By Mary Dodge Allen
In April 1942, two men in the Netherlands organized an escape line for Allied fliers: Karst Smit and Eugene van der Heijden. Part One of this four-part blog series appeared last month on April 5th. It describes the beginning of Dutch and Belgian Resistance efforts and how this escape line was established. To read Part One click this link: Part One
Karst Smit, Left Photo; Eugene van der Heijden, Right Photo (Public Domain)
Karst Smit, age 24 was a member of the Marechaussees (Dutch border patrol) stationed in the Dutch village of Hilvarenbeek, near the Belgian border. Eugene van der Heijden was a 25-year-old Dutch teacher who lived in Hilvarenbeek.
In the Spring of 1942, Smit and van der Heijden began working together to help Jews and POWs who had escaped from Germany. They found local safe houses to provide food and shelter, until Smit could arrange for them to cross the border into Belgium.
Months later, as they began encountering Allied airmen seeking to avoid capture, Smit and van der Heijden expanded their escape line operation. They established contacts with trusted Resistance members in Belgium, to shelter Allied airmen and place them into the hands of larger escape lines that could guide them to freedom, through France and into Spain.
The Dutch-Belgian border near Hilvarenbeek (recent photo, Bruce Bolinger)
The Dutch-Belgian border near Hilvarenbeek was heavily-forested. Karst Smit, along with fellow border officers he’d recruited, knew hidden paths they could use to guide the POW’s across the border. Sometimes they would dress an airman in the upper half of a police uniform, and then drive him across the border, seated in the sidecar of their one and only BMW police motorcycle. (The officers mostly patrolled the border on bicycles.)
The Marechaussees (Dutch border patrol officers) at Hilvarenbeek: #1 - van Gestel; #2 - Albert Wisman; #3 and #4 - unknown; #5 - Karst Smit; #6 - Gerard Schrier; posing on the station's only BMW motorcycle with sidecar (Identification obtained by Bruce Bolinger)
A German Imposter – Discovered:
The Germans were always searching for ways to infiltrate the escape lines and close them down. In September 1943, a man who had parachuted into the Netherlands was brought to Smit. To explain his accent, he claimed to be a French-Canadian RAF flier, with German parents.
Smit was suspicious. He gave the man a questionnaire designed for RAF fliers, which included technical terms and general questions, such as: “What do you write on the back of the leave form?”
The man couldn’t answer them. He changed his story several times during interrogation, which convinced Smit and other members the man was a German infiltrator. By this time, he had met too many people in the escape line, so they had to eliminate him. Months later, Smit learned the “Canadian” RAF flier was actually a German agent called “Captain Kopp.”
Tom Applewhite’s Escape Story:
The last Allied flier to be assisted by this escape line was Tom Applewhite, a 22-year-old U.S. Army Air Corps B-17 bombardier, from Memphis, Tennessee.
Tom Applewhite, U.S. Army Air Corps, circa 1942 (Public Domain)
On November 11, 1943, Tom’s B-17 bomber named “The Wild Hare” was returning from a bombing mission over Germany, when it was shot down. It crashed in a field near a Dutch city known by the locals as Den Bosch.
Crew of "The Wild Hare" taken in 1943: Tom Applewhite, bombardier, Front row, Far Right; John McGowan, pilot, Front row, Far Left; Nello Malavasi, top turret gunner/engineer, Far Left, standing behind the pilot; other crewmembers, unknown. (Public Domain)
As Tom bailed out, he counted chutes and saw that everyone else had also bailed out. (Tom would find out later that one crewmember was killed as he landed, and the rest were captured by the Germans - except for himself and top turret gunner/engineer Nello Malavasi.)Tom was knocked out when he landed. As he regained consciousness, he realized he was being carried away from the field by two farm workers. He was taken to a farmhouse, revived, and fed brown bread sandwiches, while workers disposed of his parachute and flight suit. Tom was then hidden in a remote barn outside the village, because German troops were searching the area.
