Thursday, 26 February 2026

A wargamer´s trip to Arnhem - (part 2) The Crossroads at Oosterbeek and the Oude Kerk

 

Writing "Oude Kerk" (the old church of Oosterbeek), makes me look more cultivated for sure even if I don´t know any other word in Dutch. Even sure I´m sure it attracted your attention as it surely attracted mine a few days ago as I had no idea how to write 'old church' in Dutch. 

This post is about the Crossroads and the Oude Kerk, particularly this last one as I don´t have many references in order to build the church which is an important building still missing in my collection. I have all other major buildings already made for years and it was very funny to see them in 1/1 scale :)

On top of the page you can see the modern Tafelberg.  First it had the old red brick walls and it was like this that served as General Model´s HQ (together with Hartenstein) and then as a critical MDS station for the British. Today is a private house. Only the front remains from the battle time and it was recently painted white. 

Going down Pieterbergseweg you have on the right the No 35, Hotel Johanna. On the previous post you can see the piece of wall paper taken from this place and used as a kill mark by a British sniper.

While looking for this house I asked a lady that was passing by were Hotel Johanna was. To my astonishement she was the daughter of Kate Ter Horst, and I think one of the few still alive from a total of 6 children. We chatted a bit and I could understand that she was 5 years old when the battle happenned. She was very sad when I couldn´t understand initially her mother´s name in Dutch but then, when I mentioned that I remembered her mother taking care and saving hundreds of British Paratroopers, she became slightly happier. I´m not sure but after looking in the Web she seems to be Sophie, probably the youngest daughter now with the beautiful age of 87. 

Next to No34 is this other beauty, in typical Oosterbeek style, maybe also deserving a model. 

Hotel Vreevijk on the Crossroads was another medical post. 


Schoonoord Hotel. In fact this row of building were rebuilt after the landing of revengeful V-1 weapon strike on the 26 January 1945 which killed 26 people. 

Quatre-Bras is probably one of the most elegant buildings at Oosterbeek. But frankly in the middle of so many beautiful buildings its hard to say. The triangular monument at the right bottom corner remembers the 21 Independent Parachute Company. 

And now to the main target of my visit to Ooosterbeek, the Old Church. This church is famous for being the oldest church ground of the Netherlands and it became the focal point of Lonsdale Force in the last few days of the perimeter. There is a nice model picture of this church in the first Rapid Fire! book on Market garden designed by  Dale Rawson  but I wanted more information and take some pictures in order to make the model in the future. 

The guy in the picture is my wife´s cousin, he is almost two meters tall and he was useful for scale. Well, at least if you use Valiant 1st edition 1/72nd scale figures :). Besides scale he was also a great company. 


The lime tree to the right is still shattered from the battle and next to it 4 British paratroopers died from a mortar shell. 


Going left around the church and still facing the river you can see some details of the windows in Gothic style. They look to be new as the church suffered a lot of damage during the battle with plenty bullet holes that can still be seen right and left of this door. 


With your back to the river there are new structures and different, smaller, windows. 


Using AI I got this information: 

Following the Battle of Arnhem in September 1944, the Oosterbeek Old Church (Oude Kerk) was left in a state of near-ruin due to heavy artillery fire and its role as a final stronghold for the 1st Airborne Division. Restoration efforts between 1946 and 1961, directed by architect Berend Tobia Boeyinga, focused on rebuilding the church while altering its structure to reflect its historical origins.
Key changes and structural alterations after the 1944 battle included:
  • Removal of the 19th-Century Expansion: The extensive 1856 neo-Gothic additions, which included a transept and large windows, were not restored.
  • Restoration to "Original" Style: The church was rebuilt to resemble its older, pre-19th-century form (circa 1400).
  • Choir Modification: The severely damaged 15th-century Gothic choir was replaced with a new, smaller, and simpler pseudo-Romanesque choir that matched the 10th-century nave.
  • Structural Changes to Walls and Windows: To emphasize the Romanesque origins, large windows were closed off and replaced with smaller ones.
  • Consistory Addition: A new, smaller consistory (a room for church meetings) was added to the choir.
  • Commemorative Features: While the structure was repaired, many battle scars, such as bullet holes, were left in the walls as a memorial. Inside, the church was adorned with memorials to the British and Polish soldiers, including special kneeling cushions with the Pegasus emblem of the Airborne Forces.

So in order to make model of this church (no interior) you need:
- To add the transept 
- Make larger neo-gothic windows. 
- Take into consideration that the clock are not contemporary of the battle and frankly I´m not sure if they even existed by then. 


This plate on the wall also clarifies the date of the major changes.

The view of the church from the river. To the left, the beautiful white building is the house of Kate Ter Horst family. 


And the view of the other side of the Lower Rhine river were the remnants of the 1st British Airborne Division and the Polish Brigade arrived after escaping the German encirclementon of Oosterbeek during Operation Berlin on the 25th and 26th September 1944, an operation made under constant fire from the Germans. The river is not very large but the current is very strong which caused trouble to the salvage boats and to swimmers on those days. 

Next: a visit to Arnhem itself

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