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Clydebank's Rugby Football Club is based in Whitecrook. The club was founded on 29 May 1969. Their first game was played at Whitecrook on Monday 1 September 1969 against a Presidents XV captained by Richard Alan of Hutchesons and Scotland. The club play in red and black and regularly field two XVs.
St Andrew's High School was a Catholic high school situated in Whitecrook in Clydebank in Scotland. [1] It was closed in 2009 and amalgamated with St Columba's High School to form St Peter the Apostle High School on the site of St Columba's in Drumry. The final head teacher was Mick Vassie (in post from 1995) who then took over as head of the ...
Clydebank RFC is a rugby union side based in Clydebank, West Dunbartonshire, Scotland. [1] The club was founded in 1969. [ 2 ] They play their home games at Dean Street in the Clydebank Community Sports Hub; a purpose built facility which opened in 2018,featuring several rugby pitches.
Clydebank and Milngavie (Scottish Parliament constituency) Clydebank and Milngavie (UK Parliament constituency) Clydebank Blitz; Clydebank Central (ward) Clydebank Co-operative Society; Clydebank College; Clydebank East railway station; Clydebank F.C. (1899) Clydebank F.C. (1914) Clydebank F.C. (1965) Clydebank High School; Clydebank Juniors F ...
In 1876, the school board opened the first purpose-built Clydebank High School. Twelve years later, in 1888, the board decided that the school was too small and built another, larger, school on the Kilbowie Road site. By the middle of the 1930s a new school building was being built at Janetta Street, in the north of Clydebank.
Whitecrook Park, Clydebank 27 September 1890 Dalmuir Thistle 5–7 Cowdenbeath: Castle Park, Dalmuir: 27 September 1890 Campsie 4–4 East Stirlingshire Alum Works Park, Lennoxtown 27 September 1890 Jamestown 2–5 Mossend Swifts: Balloch Road, Jamestown: 27 September 1890 Slamannan 5–2 (protested) [note 19] Clydebank Castleburn Park, Slamannan
The last sighting of her was on CCTV at a deli shop in Clydebank, owned by John Leathem, who later admitted to murdering Paige Doherty. [4] Pamela set up the charity, Paige's Promise, in her daughter's name to teach children self defence , as well as support families whose children have been victims of murder.
The first record of the club is a home match in October 1882 against a side called Meadowbank, [2] who played at Glasgow Green. [3]The club played on a local level until joining the Scottish Football Association, with 31 other clubs, in August 1890. [4]