Design Competition to memorialise Conscientious Objectors

Great War Dundee and the CO Memorial Committee are pleased to announce the Design Competition for a permanent Memorial to Conscientious Objectors to be created in Edinburgh’s Princes St Gardens.

Artists are invited to submit applications by 12 noon 15 December 2017. A shortlist of three or four artists will be engaged to create designs for the Memorial.

View and Download the Brief at the Peace and Justice website

Queries should be directed to: COMemorial@peaceandjustice.org.uk

Legacies of Resistance to the First World War – 8 week course

1st April 2017 - 31st March 2019

An opportunity to learn about Scotland’s conscientious objectors of the First World War. Duration: 8 week course of 2-hour sessions. Location options: Dundee, Edinburgh & Glasgow Dates: Courses will be…

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WW1 deserter honoured by his community

The tragic story of a Black Watch soldier executed for desertion during the First World War is being told anew for today’s youngsters, thanks to a partnership between Abertay University and the Nine Incorporated Trades of Dundee.

Private Peter Black, aged just 21, was shot by firing squad at 5:47am on 18 September 1916.  His name might have been forgotten forever were it not for a public outcry in his hometown of Newport-on-Tay.

After the war, plans were drawn up for the town’s official war memorial to commemorate the 84 local men killed in the conflict.

Some bereaved parents and the local war memorial committee demanded the architect Robert Lorimar (who also designed the Scottish National War Memorial located in Edinburgh Castle) exclude Peter’s name on the grounds that it was ‘unsuitable’ for a Roll of Honour.

However, ex-servicemen including friends of Peter’s who had gone to war with him protested angrily, even threatening to blast the memorial into the River Tay with gelignite if Peter’s name wasn’t on it.

They believed that he shouldn’t have been in the frontline at all due to his fragile mental state at the time, and that his service in major battles earlier in the war gave him as much right as anyone to be included.

At a stormy public meeting, the Newport community voted overwhelmingly that Peter’s name should appear on the monument – a highly unusual view at a time when most people regarded desertion in wartime as a disgraceful crime.

5:47 comic strip cover
Cover image to 5:47 a digital comic by Fruzsiner Pittner and Iain Donald of the University of Abertay Dundee. Click on the image to visit the Shot at Dawn page.

5:47

Now, the story is being told afresh for today’s generation in a digital comic entitled ‘5:47’ – a reference to the time of Peter’s execution at dawn.

The comic will be made available for free download from the Great War Dundee website on Sunday 18 September, exactly 100 years after Peter’s death.

An Innovation Internship funded by the Nine Incorporated Trades enabled computer arts student Fruzsina Pittner to design the comic.

Fruzsina has created a truly evocative digital comic that reflects upon the tragedy and misery of war…
Dr Iain Donald, Abertay University.

Dr Iain Donald of Abertay University, who supervised the project, commented:  “By combining her design and software talents, Fruzsina has created a truly evocative digital comic that reflects upon the tragedy and misery of war and what it can do to fragile young minds.

“’5:47’ also prompts us to think about the meaning of community both in 1916 and in 2016, and to raise awareness of PTSD – which Peter would almost certainly have been diagnosed with had he served in today’s forces.

“We hope that as well as telling Peter’s story and the uplifting response of his local community via the Great War Dundee website, the comic could also be used as an educational resource in schools.”

As well as Abertay University and the Nine Incorporated Trades, many other organisations have contributed to the project, including the University of Dundee, Leisure & Culture Dundee, DC Thomson, the Black Watch Museum, the Imperial War Museum and the Western Front Association.

 

NOTE FOR EDITORS

The full story can be found in Historian Richard Van Emden’s book The Quick and the Dead. And is summarised here in the Jannies Write article Peter Black and the Newport Memorial

Great War Dundee – Home Front Exhibition Tour

2nd August 2016 - 23rd June 2017

Coming to a library near you. Following it’s successful launch at Lochee Library the Dundee Home Front Exhibition will tour all Dundee community libraries.

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Home Front Exhibition

The launch of the Home Front Banner exhibition took place at Lochee Library this morning. There was a large turnout for the event including local history enthusiasts, school children and people from the local community.

Matthew Jarron (museum curator at the University of Dundee) who, along with Linda Nicoll (a volunteer at Dundee City Archives) put together the information and images for the twelve banners, gave a short introduction with Linda and Dr. Billy Kenefick giving more information about various aspects of life in Dundee during the First World War.

The exhibition will be on display in Lochee library until 29th August and will then tour all Dundee libraries.

For information see the Home Front Exhibition tour calendar.

The War on The Western Front 1916-18: An Archaeological Perspective

2nd June 2015

Black Watch Castle and Museum, Tuesday 2nd June, 7pm-8pm Dr Tony Pollard, Director of the Centre for Battlefield Archaeology at the University of Glasgow, joins us to give a talk…

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The Battle of Loos national commemorations

25th September 2015 - 27th September 2015

Dundee has been chosen to host the official commemorations which will mark the centenary of the Battle of Loos and pay tribute to the estimated 30,000 Scots who took part in the battle….

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Remembering: The Christmas Truce

Great War Dundee’s latest event, Remembering: The Christmas Truce took place on Saturday 6th December 2014 at Discovery Point. Experts from the Black Watch Museum and Castle showed us how we can find out more about our family’s military past and we even heard about the rumoured football match on the trenches – it seems that it really happened!

The most popular talk of the day explored the impact that the First World War had on local footballs clubs, Dundee FC and Dundee United FC (or Dundee Hibernian as it was then!) Over 119 people attended the event and, by all accounts, it was a great success!

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