NS4076 : The Risk Family Memorial
taken 14 years ago, near to Bellsmyre, West Dunbartonshire, Scotland

The memorial is 13 feet, 4 inches long, and stands 12 feet tall. The architect was John MacLeod, who was responsible for many of the memorials in this cemetery. It was carved by Mr Grassby, a Glasgow sculptor (presumably Charles Benham Grassby – he was also responsible for NS4076 : The Janet Rankin Memorial, which is located nearby, and for others; see, for example, NS4076 : Memorial to James Boyd).
Two Provosts of Dumbarton, father and son, are commemorated here. The father, William Risk, was born at Kilmarnock. In Dundee, he traded in seeds; in 1810, he began carrying on the same trade in Dumbarton, but he soon branched out into the sale of wines and spirits. He was joined by his son in that business; the firm, William Risk and Son, continued trading until 1853.
William Risk was elected Provost of Dumbarton in 1845. He died on the 7th of October, 1864, in his 80th year.
His son, James Blair Risk was born and raised in Dumbarton. He became partner in a firm of drapers (France & Risk), and in his father's business, and he was also connected with the Dumbarton Brewery. Like his father, he was elected Provost of Dumbarton, and held that position from 1854 to 1860. He also served as a Justice of the Peace for the county.
He did much travelling in his later years, and died in London, on the 29th of April, 1878. However, he is buried here in Dumbarton Cemetery. The central panel of the memorial bears the inscription "the burying ground of James Blair Risk of Meadowbank", and the top of the structure bears a JBR monogram, shown in NS4076 : The Risk Family Memorial (detail).
Risk Street in Dumbarton is very probably named after William or James Blair Risk (or both): NS3975 : Risk Street, Dumbarton.
[For further biographical details, see Donald MacLeod's "The God's Acres of Dumbarton" (1888).]
The cemetery was formally opened on the 4th of October, 1854, replacing the overcrowded parish churchyard. See the Geograph article "Dumbarton Cemetery" – Link – for a detailed discussion. For biographies of many of those buried here, and for descriptions of their memorials, see Donald MacLeod's "The God's Acres of Dumbarton" (1888), and the same author's "Dumbarton: Its Recent Men and Events" (1898). By 2010, there was concern that Dumbarton Cemetery would run out of space within a decade; New Dumbarton Cemetery – Link – was subsequently created uphill from the existing cemetery, and opened at the end of December 2015.
