1st June 1915

Mr Charles Phillip ceased to be on the Staff as of today. Mr Phillip has joined the army.

13th November 1916 – A War Savings Association has been formed and operations began today.  66 members joined and £18-1/- was collected. 23 War Certificates@15/6 each were purchased.

31st August 1917 – School closed this afternoon in honour of Sir Baden Powell’s visit to the city.

10th May 1918 – All the Jute Mills are closed down for this week consequently there is a drop in the attendance of about 10%.

15th October 1918 – Several classes suffering from attack of Spanish Influenza. In some rooms attendance below 50%.

23rd October 1918  – Owing to prevalence of Influenza School closed indefinately by order of the school board.

18th November1918 – Work resumed today. Attendance 75%. Still numerous cases of Influenza.

6th December 1918 – Sent in to School Board a return giving the names of pupils in this school who had lost their fathers in the war. The return contained 56 names.

10th March 1919 – Mr Charles Phillip who has been on War Service rejoined the staff today. Mr Phillip joined the army on 1st June 1915.

Great Influenza Pandemic of 1918

‘In the summer of 1918 a severe form of influenza broke out and eventually killed 70 million people around the world. The virus killed far more people than did the fighting of 1914-18. Initially the symptoms were mild but by the summer up to a third of influenza sufferers reported serious symptoms, such as bronchial pneumonia and septicemic blood poisoning. A large number died quickly after the onset of symptoms because the virus caused an uncontrollable haemorrhaging that filled the lungs, and patients would drown in their own body fluids. The pandemic inevitably had military consequences but a far higher number of civilians died. The virus swept across German, Austro-Hungarian and Turkish battle lines before it reached France. By the Autumn of 1918 the virus had spread across the Atlantic to the U.S.A. carried by the returning American soldiers. Around 450,000 civilians died in the prosperous United States, the majority of them otherwise healthy people under the age of 40. In Britain some 228,000 civilian casualties died; 400,000 in Germany. Hardest hit however was India with a reported 16 million casualties alone. For reasons unknown, in mid-1919 the pandemic withered and died out.’
Article from SCRAN

November 18th 1914

Third parcel of work for troops made up, one outfit being posted direct. The list includes -: 14 pairs of socks, 6 belts, 3 scarves, 1 helmet, 4 pairs of cuffs and mitts, 3 pairs of stockings.
School did not meet on the afternoon of Tuesday, 17th November in preparation for school concert and sale in aid of War Relief Funds. The concerts and Variety Sale realised the sum of £111. 1 shilling  10d

Outbreak of War

Dundee reacted to the outbreak of the First World War in much the same way as the rest of Scotland. Patriotic fever was running high and hundreds of men ‘flocked to the colours’ to serve their King and Country. By 1918 over 4000 men had lost their lives from Dundee alone. One soldier from Dundee was James Hogg. He left for France with the 1st Battalion of the Black Watch on2 september 1914. He fought there for the first few months before being wounded when a bullet hit his helmet. He was sent home but re-enlisted, as did many other men.
On 27 December 1914 James sat down to record his experiences in France.

image & article from SCRAN