On May 5th the Spring meeting of the Dutch Foundation for Model Figures (in Dutch the NSM; de Nederlandse Stichting voor Modelfiguren) took place at the "Fort aan de Buursteeg" at which place is situated the Visitors Centre for the Grebbelinie.
For those who don't know the Grebbelinie; this was one of the defense lines of the Dutch army against the invading German army in WW2.
But, although this is the most known period of the Grebbelinie, it already existed some centuries before.
The "Fort aan de Buursteeg" was build in 1786 as a defense against a possible Austrian invasion of the Seven Provinces. As that invasion never happened, the first real invasion came in 1794/1795 when French revolutionary armies crossed the frozen rivers, the allied British and Austrian armies pulled back their forces to Germany and the United Provinces came to its end in 1795 just to emerge as the Batavian Republic, a satellite state of France.
The fortress itself was never threatened by an enemy but was occupied by Dutch, British and later French troops.
The fort was in 1846 split in half as an east-west railroad was built right through the fort and effectively split the fortress in a northern and a southern part.
Underneath are some pictures of the fort whose earthen defenses were made in 1786, but these defenses were added with modern bunkers, artillery position etc just before WW2 by Dutch troops but also in the later WW2 by German troops.
Starting with a drawing of the fort which shows the situation when the railroad was made and now crossed through the fort. The top of the drawing is the facing to the east
What is to see on this moment:
Firstly there is the nice Visitors Centre of the Grebbelinie which is situated in the centre of the northern part of the fort. A picture of an earlier visit:
Some pictures fo walking through the terrain of the fort.
German bunker which was camouflaged/painted as a house build at the backside of the fort. An 88mm gun was placed in the bunker. The fort was then part of the socalle "Panther stellung"
We missed it at our visit so this is from the site of the Visitors Centre whose site you can find at:
advancing French
Miniatures used were Eureka (French and Austrians) and Emperor Toad (Dutch). Terrain is mostly handmade by ourselves.
3 comments:
What a great game you chaps out on and in such a wonderful setting too. Thanks for the photos of the fort too:).
Great photos, what a bad idea building a rail line right through the centre!!!
Steve and Ray, thanks for your nice comments. The site is imho great esp as in fact it has a war history from 1786 up to 1945 although of course real battles were not fought at the site itself but it could have been.
Regarding the railroad, there were only 3 roads from east to western Netherlands of which the Buursteeg(name of the road), where the fort was situated, was one. What is more logical then beside this road, build a railroad so the fort could also protect it.
If it is military wise good thinking is questionable but it is cheaper (and we are Dutch isn’t it😁
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