Field where Tom landed (recent photo by Bruce Bolinger)
Another local farmer, Peter “Peek” de Noo, had seen the crash and came to Tom’s aid. At dusk, he guided Tom to his farmhouse, located outside the nearby village of Well. Peek de Noo and his wife Nellie sheltered Tom for two nights and provided civilian clothes and wooden shoes. Members of Peek’s family visited Tom and provided meals for him.
On Left: Peter "Peek" de Noo and his wife, Nellie with their children
On Right: Peek's brother, Adriaan de Noo, a chauffeur for a local surgeon (Public Domain)
German troops began searching house-to-house in Peek’s village. Tom had to be moved. Peek’s brother Adriaan de Noo was put into contact with Arnoldus “Nol” van Dijk, who knew the local contacts for the Smit-van der Heijden escape line – brothers Fons and Jacques Raaijmaakers.
The Raaijmaakers brothers: Fons (Left) and Jacques (Right) (Public Domain)
On November 13th Peek’s brother Adriaan guided Tom to a field outside the village of Bokhoven, where Fons and Jacques were waiting. Nol van Dijk was also there, to personally verify Adriaan de Noo’s identity to the two brothers.
Tom traveled with Fons and Jacques on bicycles for several miles, to a rendezvous with a pair of new guides. Tom cycled behind these new guides for several more miles, until they arrived at a tavern after dark.
Jan Naaijkens (Public Domain)
At the tavern, Tom met Jan Naaijkens, a teacher who worked at the same school as Eugene van der Heijden. They set out on bicycles, with Jan cycling several feet ahead. It was cold, drizzling and dark, well after the German curfew. The two men had agreed to alert each other if they saw any sign of danger, by whistling a certain tune. The tune “Anchors Away” turned out to be the only one familiar to both of them.
After both bicycles broke down, they walked late into the night, until they reached the outskirts of the village of Hiivarenbeek. Jan delivered Tom to a safe house - the van der Heijden family home.
Elisabeth van der Heijden (Public Domain)
Eugene van der Heijden’s mother, Elisabeth served Tom a hot meal. Then one of the Marechaussees (thought to be Albert Wisman), arrived and took Tom to a chicken coop that was hidden and insulated by bales of hay. Tom spent the rest of the night there. The coop was also being used by Dutch university students in hiding, to avoid being sent to Germany as forced laborers.
Dutch students cooking breakfast in their chicken coop hide-out (Public Domain)
The students cooked breakfast on the morning of November 14th. Shortly after Tom finished eating, Euguene van der Heijden arrived. He would take Tom across the border into Belguim and then guide him to the safe house in Brussels.
Eugene didn’t have a false ID for Tom, because the escape line felt pressured to move him as soon as possible. Tom’s B-17 had crashed only twenty-five miles from Hilvarenbeek, and local German authorities were looking for him and another crewman still at large - Nello Malavasi, the top turret gunner/engineer on “The Wild Hare.”
Nobody was prepared for what was to happen the following day, November 15th, as one of the Smit-van der Heijden guides, Willem Schmidt, was escorting airman Nello Malavasi through Belgium. Schmidt would make a disastrous decision that would expose the network and lead to arrests.
Stay tuned for the third installment of my four-part blog on June 5th; WWII Smit-van der Heijden Escape Line: Part Three – A Network in Danger; Airman Tom Applewhite’s Experience.
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Mary Dodge Allen is currently finishing her sequel to Hunt for a Hometown Killer. She's won a Christian Indie Award, an Angel Book Award, and two Royal Palm Literary Awards (Florida Writer's Association). She and her husband live in Central Florida. She is a member of American Christian Fiction Writers and Faith Hope and Love Christian Writers.
Recent release, anthology devotional: El Jireh, The God Who Provides
Mary's story, entitled:
A Mother's Desperate Prayer, describes her struggle with guilt and despair after her young son is badly burned in a kitchen accident. When we are at the end of all we have, El Jireh provides what we need.
Click the link below to purchase on Amazon:
https://www.amazon.com/El-Jireh-God-Who-Provides/dp/1963611608
Mary's novel: Hunt for a Hometown Killer won the 2022 Christian Indie Award, First Place - Mystery/Suspense; and the 2022 Angel Book Award - Mystery/Suspense.
Click the link below to buy Hunt for a Hometown Killer at Amazon.com: