George Van den Heuvel, 86, of Britt passed away on Tuesday, August 1, at
Westview Care Center in Britt. Mass of Christian Burial for George Van den
Heuvel will be held Tuesday, August, 8, 2023, at 2:00 PM at St. Francis Xavier
Catholic Church, 1207 3rd Street Northeast, Belmond, Iowa with Father Jerry
Blake officiating. Scriptural wake service will be held at 12:30 pm. Visitation
will begin at 1:00 PM until the time of Mass. Graveside Services will be held on
Wednesday, August 9, at 10:30, at Ell Township Cemetery in Klemme, Iowa.
Military honors will be provided by the Klemme American Legion.
George A. Van den Heuvel the son of John and Francoise (Schwarz) was born on
January 9, 1937, in Central Africa on a coffee/tea and eucalyptus plantation in
the "Belgian Congo". On these plantations, his father also ran a machine shop
where he repaired neighbor's cars and ran a welding shop.
At the age of six, George was sent to a Jesuit Catholic boarding school (College
Notre Dame de la Victoire, in the Congo) where they spent nine months of the
year. The other three months of the year (Christmas and summer) vacation were
spent at the plantation helping their father in the machine shop, driving
trucks, riding horses or playing with natives.
He attended Jesuit high school until he graduated in 1956. Since George's
father always dreamed of starting a "family Industrial Center" in Africa with
his two sons. Since America was known the world over, it was America that
George and his brother Raymond were sent, to pursue their engineering studies
and the Milwaukee School of Engineering in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. George was
admitted on a probation basis because he knew only a few words of English.
In 1960, while George was still attending college, his country of origin (the
Belgian Congo) became an independent country and took the name of Zaire. Chaos
followed and George and Raymond were advised to remain in America and become US
Citizens. In 1961, after graduation from college George joined the US Army
because he wanted to earn the right of becoming an American citizen. Six months
later, while in the US Army, his dream materialized, and he became a US citizen.
He married his first wife Elizabeth in 1963, while still in the service in
Frankfurt, Germany. Three sons and two daughters were born from this union:
George Jr., Marc, Paul, Marianna and Orissa. (This union lasted until 1992).
In 1965, he was honorably discharged from active duty with the rank of Chief
Warrant Officer but remained in the Army Reserve for an additional 16 years and
finally retired from the service as a major.
In 1966, he started his civilian career as a Mechanical Engineer, working with
Farm Equipment (Allis Chalmers) in Wisconsin. In 1976, he was recruited by
another farm equipment company (Rome Industries) in Georgia to work as a Test
and Evaluation manger. In 1981, he was hired as "Manager of Engineering" by a
manufacturer of forklift attachments (Long Reach Manufacturing Company) in
Houston, Texas. In 1990, he moved to Garner, Iowa to accept work as a chief
engineer at (Iowa Mold Tooling Company), a manufacturer of Hydraulic Truck
Mounted Cranes and Rotary Air Compressors.
It was in Garner, Iowa, while working for Iowa Mold Tooling Company, that he met
"the love of his life", Shirlene. They married in 1993 and continued working in
Garner Iowa. In 1996 they moved to Michigan City, Indiana, where George had
accepted work for the Sullair Corporation, (manufacturer of rotary air
compressors) as a "Sullair" subsidiary in Lyon, France. In 2002, after five
years and 5 trips to Europe with Shirlene, George retired to enjoy his and
Shirlene's family in Klemme, Iowa.
After retiring a few months, in 2002, he started working part-time as a bus
driver for "Opportunity Village", serving people with disabilities which gave
him great satisfaction. In December of 2015, George retired for good.
In his retirement, he enjoyed fishing and golfing, although he was not good at
either one of these activities. He also enjoyed riding his motorcycle,
landscaping around the house, and taking pictures. He was good in languages and
taught French at NIACC one winter. He also enjoyed visiting his family in
Belgium and France.
Preceding him in death is his wife Shirlene, his parents John and Francoise Van
den Heuvel, two sons Marc and Paul and daughter Orissa and brother Raymond and a
stepson Richard Ulrich and one great step granddaughter.
Survivors include: One daughter Marianna Fleming of Houston Texas, one
daughter-in-law Nina Stolzenberg of Norfield, New Jersey, stepson Wendell (Kim)
Ulrich of Klemme, Iowa, stepdaughters Lynetta Ulrich of Mason City, Iowa, Denise
(Ron) Haberkamp of Garner, Iowa and Dawn (Jon) Gamerdinger of Garner, Iowa along
with grandchildren and great grandchildren in Iowa, Houston, Texas and New
Jersey.