Recalling the Clydebank Blitz, 76 years on

SEVENTY-SIX years ago tonight a devastating aerial attack took place which will never be forgotten. Official estimates from the Clydebank Blitz record that 528 civilians perished, though it's suspected that the true death toll may have been even greater.
Evacuating Radnor Street, Clydebank, one morning after the Clydebank Blitz. Picture: Clydebank Central LibraryEvacuating Radnor Street, Clydebank, one morning after the Clydebank Blitz. Picture: Clydebank Central Library
Evacuating Radnor Street, Clydebank, one morning after the Clydebank Blitz. Picture: Clydebank Central Library

Clydebank was not properly prepared for the aerial blitzkrieg of 13 and 14 March 1941. But as a densely-populated industrial town of 55,000 inhabitants, filled with munition-producing factories and active shipyards, it really should have been

It must have been a truly terrifying experience to detect the distant drone of hundreds of German planes as they approached. By the time the air raid sirens sounded out, it was already too late. There was no time to evacuate; all residents could do was to huddle together at the foot of tenement closes, the vast majority sitting ducks.

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