Glasgow Times

Lewis completes Kiltwalk in memory of great-great-uncle

- BY ANN FOTHERINGH­AM

CLYDEBANK Blitz survivor Blair Holt was proud to have served with the RAF during the war – and even prouder when his young great-great-nephew signed up as a cadet.

Lewis Cramb, who is 15, completed the Glasgow Kiltwalk at the weekend in Blair’s memory – and he knows his great-greatuncle would have supported him every step of the way.

“He recently passed away and I wanted to fund a way to commemorat­e what he had done in his life,” explained Lewis. “I decided to step out of my comfort zone, to help both myself and the RAF Benevolent Fund.”

Lewis has already smashed his £400 fundraisin­g target and there is still time to donate via his fundraisin­g page (glasgow. thekiltwal­k.co.uk/fundraisin­g/ GlasgowKil­twalk2022L­ewisCramb).

The RAF Benevolent Fund supports serving RAF personnel, veterans, and their families, when they need it most. The Fund provides financial, emotional and practical assistance to help people live with dignity and independen­ce.

Lewis, who is from Bearsden, is a cadet in 1740 (Clydebank) Squadron Air Cadets, which he joined in August 2021. He completed the Kiltwalk alongside fellow members of his squadron.

Blair grew up in Clydebank, explains Lewis’s mum, Angela.

“He was my father’s uncle, and with no children of his own, he treated our family as his own,” she says. “He was like a grandfathe­r to my family – he actually gave me away at my wedding, as my father had passed away some time before.”

Angela adds: “He was born in Liverpool, but moved to Clydebank as a baby. Work took him to Castlebar in Ireland and then to London, and eventually he retired to Melrose. During his service, he was based at RAF Waddington and frequently took flights to Leuchars so he could sneak home to visit his fiancé Dorothy for short weekends. He also ran the cinema nights on the base as he could work the projector.

“He was young during the war and did his National Service with the RAF. He always talked passionate­ly about his time there and he was so pleased Lewis had joined as a cadet.”

Angela adds: “His birthday coincided with the Clydebank

Blitz. His father brought him back from Larkhall ,where they had been temporaril­y housed as a result of the Blitz, so they could collect his birthday cake, which had been ordered before the bombing.

“Amazingly, City Bakeries was still standing – so he did get his birthday cake.”

The Clydebank Blitz was a sustained bombing attack by the Luftwaffe during the Second World War, which left 528 people dead, thousands more injured and 40,000 evacuated. The raids took place on March 13 and

14, 1941, and resulted in Scotland’s biggest loss of civilian life of the war. The town was devastated, with entire streets wiped from the map.

More than £3 million was raised for hundreds of charities after a crowd of more than 10,000 people participat­ed in this year’s Kiltwalk, founded by entreprene­ur Sir Tom Hunter.

He said: “I regard the success of Kiltwalk as one of the Foundation’s greatest achievemen­ts. It was a joy to see so many of our Kiltwalk Heroes out in their tartan at Glasgow Green.”

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 ?? ?? Lewis Cramb, middle, while above, Blair Holt, and main picture, the Clydebank Blitz in 1941
Lewis Cramb, middle, while above, Blair Holt, and main picture, the Clydebank Blitz in 1941

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