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Gerdesiaweg metro station

1982 establishments in the NetherlandsEuropean rapid transit stubsNetherlands transport stubsRailway stations opened in 1982Rotterdam Metro
South Holland geography stubs
MetroGerdesiaweg1
MetroGerdesiaweg1

Gerdesiaweg is an underground subway station in the city of Rotterdam, located on the Rotterdam Metro lines A, B, and C. The station opened on 10 May 1982, the same date that the East-West Line (also formerly called the Caland line), of which it is a part, was opened. The station is located to the east of the city center, in the borough of Kralingen-Crooswijk.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Gerdesiaweg metro station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Gerdesiaweg metro station
Eikenpage, Rotterdam Kralingen-Crooswijk

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.925833333333 ° E 4.5061111111111 °
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Address

Gerdesiaweg

Eikenpage
3061 WS Rotterdam, Kralingen-Crooswijk
South Holland, Netherlands
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MetroGerdesiaweg1
MetroGerdesiaweg1
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Marine memorial
Marine memorial

The Marine memorial (Dutch: Mariniersmonument) is a war memorial on Oostplein in Rotterdam, Netherlands. It commemorates and thanks the Netherlands Marine Corps who fought hard for the city in the Battle of the Netherlands.The monument, a bronze statue of a marine, was made by Titus Leeser and was unveiled by Prince Bernhard on 5 July 1963. It stands on Oostplein, directly opposite the site of the former marines' barracks, which was bombed away in the May days of 1940. The barracks were located here from 1869 to 1940 in the former arsenal of the Admiralty of Rotterdam. Above the nearby underground entrance is the preserved side gate of the barracks. The wall surrounding the memorial also lists other achievements in the history of the Marine Corps, such as the four-day naval battle at Chatham in 1666, the Dutch East Indies, Korea, Cambodia and Uruzgan.According to Bram Grisnigt, around 30 Engelandvaarders served in the Marine Corps. These included Marines involved in the defence of the Maas bridges in Rotterdam during the May Days in 1940. From England, a number of Engelandvaarders/marines were sent to the United States to be further trained together with 450 Dutch marines to be deployed later in the war against Japan. Some of them were sent back to England to reinforce the Princess Irene Brigade, which landed at Arromanches on 8 August. Before the Dutch marines were deployed against Japan, Japan capitulated. The marines then went to the Dutch East Indies.At the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the marines' monument on 4 July 2013, former Marine Ben Schierboom was present. He was the model for the monument at the time. The anniversary marked the conclusion of the (extended) anniversary year of the Rotterdam and the Marines Foundation.