De Nederlandse Spoorwegen in oorlogstijd 1939-1945 - Rijden voor Vaderland en Vijand
On 17 September 1944, the Dutch Railway Strike began. On the orders of the government in exile, more than 30, 000 people on the Dutch Railways stopped working. In this way, they hoped to support the Allied offensive towards Arnhem, known as Operation Market Garden.
In the first week of the strike, the Germans were seriously hampered by the lack of rail transport, but later they managed to regain some control over the supply of equipment and personnel with their own people.
Market Garden largely failed, but the strike continued. Financing the strike, by continuing to pay the salaries of railway workers in hiding, was a huge operation that was successfully completed thanks to the largest bank robbery in Dutch history.
In this book, Guus Veenendaal (former company historian of the Dutch Railways) and David Barnouw (historian, previously affiliated with the NIOD as a researcher) describe the run-up to the strike, the strike itself, but also the image of the strike after the liberation.
Dirk Mulder (director of the Westerbork Camp Memorial Center) writes about the transport by rail of Jews, Roma, prisoners of war and other groups on behalf of the Germans.
Szczegóły
Autor: | Guus Veenendaal, David Barnouw, Dirk Mulder |
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Wydanie: | 160 strony, 23 x 17 x 2.2 cm, twarda oprawa |
Ilustracje: | zdjęcia czarno-białe i kolorowe |
Wydawca: | Uitgeverij Wbooks (NL, 2019) |
ISBN: | 9789462583337 |
De Nederlandse Spoorwegen in oorlogstijd 1939-1945 - Rijden voor Vaderland en Vijand
Język: holenderski
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