The main Blitz memorial is located in Dalnottar Cemetery above Clydebank. It is composed of a substantial granite memorial with bronze cast plates at its base designed by the artist Tom McKendrick. The castings name the 528 casualties. The memorial sits over the remains of Clydebank's unclaimed dead. ) An additional memorial is dedicated to the crew of a
Polish destroyer, , which helped defend the town from the docks of the
John Brown & Company shipyard. It is located directly opposite from the Town Hall, which has itself a shrine dedicated to those in Clydebank who died during
World War I and
World War II. There is another war memorial on Graham Avenue. A recording made in May 1941 by bombed-out civilian Tom Wright features on
The Blitz, an archive audiobook CD issued in 2007. There is a yearly memorial service held at Kilbowie Saint Andrew's Parish Church on the anniversary of the Clydebank Blitz and a memorial garden is located there. It is the only
Church of Scotland building to survive the Blitz bombings. In 1997, as part of their 100-year anniversary celebration, a memorial side chapel dedicated to the victims of the Clydebank Blitz called "The Blitz Chapel" was added to the church. The church displays a
triptych painting portraying images of the Blitz created by artist Tom McKendrick. ==References==