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Whiteinch Heritage Trail - northern loop
Item 5 of 27

Soon after its establishment in 1877 Whiteinch Public School (now Whiteinch Nursery) had an average attendance of 340 pupils, but conditions were not ideal and in 1885 the School Inspector's report stated 'a chair should be provided for each teacher, their want (especially the female teachers) being serious'

Following further rapid increases in population - mostly caused by the shipbuilding industry expansion - the school became seriously overcrowded with an average attendance of 696 in 1885, more than double that of when it opened only 8 years earlier


To help alleviate the overcrowding, Govan Parish School Board opened an additional building on the site in 1892 which had capacity of 680 children. This building to this day is home to Whiteinch Primary School

As was typical of schools of this era, boys and girls entered the school via separate gates and had separate playgrounds. The boy's playground was located between the 2 buildings and this is where the janitor organised drill for the pupils

An inspector's report on the new school commented that 'the tone, order and discipline [of the pupils] left little to be desired. Pupil attendance continued to increase and by 1899 the two buildings housed 1,336 pupils with some classrooms holding as many as 60 children

In 1915 an additional building on nearby Victoria Park Drive South was built to help ease the overcrowding, this building is now Ladywell School which is used as a temporary school for Glasgow schools undergoing modernisation or similar work