
HMS Dasher
Memorial, South Beach 146
3 April 2016
On the afternoon of Saturday
27 March 1943, the Royal Navy aircraft carrier HMS Dasher was sailing in the
Clyde Estuary between Ardrossan and Arran. At 4.40 pm, there was an enormous
explosion. Within a short time, the ship sank. Of the 528 men on board, 379
were killed by the blast or drowned. The memorial stone and plaque, in the Sunken
Gardens on South Beach, were unveiled on 27 March 1993, exactly fifty years
after the tragedy. Every year since 2000, there has been a commemoration service
on the Sunday of or before 27 March except in 2016 when 27 March was Easter
Sunday. The picture above was during the 2016 service. The Isle Of Cumbrae Royal
British Legion Scotland Pipe Band accompanied by members of the British Legion,
Ardrossan Sea Cadets and Stevenston Boys' Brigade marched to and played at the
beginning of the service. The service was conducted by Canon Matt McManus, Parish
Priest of the Church of Saint Peter
in Chains.
Floral tributes
were laid by the
families of sailors who were aboard the Dasher, the
British Legion, Ardrossan Sea
Cadets, Stevenston
Boys' Brigade,
Member of the Scottish Parliament Kenneth Gibson, Member of Parliament Patricia
Gibson, Deputy Provost Robert Barr,
the Police
and others. Refreshments were later served to participants in Saint
Peter's Parish Centre.