Marion added: “My gran put the kids down and she was screaming at the top of her lungs. She ran over to the rubble and started clawing at it with her hands.  My grandad was evacuated to Helensburgh, and when there were reports of bodies being found in Clydebank, my grandad walked all the way from there to Clydebank to check to see if it was any of her family.  Eventually they were found. One of the grannys was actually found holding one of the babies in her arms. She was called Anne and she was only a year old.  We promised my gran and my mum that we would never forget, which is why we attend the service every year.  My mum died seven years ago, and she left a letter asking us to keep the promise we made.  There was actually one morning I was being violently sick, but I actually attended the service in my pyjamas, because I knew I had to go.”

Sadly, during the Covid pandemic it was announced that ceremonies to mark the 80th anniversary of the Clydebank Blitz would be postponed as a result of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic.

Members of the Rocks family, including Marion McDermid (second left), visited the Blitz memorial in Old Dalnottar Cemetery on the 80th anniversary of the bombings to pay their own tribute to the family members who lost their lives.

The Rocks family visited the Blitz memorial in Old Dalnottar Cemetery to pay tribute to family members who lost their lives. Marion said: “I understand why we couldn’t have the service we usually have with the priest, the minister and the piper.  But it was quite sad we couldn’t do what we usually do because of the restrictions.”