MLU FORUM  

Go Back   MLU FORUM > GENERAL WW2 TOPICS > WW2 Military History & Equipment

Notices

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 30-10-24, 13:02
Alex van de Wetering Alex van de Wetering is offline
Moderator
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Hoofddorp, The Netherlands
Posts: 2,767
Default

Back to the Numerical page again.....moving "forward" to pictures "41948" and "41949", it shows a clocktower....there is a similar building today (Dorpsstraat 85), but if it's the same one, it's been heavily modified....I haven't investigated this yet.

If you move the other way on the numerical to pictures 41947-41942...you see a dike and a crossing....and if you think for a moment that the Oude Rijksweg is indeed the correct location of the picture with the parked C15TA's, than the crossing looks a lot like the Bolwerk/Rijksweg crossing, with the differences in height and the curve of the road.

If this is the case, than I think Lieutenant Bell spent a few minutes taking pictures around the Bolwerk/Rijksweg crossing (41942-41947), Rijksweg and than moved to the Krabbendijke centre (41948-41949)......and the C15TA's stood parked along the Rijksweg West of Krabbendijke, before turning right on the "Bolwerk" towards "Oostdijk"
Attached Images
File Type: jpg Krab3.JPG (50.9 KB, 1 views)
File Type: jpg Dorpstraat 120.JPG (160.9 KB, 0 views)
File Type: jpg Krabbendijke N289.JPG (156.5 KB, 2 views)
File Type: jpg Kruising.JPG (73.3 KB, 0 views)
File Type: jpg Krab1.JPG (238.6 KB, 0 views)
__________________
Chevrolet C8 cab 11 FFW
BSA Folding Bicycle
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 31-10-24, 12:28
Jakko Westerbeke Jakko Westerbeke is offline
Moderator
 
Join Date: Apr 2020
Location: Netherlands
Posts: 341
Default

I would be very surprised if the building with the tower in 1944 is the same as the one today — it looks to me like it’s a new building in the same place. As I suspected, it’s the town hall. Here’s the same building as in the 1944 photo:

Gemeentehuis Krabbedijke 1.jpeg

That photo is probably 1920s at the latest. In a later postcard, dated “1960–1979” on the site that sells it, there’s the building that’s there today:

Gemeentehuis Krabbedijke 2.jpg

The building next to it is the same in both photos, judging by the three bands of light-coloured stone (?), but it got a slight extension to its roof somewhere between the 1920s and 1944, possibly when it was converted into a shop (it seems to be a house in the 1920s, but has a shop front in 1944). The whole building must have been torn down at some point after the war.

The building was the town hall until 1970, when Krabbendijke ceased to be a separate municipality, but I can’t find when the post-war building was constructed. It looks 1950s to me, though. There is this article from 2018 about when thethen-owner sold it, but that’s behind a paywall. But using an iPad from someone who does have a PZC subscription, I discovered this:

PZC.jpeg

Quote:
Men playing billiards and women knitting
The town hall, originally built in 1888, has no secrets for [the current owner, Mr. Weststrate]. ”I bought it in ’88, before then it was still being used by men playing billiards, women knitting and teenagers. That ended when community hall De Meiboom was completed.” Weststrate also knows all there is to know about the major reconstruction of 1949, in which the whole building was raised by a storey.
So it is the same building, even though you would’t think it is.

Last edited by Jakko Westerbeke; 31-10-24 at 12:47.
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 31-10-24, 17:05
Ed Storey Ed Storey is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Ottawa
Posts: 1,718
Default 80 Years Ago

Great stuff! I love those comparison photographs and I wish that I was there to tour around and visit some of those sites.

Right now we are in the depths Halloween before everyone refocuses on Christmas. Wedged in between these two consumer driven events that outwardly benefit the Chinese economy is 11 November and its Remembrance events. It is a time when, for a least a couple of minutes, most Canadians turn from visions of costumes, Halloween candy and the inpending Christmas spending spree to reflect that they have a military and the sacrifices made by the men and women of the armed forces.
Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Fort Garry Horse - Battle of the Scheldt Then & Now Hanno Spoelstra WW2 Military History & Equipment 6 15-01-23 19:03
Back in Action 77 years later... jdmcm The Armour Forum 14 20-02-19 18:31
AIF action Mike K WW2 Military History & Equipment 2 11-03-17 00:20
Battle of Britain..70 years ago... Alex Blair (RIP) The Sergeants' Mess 7 05-09-10 06:20
After action report: Battle of the Rhine crossing sapper740 Military Shows & Events 0 26-05-05 23:45


All times are GMT +2. The time now is 15:31.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Maple Leaf Up, 2003-2016