Santa Fe New Mexican

Holland honors liberators in WWII — black U.S. soldiers

- By DeNeen L. Brown

WASHINGTON — He’s 95 now, and many of his Army comrades are gone. That makes retired Cpl. James W. Baldwin one of the last living black liberators, the African American soldiers who rolled into Holland in 1945 to fight the Nazis and helped free the Dutch from German occupation.

Baldwin still remembers that push in the final months of World War II. He fired an 81mm mortar gun at Nazi troops, who had a strangleho­ld on Holland during the war. Thousands of Dutch Jews had been rounded up and sent to concentrat­ion camps. The country had been ravaged by the horrors of genocide, hunger and starvation.

“We took 23 cities in three days,” recalled Baldwin, who fought with the U.S. Army’s allblack 784th Tank Battalion. “We were really moving. We were taking the cities, meaning killing Germans, and running them out. We came in and freed them. We liberated them. To know I had a role in the liberation of Holland means a lot.”

Last week in Washington, the Netherland­s Embassy honored Baldwin and hundreds of other black soldiers as part of its commemorat­ion of the 75th anniversar­y of liberation.

“The citizens of the Kingdom of the Netherland­s express their sincere appreciati­on and gratitude for your sacrifice, courage, and willingnes­s to fight for freedom while enduring the hardships of war,” the embassy wrote in a certificat­e of appreciati­on presented to Baldwin. “... Seventy-five years later, the footprints of courageous men like you are still found in our thriving economy, our stable government, and in our hearts and minds. Freedom sways in the wind while our flag flutters in peace. We will never forget.”

The liberation of Holland, which had been invaded by the Nazis in 1940, began after thousands of Allied troops landed at Normandy on June 6, 1944. The Allied forces drove German troops from France and Belgium. By September 1944, the Allies arrived in the Netherland­s.

“When the fighting ended, Europe broke free of Nazi occupation, and thousands and thousands of soldiers had died, including Americans — 8,291 buried in the cemetery in Margraten,” said Commodore Paul Herber, the embassy’s defense attaché. “In many ways, the cemetery is to the Netherland­s what Arlington National Cemetery is to the United States. It is hallowed grounds. One cannot walk through Margraten without feeling the sacrifices American soldiers made to free Europe and the Netherland­s.”

Dutch families have adopted each grave at Netherland­s American Cemetery in Margraten, making sure it is tended.

Every year, these families lay flowers on the graves. “They pay respect and honor soldiers’ sacrifices,” Herber said.

But, Herber said, the Dutch who adopted the graves of the 172 African American soldiers buried in Margraten have had some difficulty finding family members still living in the United States. Because of missing records, African American soldiers, who fought in segregated units, were often unjustly overlooked by history.

In 2009, the Netherland­s began trying to correct that oversight. Historians in the Netherland­s and in the United States began work on a black liberators project by trying to find descendant­s and relatives of the 172 who gave their lives to defeat the Nazis.

“We are determined to find each and every one of the families,” said Ric Murphy, national vice president for history of the Afro-American Historical and Genealogic­al Society. “When you think about these men who went into World War II, came from the segregated South, predominan­tly, many of them went into battle so they could be treated like men, and come out with certain dignities. They went to a foreign land to fight a foreign war to liberate foreign people. And many of them who survived came back to a segregated South, to an environmen­t where they, themselves, were not treated as free men.”

 ?? DENEEN L. BROWN/WASHINGTON POST ?? James Baldwin, 95, who helped liberate the Netherland­s, shows photos from the war in a book about the Army’s 784th Tank Batallion last week in Washington.
DENEEN L. BROWN/WASHINGTON POST James Baldwin, 95, who helped liberate the Netherland­s, shows photos from the war in a book about the Army’s 784th Tank Batallion last week in Washington.

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