Daniel Davidson: his name liveth for evermore

News

Like many other war memorials, the one in Strathblane carries the quotation from the Book of Ecclesiastes: “Their name liveth for evermore”. But in 2025, when members of Strathblane Heritage decided to research the lives of the local men who died in the Second World War, there was a problem.

The memorial is inscribed with the names of six men whose lives were claimed by that conflict. After 1945 they were added to those of 27 Strathblane servicemen who had perished in the First World War. But there was a seventh man, who had a Commonwealth War Grave in Strathblane cemetery but did not appear on the memorial.

Daniel Roy Ferguson Davidson (known to his family as Fergus) was born in 1922 and lived in Blanefield, where his father worked on the Duntreath Estate but when Daniel was ten years old both his parents died of influenza and he was taken in by a spinster aunt. In 1942 this by now tall lanky lad enlisted in the RAF and became a leading aircraftman. He was sent to West Africa where the British were assembling aircraft and flying them up a secret route to Egypt to take part in the battle for North Africa. The humidity and tropical diseases associated with service in West Africa took their toll on those who served there and tragically Daniel developed pulmonary tuberculosis. Though he returned to Scotland after the war, he became a patient at Hairmyres Sanitorium near the then village of East Kilbride. He died there in March 1946, still technically classed as “on active service” because he had never been demobbed.

Daniel Davidson

Strathblane Heritage secretary Jude Gregor took on the task of researching Daniel’s life and war record. Jude said: “Sadly Daniel seemed to have been a lost child. Orphaned aged ten, he was only 24 when he died. Though his life was claimed by tuberculosis and he did not pass away until 1946, he is just as much a victim of the Second World War as the other six men on the memorial.”

Jude was determined to add Daniel’s name, despite a severe shortage of monumental sculptors qualified to do the work, following the Covid pandemic. But she persisted and in May 2026, 70 years after Daniel’s death, a stone mason from Thomas Allan of Stirling added Daniel’s name and rank to the other six. And Jude had the pleasure of informing Daniel’s niece Fiona (his only known descendant) that her lost uncle’s name will indeed live on. Jude said: “I’m extremely satisfied finally to see Daniel where he belongs.” For Daniel’s full story see World War Two – Strathblane Seven

More

Discovering John Dillon

When Strathblane War Memorial was unveiled in 1921, it had 25 names inscribed across three panels, with nine on each of the first two panels and seven on the third. Later two more names were added, filling up the third panel: Philip Binnie, a lieutenant in the...

Strathblane Primary School Printmaking Project

As part of the launch of the Strathblane Heritage Trail in May, children in the primary school have created their own printed artworks. The project included all eight classes in the school working with Blanefield resident Jane Parfitt on a range of printmaking...

Strathblane Heritage Trail: A Community Steps Back in Time

A Celtic saint, a royal mistress, an American heiress and eight-year-olds working twelve hours a day for two shillings a week. All feature in the new Strathblane Heritage Trail, launched on 17 May. The two-mile trail has been created by Strathblane Heritage Society....

Edmonstone Hall Centenary Celebrations

The Edmonstone Hall decked out for the centenary tea party on 9 May 2026 Strathblane residents turned out in force to celebrate the centenary of a venerable local institution: the Edmonstone Hall. In 1926 the Stirling Observer described its opening as “a red-letter...

Edmonstone Hall: Gwendolyn’s Gift

Gwendolyn Edmonstone As the Edmonstone Hall marks its centenary in 2026, here is a short piece about the young heiress who came up with the idea of donating a community hall to Strathblane, which had lost so many of its young men in the First World War, including her...

Strathblane Heritage Trail Walkabout

On Friday 17 October 2025, Strathblane Heritage committee members, Keith Vass and Anne and Alastair Balfour, plus drone photographer Jamie Ballantine met with Kenny French of Kenwil Ltd, the Kirkintilloch-based company awarded the contract to produce the boards for...