Places in Scotland that tell a story of World War One
Many who grew up at Aberlour Orphanage in Moray went off to fight in the First World War.
Hawkcraig in Fife was the location of the hydrophonetraining station, HMS Tarlair.
Craiglockhart War Hospital was at the heart of pioneering PTSD treatments.
Dreghorn provided the only experience Scots soldiers had of trench warfare before war.
Any British soldier who took part in the World Wars will recall Maconochie鈥檚 ration packs
Portobello was home to thousands of troops, some billeted in a chocolate factory.
1914, Carl Lody arrives in Edinburgh. His mission? To spy on ships in the Firth of Forth.
As men fought at the front, Mary Barbour led the fight against rent rises at home.
In late 1916, a camp for conscientious objectors was set up at Dyce near Aberdeen.
On the night of April 2nd 1916 two Zeppelins dropped bombs across the Scottish capital.
Aircraft was the weapon of war, and a trainee pilot鈥檚 life was fraught with danger.
Stobs Camp was a training camp for men from the Empire. Later it became a POW camp.
John Meikle was just 19 when he was killed in France storming a German machine gun.
Perth locals offered troops tea and a chat as they passed through the Railway station.