So let me start with the coaches. After my mum passed away we found some pre-war albums with pictures of her high school trips mainly to Germany. My mother was born in Rijswijk, a small town near The Hague, in 1917. The trips took place during the years after the infamous stock market crash in 1929. But that apparently did not stop her parents from letting her go on a trip abroad. In those days school trips to other countries were exceptional for most children.
The first photo was taken in Koblenz, situated alongside the river Rhine and some 150 kilometers from the Dutch border.
The Kaiser-Wilhelm-Ring in Koblenz 1932 |
The French Rhine Army parading in front of the Barbara Denkmal in Koblenz in 1924 (Postcard made by Karl Albert Zimmermann (1885-1943**) |
Seeing the monument I wondered whether it survived the Second World War. And it did. The following image is a Google screenshot. The location is probably the same but the street name changed.
The Barbara Denkmal on the Friedrich-Ebert-Ring today |
Apparently, the school was fond of sightseeing tours. The next year, in 1933, the school trip went to Göttingen, also in Germany. But this time the students traveled in a rented coach owned by a company called VIOS*** from Wateringen near The Hague.
The VIOS bus in Göttingen, Germany in 1933 |
This is the end of the coach section of this post. Also for the cyclist pictures, I start before the Second World War.
Ber Schregel and Jan Miebies in approx. 1938 |
The picture that follows shows a married couple to be. They are family members of my wife. Their names are Sibbeltje Klopstra (l) and Aaldrik Kroeze. Although we are far from certain, we believe this photo was taken in the city of Groningen in the early years of the Second World War when it was still safe for men to go outside without being arrested and deported to Germany to forcibly work there.
The somewhat surprised look on Aaldriks face makes me believe this was not a planned situation. This picture is rather the work of a street photographer. In any case, their trip together continued. They got married in December 1943 and had two children. She turned 96 and he was 93!The first car in this post is also from the pre-war era. Based on the text on the front wheel cap I found the car is an Opel Kadett. It has German plates. This model was in production between 1937-1940.
This information, together with the fact that the friend, Wim Tuk, had a job in Germany, dates the photo below to approx. 1938. My father is seated next to the driver; my mother is in the left-hand rear seat. The last car on display is an Austin A30. It belonged to acquaintances of my mother. The boy next to it is my brother and I date this picture around 1955. Possibly my mother borrowed this car to spend a day in the countryside.Opel Kadett cabriolet**** |
My brother and an Austin A30 |
Please turn to the Sepia Saturday site for contributions of honest, non-cheating Sepians.
Notes and credits
* Next year the company exists 100 years! It was established on March 19, 1925.
**Barbara-Denkmal (Koblenz). (2022, August 10). In Wikipedia. https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara-Denkmal_(Koblenz)
*** Founded in 1922, also VIOS still exists!
****Bestand:Opel-kadett-1936.Jpg - Wikipedia. In Wikipedia. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Opel-kadett-1936.jpg
I don't mind your "cheating." You hit all the themes with terrific photos.
ReplyDeleteSusan
I agree with Anonymous - we don't cheat, we simply fashion a post around the prompt one way and another & you did a nice job with this one. I have a friend who lives in Groningen on Merwede Straat. :)
ReplyDeleteI am grateful for your forgiveness, I feel better now ;-)
ReplyDeleteAnd I looked up the Merwedestraat in Groningen just to make sure my cyclists were not riding in the same street by chance. But that would be too much of a coincidence.
Thank you both for visiting!
This was a fun trip to share on buses, cycles and cars. My first introduction to using Google Maps Street for historic research to compare places then and now was from a former Sepian's blog. I now use this fantastic tool several times a week to identify locations of old photos and postcards. Sometimes I surprise myself when I correctly predict where the camera was positioned in a small town.
ReplyDeleteThe parade around the war memorial was interesting as I only recently began reading about the French, British, and American occupation of the Rhineland following WW1. I have a small set of photos of a U.S. Army band that performed concerts in Germany after the war as part of a cultural exchange intended to win over the hearts and minds of the defeated German people. I don't think it worked. The French soldiers marching past the monument is led by a drum and bugle corps, followed by a band. I'm sure the French marches they chose to play were meant to annoy the German people living there.
I agree with your comment about the French band. This occupation has likely contributed to the political rise of a certain person. I believe revanchism is the word.
DeleteNot cheating at all, Peter, as Alan makes it plain we can write anything thing we feel like. I sometimes feel a bit guilty on adapting/repeating posts I have written before in now nearly 12 years of blogging. That charabanc was quite something, and the crowd on the bus made me smile. I enjoyed too reading the historical background to the photographs.
ReplyDeleteSorry Peter - I missed putting in my name - the Anonymous was me - Scotsue
ReplyDeleteNo problem Scotsue, Anonymous existed for two minutes only :-)
DeleteThe word 'charabanc' is new to me but now I know it refers to 'an early form of bus, used typically for pleasure trips'. Somehow it sounds like 'share a bench'. So much for amateur etymology.
Wonderful that you have photos of your mother on her trips abroad! The bicycle photos are fun, also. The couple related to your wife do indeed look astonished, but no more so than we are to see them so dressed up on bicycles -- perhaps they were on a date?
ReplyDelete