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The fallen resistance people in Limburg
Ysselsteyn TD-5-56
Gemeentearchief Valkenburg:
On April 2, 1948, Edmund Parr, Ernst’s father, wrote to the mayor of Valkenburg requesting information about the grave of his son. He is said to have died in or around Valkenburg on September 12, 1944. In the margin of that letter is written in pencil in Dutch: Maybe also Valkenburg in the province of Zuid-Holland. [1]
That is not the case, because there was not any fighting there at the time, while the front line had ALMOST arrived in South Limburg. As the first Dutch municipality, Eijsden was liberated on September 13, 1944. Therefore, this is probably a transcription error. The digit that most resembles a 2 is the 7. So if we assume, that Ernst Parr died on September 17, 1944, then it fits exactly and he would be one of those killed in the “battle” on the Goudsberg. [2]
The mortal remains of Gefreiter (Private) Ernst Parr were reburied from the general cemetery in Valkenburg to Ysselsteyn on March 14, 1956, seven years after the reburial of the other German bodies. [3]
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✠ Gefreiter
ID Inf.Ers.Bat.106 B 527.
† ca. Valkenburg
✞ 1. Algemene begraafplaats Valkenburg
✞ 2. Ysselsteyn, 14-03-1956
Footnotes