| Jan Driessen deceased
Jan Driessen, the founder of the Wings of Liberation museum, passed away on Friday 2 July 2010, 89 years of age.
 Jan Driessen has been the heart and soul of the museum from the initial set up in Veghel in 1984 as a temporary exhibition, right until 2006, when the museum was acquired by its current owner, Roland van Pelt. As Roland Korst, the director of the museum, remembers: "He was always at the museum, working with all the volunteers who shared his passion. He strongly believed he had to do this: not only to commemorate his war time comrades, but also to ensure that people would forever remember those who risked their lives for our freedom.
World War II has been the most determining factor in Jan Driessen's life; his first act of resistance dates back to 1939, when he removes a flag carrying the swastika symbol from the German school in The Hague, his town of birth.
When the Germans invade The Netherlands, he moves over to France to become involved in the resistance there, helping to smuggle crashed allied fighter pilots back to Britain. After the invasion of France by the Allied Forces, his language skills are put to good use in intelligence activities and working as an interpreter for the US Army.
After the war he returns to The Netherlands to become a successful businessman but his war experiences have left their marks. He sets up the Wings of Liberation museum in Veghel, showing photo's, documents, uniforms and military vehicles. When his collection expands to include aircraft and tanks, he swiftly runs out of space and in 1997 the museum finds a new home in Best, with the official opening performed by not the least of his close friends, His Royal Highness Prince Bernard of The Netherlands, Prince Consort to the late Queen Juliana.
Realizing he is coming of age and that his mission needs to be carried on, he sells the museum to Roland van Pelt in 2006. In 2008, an elated Jan Driessen is shown the first results of a long-term renovation project, one of them being the new “Jan Driessen” hall, honouring his lifelong efforts to keep the history of the Liberation alive. But even without this acknowledgment of all he has done, his name and spirit will continue to be part of the Wings of Liberation museum forever.
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