Glasgow Times

City’s wartime welcome helped refugees escape

- BY NERYS TUNNICLIFF­E FROM GLASGOW CITY ARCHIVES

THE train arriving at Glasgow Central on October 19, 1914, carried 900 Belgian refugees.

They were part of the 250,000 refugees who came to Britain to escape a brutal German invasion. Glasgow eventually hosted 20,000 in total.

Germany invaded Belgium in August

1914, with much violence. Many civilians were executed and survivors were forced to flee on foot. Thousands of families fled to France and Holland, eventually arriving at Folkstone and Dover, carrying only limited possession­s. It was an unpreceden­ted crisis and the Government decided to send groups to many different areas to relieve the pressure on London.

Glasgow Corporatio­n was chosen to organise the Scottish arm of assistance.

At that time Glasgow was Britain’s ‘ Second City’, with a population of more than one million, booming industries and advanced transport and utilities systems. Despite the city’s significan­t poverty, ill- health and overcrowdi­ng issues, Glasgow Corporatio­n’s investment in welfare care was ahead of its time.

The Belgian Refugee Committee was formed, and it set about arranging lodging, he a l t h c a r e and work. The plight of the refugees moved many Gla swe g ian and Scottish families, who welcomed them to their homes.

There were public appeals, and cash records in the City Archives show kind donors included churches, guilds, trade unions and the Scottish Co- operative. An Old Firm football match helped to raise funds, and other events included lectures, concerts and plays.

The Belgian Relief Committee kept a register, now held at the City Archives, of around 8000 refugees, recording their names, origins, occupation­s and Scottish addresses. Registrati­on helped reunite families and distribute relief to those most in need.

However, it was useful for the authoritie­s to know the skills of the incomers in mind of the growing war effort. The occupation­s ranged from chocolatie­rs and chair- bottomers to pit pony boys and paper bag makers. Most were given work in Scottish munitions factories or covered the work of men away fighting in the war.

Sadly not all the refugees recovered from their ordeal and the archives hold lists of burials of those who died in Scotland.

A monument was planned in their memory at St Peter’s Cemetery Dalbeth, but it was never completed.

When the war ended, the Belgians

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