Cornelia Bosch (2 August 1925 – 10 April 1945) was a Dutch Resistance member during World War II.
After graduation, she was employed as a laboratory assistant at the food and chemical company Noury & Van der Lande, a predecessor of AkzoNobel.
[1] During World War II, Bosch resided with her mother and three sisters while her father served as a forced labourer in Germany.
[1][2] On 8 April 1945, five members of the Communist Party of the Netherlands, including van Baalen, congregated in an abandoned factory near a bridge over the IJssel to allow Allied forces access to Deventer and to prevent it from being destroyed by retreating German troops.
[1] Photographs of Bosch's body in an opened wooden coffin were circulated in various foreign newspapers, including the Daily Mirror.