George, Thank you for your comment here and on my website! It has been a long time ago, my friend, since my grandfather told me his story and at the time I was then about 12 years old.
During the war years my grandfather has been mobilised for the Dutch army. After the war, from about 1922-1923 he was a simple forester worker on the estate, who was only allowed to watch from a distance the Kaiser doing his thing in his park. Often he participated in cutting the trees down. Sometimes he “was allowed to assist” the Kaiser, when he was chopping the trunks into slices. For well regarded guests the Kaiser used to sign his autograph on such a wooden slice and give it to them as a souvenir. My grandpa was never allowed to speak to him at all, unless asked for, which did not occur.
Many Dutch had in those times still strong sympathies for the Germans and their Kaiser. My grandpa, during that period being a socialist an, as I said, George, a former mobilized soldier sympathised more with the Allies. His view was, as I stated on my website: “It looked like the Kaiser wanted to recreate another devastated battlefield around Huis Doorn!" He was not content that he had to cut so many trees for the Kaiser, or that he had to work for him, but he had no choice, as jobs in those times were very scarce to become. No matter what: He was glad that he did have a job in those fresh after war times. Anyway he referred sometimes to the devastation at the Somme and he simultaneously expressed his feelings, that he was afraid that the Huis Doorn estate would finally look the same. After all the park did not suffer like that and it has luckily not been devastated like that. The estate and the manor are still in a splendid state, a time machine, where you can even, so to speak, still smell the presence of the Kaiser.