A FORMER chairman of Dumbarton Football Club Robert Dawson has died, aged 73.

Robert and his inseparable friend, builder Archie Hagen, were involved in persuading big football names such as the former Celtic players, Lisbon Lion Bertie Auld, and Scottish internationalist Murdo MacLeod, and Rangers stars Davie Wilson and Alex Totten, to take on the management role at Dumbarton.

He later became a director and eventually chairman of the club.

Robert Dawson was born in 1944 at home in Croft Street, Bonhill, to Robert and Jean Dawson. He lived his early life there and attended Bonhill Primary School for whom he played football in the Russell Cup and won it.

This cup was fiercely contested at Millburn Park by schools throughout West Dunbartonshire in an era when thousands of fans turned out to watch even schools football.

He moved up to Vale of Leven Academy where his leisure time was spent between playing football and joining in the activities of the First Bonhill Boys Brigade.

The Rev Ian Miller, who conducted Robert’s funeral service at Cardross Crematorium, told the congregation: “Perhaps it was there that Robert developed his strong Christian beliefs principles and values.”

When he left the academy, Robert went straight into the fruiterers’ business run by his parents on Main Street, Bonhill. The Dawson family were originally from Glasgow, where they traded in the old fruit market in Candleriggs.

He met his wife, Helena May, a farmer’s daughter from Gartocharn, at a dance organised by the Loch Lomond Young Farmers’ Club. They later married, set up house in Alexandria, and had three daughters, Jacqueline, Jane and Jill.

Robert was an excellent dancer, having been a member of the Stewart School of Dancing in Alexandria, which took part in the Edinburgh Festival each year.

Robert passed his driving test and took charge of the deliveries of fruit and vegetables from a new shop at the Fountain Alexandria to the many guest houses and hotels in the Loch Lomondside area, some of which he was later to own himself.

It was from small beginnings that Robert entered the licensed trade in 1977 when he also became a community activist.

He was elected to the local council and was responsible with fellow Labour councillors, Duncan Mills, Michael Haran, Jimmy Craig, Hector McCulloch and Communists Willie Lamont and Duncan McGowan for the slum clearances and a large social housing programme in Bonhill, Renton, Jamestown and Alexandria, where a new town centre was established.

Robert was diversifying in business at this time and he bought the Burgh Bar in Dumbarton; the Lomond Park Hotel in Balloch and the Dillichip Hotel in Bonhill. He was later to extend his portfolio to ownership of other hotels and licensed premises, including the Water House Inn at Balloch.

He still found time for football though and, with Archie, persuaded Murdo MacLeod, who had recently returned from playing for Borussia Dortmund in Germany, to be Dumbarton’s manager.

Robert and Archie were well known in every football boardroom in Scotland and even in the Republic of Ireland where they once flew to Sligo in a private plane with former club owner Sir Hugh Fraser and Sean Fallon to see the local Rovers.

Once, when Dumbarton were playing in Inverness, they missed the team bus and hired a plane to get them there and back. Both men travelled regularly to Europe to watch matches involving Scottish teams.

Robert’s community work extended to him becoming a founder member of The Lions Club which met weekly at the Dumbuck Hotel in Dumbarton to organise social and fundraising events for charity.

Robert and his family travelled widely in Europe, South America and the Far East, but he worked hard, sometimes round the clock.

Rev Miller added: “He was driven in many ways by his work. Robert had a huge work ethic and was a business person of the old school. He loved going up to the fruit market in the morning and bartering for the produce he would sell in the family shops. “He was a generous man too and he did a great deal for charity in a quiet way, never broadcasting what he had done. The family has received a myriad of cards and comments that ratify Robert’s kindness and generosity.”

The now retired minister of Bonhill Parish Church said Robert had helped to finance a book about the history of the parish – “It did not stop there. He was generous, very generous to Bonhill Church.

He added: “I often referred to Robert as my twin brother for we were born on exactly the same day. I would never tell him at what time I was born though, because neither of us wanted to be known as the wee brother. It was a privilege to have known him. He was one of the Vale of Leven’s honoured sons.”

Robert Dawson is survived by his wife, Helena, daughters Jacqueline, Jane and Jill, grandchildren Helena and Alexander, and sons-in-law of Grant and Eddy.