Ten Boom Museum

Ten Boom Museum on the Barteljorisstraat in Haarlem. It is a 17th-century house with a neck gable facade.

The Ten Boom Museum is a museum dedicated to The Hiding Place, the subject of a book by Corrie ten Boom. The house where the museum is located was purchased and restored in 1983 by the Corrie ten Boom Fellowship, a non-profit 501(c) 3 corporation governed by a board of directors. Mike Evans (journalist) serves as the chairman of the Board.

The Ten Boom family ran a watch shop (horlogerie) on the corner of an alleyway and the main shopping street of Haarlem, the Netherlands. During the Nazi occupation of Haarlem starting in 1942, they provided safe harbour for Jews and other underground refugees in a hiding place they built upstairs. Due to their large social network in church charities and watchmaker circles, the family was quite successful in smuggling refugees until being betrayed on February 28, 1944. In the alleyway they would place a small triangular sign to indicate that the coast was clear. After the betrayal of the Ten Boom family, the Nazis were able to collect many more prisoners by falsely placing this triangle in the window.

Casper ten Boom, their father, died on March 9, less than two weeks later, in Scheveningen prison, aged 84. Betsie ten Boom died on December 16 in Ravensbrück concentration camp, aged 59. Willem died on December 16, 1946, in Hilversum, aged 60. His son Christiaan ("Kik") died sometime in April 1945, aged 25. Corrie ten Boom survived Ravensbrück and returned to Haarlem and the watch shop. She died in 1983 on her 91st birthday. She wrote several books about her experiences, and this museum opened on her birthday in 1988.

The museum is open from 10.00 to 15.30, Tuesday to Saturday.

Coordinates: 52°22′56″N 4°38′07″E / 52.3823°N 4.6354°E / 52.3823; 4.6354

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.