MARGRATEN, Netherlands — In the rolling hills of the southern Netherlands, locals have vowed to never forget the American and other Allied soldiers who gave their lives in the fight to liberate towns and villages from the Nazi occupation in World War II.
Nowhere is the deep-rooted gratitude of the post-war generations more clear than in the 65.5 acres of manicured lawns and white marble headstones of the Netherlands American Cemetery on a hill just outside the village of Margraten.
The hallowed burial ground is hosting a concert Thursday to mark the 80th anniversary of the start of the liberation of the Netherlands.
Hundreds of people like Ton Hermes and Maria Kleijnen have chosen to ''adopt'' one of the 8,288 Americans buried there.
It's an act of gratitude and remembrance that started almost as soon as the war ended and endures to this day.
People who adopt a grave visit it regularly and leave flowers on the fallen soldier's birthday, the day they died, at Christmas, on Memorial Day or whenever else they see fit. Some reach out to families of the dead in the U.S., forming lasting transatlantic friendships.
Hermes and Kleijnen adopted 2nd Lt. Royce D. Taylor, a bombardier with the 527 Bomb Squadron, 379 heavy bomber group, who was killed at age 23 when his B-17 plane was shot down on his third mission over Germany — a raid to Bremen — on Dec. 20, 1943.
Taylor's grandson, Scott Taylor, from Indianapolis, calls his grandfather his hero. He is also the inspiration behind Scott's decision to serve in the U.S. Air Force. He flew F-15E Strike Eagle jets over Iraq and Kosovo.