. The three other crew members got injured, but were able to leave the vehicle and took cover behind the second Staghound. One of them stated:
"[…]Flames burst through the turret, where the officer and I were half in and half out of the hatches. Any skin surface not covered was burned and the flames badly singed our eyebrows, eyelashes, moustaches and hands, sending me and the officer both wounded to the field hospital."3
Immediately after the first Staghound was hit, the second Staghound opened fire on the Germans. Seriously injured, Wilfred Berry remained in the vehicle. After about fifteen minutes of shooting back and forth, the other Staghounds retreated towards Oldeberkoop. The exact reason for this remains unclear. Berry was already dying and was briefly cared for by the elderly Andriesje Dekker-Oosterhof in the vehicle when the shooting had stopped. The tragedy had unfolded right in front of her house. He died in the wreck shortly afterwards.
Berry's remains were eventually transferred to the farm on "De Bult" in Oldeberkoop and buried there. After the war he would be reburied at the Canadian war cemetery in Holten. The other crew members were eventually able to return to their units after receiving medical treatment. The commander only had burns on his face.
The event made a deep impression on the inhabitants of Oldeholtpade. In 1945, a monument to Berry was erected. And in 1965, a street was named in his honour.
Oldeholtpade
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Kwekerij Passiflora
Kwekerij Passiflora
Drachten
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Smoek
Smoek
Holwerd
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Veerpont Langweerdervaart (Langweer)
Veerpont Langweerdervaart (Langweer)
Langweer
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HCR ‘t Raedhus en Boutiquehotel Dokkum
HCR ‘t Raedhus en Boutiquehotel Dokkum
Dokkum
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Galerie Lauswolt
Galerie Lauswolt
Olterterp
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Nes en de brutale barnsteenroof
Nes en de brutale barnsteenroof
Nes
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Sondelerleien - De Sondeler Leijen - Vogelkijkhut
Sondelerleien - De Sondeler Leijen - Vogelkijkhut
Sondel
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Kitesurfing Spot at Hindeloopen
Kitesurfing Spot at Hindeloopen
Hindeloopen
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Garnalenpelcentrum Kant
Garnalenpelcentrum Kant
Lauwersoog
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Bêd en Brochje de Hollen
Bêd en Brochje de Hollen
Ryptsjerk
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Execution of ten Dutch collaborators near Oldeberkoop
Execution of ten Dutch collaborators near Oldeberkoop
On the afternoon of 12 April, Oldeberkoop was liberated by "D" Squadron of the Royal Canadian Dragoons. Later that day, they established a temporary headquarters in the village. The movements of "D" squadron were coordinated from the headquarters. This was also the place where prisoner of war from the immediate surroundings were gathered.
These prisoners of war were often Germans, but sometimes also Dutch who served voluntarily in the Waffen-SS, the NSKK (a paramilitary section of the Nazi party NSDAP) or the Dutch Landwacht. On this 12th of April, ten of these collaborators were brought into the encampment in Oldeberkoop amid great interest. Hatred of people who fought with or for the Germans was strong among most of the Dutch population. A resident of Oldeberkoop described the moment the men were brought in:
"The crowd booed and whistled, some spat, and some could not keep their hands off them. One of them got such a blow to the head that hit made his head spin."Not much later, these POWs were taken away again. Presumably with the aim of taking them to a real prison camp in Vledder. But the men would never get there. All ten of them were shot without trial in the Koepelbos just outside Oldeberkoop.
It was long thought that the Canadians were responsible for these unlawful executions. But by 1995, it became clear that Canadian involvement had been minimal. Stories about the involvement of two former resistance fighters were confirmed when one of them confessed to having fired the shots. In addition to himself, a colleague, a Canadian driver and some men who had dug the graves were present at the execution.
The exact reason for the murder of the Dutch collaborators and the exact role of the two Dutchmen and the Canadian have never been fully clarified. There are different accounts of the events leading up to the shooting. On 14 April, the bodies were finally buried in a mass grave on the side of the road. Later they were transferred to the German war cemetery in Ysselsteyn. The names of most of the victims also became known at that time:
Egbert Jan Hommes, Ordnungspolizei
Otto Frikken, Ordnungspolizei
Gerrit Jan Seevinck, Dutch Landwacht
Hendrik Dales, Dutch Landwacht
Heike Ham, Dutch Landwacht
Douwe Jonkman, Dutch Landwacht
Bernard Janssen, Dutch Landwacht
Arnold Pieter Post, Dutch Landwacht
The identities of two men from the Dutch Landwacht could not yet be ascertained.
Oldeberkoop
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Stichting Nobilis, centrum voor prentkunst
Stichting Nobilis, centrum voor prentkunst
Fochteloo
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Tourist Information Sneek
Tourist Information Sneek
Sneek
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Restaurant de Goudenleeuw
Restaurant de Goudenleeuw
Terherne
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Boerderijcamping Poelzicht
Boerderijcamping Poelzicht
Heeg
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Ouderwets Gezellig
Ouderwets Gezellig
Leeuwarden
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Allemastate
Allemastate
Oudwoude
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Rent to Enjoy - Houseboat Happy
Rent to Enjoy - Houseboat Happy
Warns
Direct boekbaar
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City Park and Marina De Prinsentuin
City Park and Marina De Prinsentuin
Leeuwarden
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Sint-Gertrudiskerk Idaerd
Sint-Gertrudiskerk Idaerd
Idaerd
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