Clydebank Blitz Memorial Service – Saturday 12 March 2022
Saturday 12 March ( 11:00 – 12:00 )
Blitz Memorial , Old Dalnottar Cemetery, Great Western Road, Clydebank G60 5HQ
There will be a Service of Commemoration to mark the Clydebank Blitz Anniversary on Saturday, 12 March 2022 at the Blitz Memorial in Old Dalnottar Cemetery, Great Western Road, Clydebank G60 5HQ.
The Service will begin at 11am and will be led by Canon Gerry Tartaglia of St Margaret’s and Our Holy Redeemer Parishes and Reverend Gregor McIntyre of Faifley Parish Church in Clydebank. The service will last approximately 15 minutes.
After the Service, there will be a Wreath Laying Ceremony at the Polish Memorial at Solidarity Plaza, opposite Clydebank Town Hall, at approximately 11.30am.
All members of the public are most welcome to attend.
Meaanwhile, a plaque to commemorate the bombing of Dumbarton during WWII will be laid within the grounds of the Municipal Buildings.
West Dunbartonshire Council’s cultural committee agreed to the move as part of plans to mark the 80th anniversary of the Clydebank Blitz.
Councillors Iain McLaren and Brian Walker.
The Lennox Herald is reporting that Dumbarton councillors Iain McLaren, of the SNP, and Conservative Brian Walker raised the issue of a lack of commemoration for the Luftwaffe attacks on Dumbarton, that reportedly saw around 17 people killed and more than 100 homes destroyed.
During two nights of German bombing raids on March 13 and 14, 1941, a total of 528 people were killed, more than 600 injured and around a quarter of Clydebank’s 12,000 homes destroyed.
Dumbarton avoided more devastating attacks despite being home to Nazi targets, thanks to starfish decoy bunkers at Lang Craigs above Overtoun House
Troops would hide out in it and light up the hillside with fires to replicate the appearance of the town to try and direct the German bombers away from the town itself so they were bombing the hillside.
Although Dumbarton was bombed – most devastatingly on May 5 in 1941, it is believed it didn’t suffer the same impact as Clydebank because of the starfish bunker.
A parachute mine also came down on Stirling Road, near Round Riding Road, severely damaging three houses.
Another parachute mine fell on the canteen of the Denny Shipyard, which failed to explode and was immobilised by the bomb disposal team.
During the May attack, incendiaries fell on the Silverton and Newton areas – with tenements at the foot of Wallace Street destroyed. Clydeshore Road and the old Back Road at the cemetery gates were also targeted by bombers.
The local authority had been planning to host a remembrance service on Sunday, March 13 in Our Holy Redeemer’s Church in Clydebank but this will now not take place as St Andrew’s Church in Kilbowie Road.
A destroyed tram is surrounded by the rubble on Dumbarton Road, Clydebank, after a WWII bomb raid (Image: West Dunbartonshire Libraries and Cultural Services)


