Kilbowie Park, also known as New Kilbowie Park, was a football stadium in Clydebank, Scotland. It was the home ground of Clydebank. New Kilbowie was built for Clydebank Juniors in 1939. In 1964, Clydebank merged with East Stirlingshire and entered the Scottish Football League. A record attendance of 14,900 was set by a visit of Hibernian in February 1965. Floodlights were first used in a match against Sunderland in the same month. The merger collapsed after a legal battle, but Clydebank entered the league in their own right in 1966. Clydebank were promoted to the Premier Division in 1977. A covered plastic-seated stand was built, which was funded by selling star player Davie Cooper for £100,000 to Rangers. To avoid having to apply legislation affecting stadium safety, the club installed wooden benches that reduced the capacity to 9,950. This was below the 10,000 limit at which the legislation started to apply. Clydebank played their last competitive game at Kilbowie against Hamilton Academical in 1996 (1-3). The last game at Kilbowie was a testimonial match later that summer for Ken Eadie, against Rangers (2-3). The ground was sold by club owners, the Steedman family, in 1997. Clydebank endured several seasons groundsharing at Cappielow in Greenock and Boghead Park in Dumbarton. Land was purchased on Great Western Road on the outskirts of the town to construct a new stadium for the club, but the necessary approval was never obtained. The sale of Kilbowie Park was the catalyst for the club's decline, which was finally ended in 2002. The club was purchased from its administrator by Jim Ballantyne, who moved it to Airdrie, North Lanarkshire and renamed it Airdrie United. This was done to replace the Airdrieonians club, which had been liquidated earlier in 2002. Clydebank F.C. was reformed as a junior club by the United Clydebank Supporters and it now plays at Holm Park in Yoker. Kilbowie was purchased by Vico Properties plc, who developed a retail scheme and restaurants on the ground. A single piece of rubble of the old stadium is now on view at the Scottish Football Museum in Hampden Park.

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358 m

Kilbowie Park

Le Kilbowie Park (aussi parfois appelé New Kilbowie Park) est un ancien stade de football construit en 1939 et fermé en 1996, et situé à Clydebank.
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665 m

Usine Singer de Clydebank

L'usine Singer de Clydebank est une importante usine spécialisée dans la fabrication de machines à coudre, située à Clydebank, près de Glasgow (Royaume-Uni). Ouverte en 1885 par la Singer Manufacturing Company, cette usine a longtemps été la plus importante usine de machines à coudre au monde. Elle a été fermée en 1980.
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717 m

Clydebank

Clydebank (Bruach Chluaidh en gaélique écossais (gd) ; Clidbaunk en scots (sco)) est une ville (et ancien burgh) d'Écosse, située dans le council area du West Dunbartonshire et dans la région de lieutenance et ancien comté du Dunbartonshire. De 1975 à 1996, elle était la capitale administrative du district de Clydebank, au sein de la région du Strathclyde. Elle est proche de la rivière Clyde et de la ville de Glasgow.
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977 m

HMS Repulse (1916)

Le HMS Repulse est un croiseur de bataille de classe Renown qui servit dans la Royal Navy de 1916 au 10 décembre 1941, Portant des canons du plus fort calibre existant à cette époque et capables d'une vitesse supérieure à celle de ses congénères, les navires de cette classe sont néanmoins handicapés par un blindage dont la bataille du Jutland a montré l'insuffisance. Il constitue de 1920 à 1940, avec les HMS Renown et HMS Hood, l'escadre de croiseurs de bataille de la Royal Navy. Il a subi plusieurs refontes pendant l'entre-deux-guerres, mais ne bénéficie pas d'une véritable reconstruction, comme celle de son sistership, en 1936-1939. Il a servi dans l'Atlantique, entre 1939 et 1941, et a été coulé par des avions japonais, au large de la Malaisie, en mer de Chine méridionale, trois jours après l'attaque de Pearl Harbor.
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977 m

John Brown & Company

John Brown and Company de Clydebank, West Dunbartonshire, en Écosse, était une grande entreprise de construction navale britannique.