Clydebank is in
West Dunbartonshire, one of the 32
council areas of Scotland. West Dunbartonshire Council, the unitary
local authority, is based in
Dumbarton, to the northwest, although Clydebank is the largest town in the council area. For local electoral purposes, West Dunbartonshire is split into
wards electing either three or four councillors. The
Clydebank Waterfront ward broadly covers the area between the River Clyde and the Forth and Clyde Canal, including the town centre, Whitecrook and part of
Dalmuir; it also includes neighbouring Old Kilpatrick. The
Clydebank Central ward includes Kilbowie, Linnvale, Radnor Park, Parkhall and the northern part of Dalmuir. West Dunbartonshire is also divided into
community council areas: those covering Clydebank include Dalmuir and Mountblow; Parkhall, North Kilbowie and Central; Linnvale and Drumry; and Clydebank East. The area that is now Clydebank was once in the territory of the
Kingdom of Strathclyde and has been part of the
historic county of
Dunbartonshire since medieval times. From 1890 onwards, Dunbartonshire was an area of local government administered by a
county council. Although Dunbartonshire ceased to be used for local government purposes in 1975, it continues to exist as both a
Lieutenancy area and
registration county. Clydebank is also within the ancient
parish of Old Kilpatrick. The town became a
burgh in 1886; as such, it exercised most local government functions independently of the county council. Following the abolition of administrative counties in 1975, a new
Clydebank District was created within
Strathclyde Region under the new
two tier system of local government. As well as Clydebank itself and its suburbs, the district also covered a wider area including Old Kilpatrick and
Bowling. This lasted until the creation of the present unitary authorities in 1996. In the early 20th century the town was synonymous with the Scottish socialist movements led by the shipyard workers along the river Clyde, giving rise to the title of
Red Clydeside. The 11,000 workers at the largest factory of
Singer sewing machines went on
strike in March–April 1911, ceasing to work in solidarity of 12 female colleagues protesting against work process reorganisation. Following the end of the strike, Singer fired 400 workers, including all strike leaders and purported members of the
Industrial Workers of Great Britain, among whom
Arthur McManus, who later went on to become the first chairman of the
Communist Party of Great Britain between 1920 and 1922. Labour unrest, particularly by women and unskilled labour, greatly increased between 1910 and 1914 in Clydeside, with four times more days on strike than between 1900 and 1910. During these four years preceding
World War I, membership of those affiliated to the
Scottish Trades Union Congress rose from 129,000 in 1909 to 230,000 in 1914. The design comprised a shield surmounted by a
mural crown, above which was a helm bearing a wreath and crest. In the centrepiece of the shield was a Lennox Cross representative of the ancient Earls of Lennox. In chief position was a sewing machine representing the
Singer Corporation and in base position "on the waves of the sea" was a representation of the battleship built at J & G Thomson's Clydebank Shipyard in 1892. In the dexter fess position was a stag's head taken from the coat of arms of shipbuilder James Rodger Thomson, the first Provost of the Burgh. In sinister fess position there was a lion rampant taken from the coat of arms of local landowner, Alexander Dunn Pattison of Dalmuir. The crest was a garb or wheatsheaf representing the agricultural interests of the area. The
Latin motto below the shield was
Labore et Scientia or
by work and by knowledge. In 1929 there was a concerted campaign by the office of
Lord Lyon King of Arms to ensure that all burghs using unmatriculated arms regularised their position, and more than fifty burghs registered arms between 1929 and 1931. This led to Clydebank's arms being matriculated on 6 February 1930. The 1930 grant was almost identical to the 1892 device. When the burgh was abolished in 1975 to become part of a larger Clydebank District, the burgh arms went out of use. Clydebank District Council was granted new arms on 3 September 1975, consisting of a red saltire on a white field for the ancient province of
Lennox and for the town's more recent historic links to Ireland which previously used the same flag. The cog-wheel symbolised all the local industries and the demi-figure of
Saint Patrick referred to Old Kilpatrick, a burgh of barony from 1672, and where the saint is reputed to have been born. A representation of part of the Roman
Antonine Wall was included as the Wall and Roman forts at Old Kilpatrick and Greenhill were features common to the burgh and to the villages in the district. The
lymphad (galley ship) was for Clyde shipbuilding. The burgh motto was retained. At the request of the district council, the arms were rematriculated on 19 April 1985 with the addition of a dove of peace in the centre of the saltire. The coat of arms went out of use in 1996 with the abolition of the District Council. In 1998, the successor West Dunbartonshire Council was granted very similar arms. ==Geography==