EIGHTY years ago, Clydebank endured the heaviest raids of anywhere in Scotland. One Blitz survivor was Hugh Bright, a 15-year-old apprentice engineer at Scotstoun’s Harland and Wolff shipyard in 1941, making guns for naval ships. He and his brother Fred were volunteer stretcher bearers with the 110th Glasgow Scout Group. They were at a regular training session in a Knightswood hospital on the evening of March 13 when disaster struck the area. “Around 20 of us were there on the Thursday night when we heard the sirens,” he recounted later. “We did not realise, until the first patients were coming, that it was Clydebank getting hit.