Recommendation for Citation – Eugene Van der Heijden

The following are excerpts from a document dated 10 May 1946 headed:

HEADQUARTERS

6801 MIS-X DETATCHMENT

HEADQUARTERS COMMAND

UNITED STATES FORCES, EUROPEAN THEATRE

3.  HISTORY:  EUGENE VAN DER HEYDEN, subject of The Netherlands, was extremely active in the work of recuperation and repatriation of Allied airmen from March 1943 to January 1944.  Working with the organization of Karst Smit, van der Heyden was of direct assistance to twenty-two Allied aviators, twelve of whom were Americans, who had been shot down over enemy-occupied territory and were seeking to escape from the Gestapo which was constantly hunting them.

When he began the work of evacuation and escape, he had already been active in the Dutch resistance movement, and thus had many valuable contacts among Dutch patriots.  He soon became supervisor of a collecting point for evaders, near Esbeek, Holland.  Allied evaders gathered from the northern provinces of Holland were fed, clothed and sheltered here while false identity cards were prepared and all other necessary arrangements made for their evacuation from Holland.

On a number of occasions van der Heyden escorted Allied fliers from Esbeek to the Belgian border from where they were taken to Brussels by Belgian patriots.  In several instances he personally convoyed fliers all the way to Brussels, and in most cases these men successfully regained their home bases.

In January 1944 the organization to which van der Heyden belonged was broken up by the Germans.  Eugene van der Heyden escaped, but his father and two brothers were arrested and deported to concentration camps from which they never returned.

4. PROPOSED CITATION:

EUGENE VAN DER HEYDEN, subject of the Netherlands, for service in the cause of freedom from March 1943 to January 1944, while aiding Allied airmen shot down over enemy-occupied territory.  EUGENE VAN DER HEYDEN, in his self-chosen mission, inspired his compatriots by his fearless leadership and devotion of purpose while assuring the successful escape of twenty-two Allied airmen from the enemy.  His heroism and his determination were of inestimable aid in the prosecution of the war and his magnificent contribution to the cause of Freedom merits the esteem and gratitude of the United Nations.

R.H.BETTS, Lt. Col., GSC, Commanding

Eugene van der Heijden receiving Medal of Freedom with Bronze Palm

5 responses to “Recommendation for Citation – Eugene Van der Heijden

  1. Mr. Eugene van der Heijden was my teacher for five years at the highschool in Boxtel. He was a modest man and an excellent educator. He instilled in me a love and a thorough knowledge in the Dutch language. We were aware of some of his heroic exploits however I was not aware of the horrible cost to his family.
    I am proud to have known this hero.

  2. Eugene van der Heijden

    Ik ben erg vereerd dat ik deze bewonderenswaardige naamgenoot vandaag heb gevonden op internet!

    Eugene van der Heijden (Den Haag)

  3. Eugene van der Heijden was my grandma’s sister, Eleana van der Heijden-Fontaine. She has told me numerous stories about her family during the holocaust, but unfortunately, i was too young to understand most of them. She passed when I was 12. I am 18 now, and I am trying to read into not only her past, but the past of the van der Heijden family. If you have any more information about the van der Heijden family during the holocaust, please e-mail me. Thank you.

  4. Christine Maloney

    Eugene van der Heyden was my much beloved uncle. Sadly this family lost two sons and their father in the war, which resonated since across many generations. The women in this family were heroes as well, my grandmother was ready with food and my aunts with transporting messages. An amazing family who paid the ultimate price for their fellow man,

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