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Quarriers Story
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01 September 2006

In 1878, Glasgow shoemaker William Quarrier founded an organization that offered help to the thousands of desperate, poverty-stricken children in Glasgow’s infamous slums. A few years later Quarrier’s Village was opened, providing a refuge for the abandoned and the orphaned in the rolling fields of Renfrewshire. Since these beginnings, Quarriers has cared for more than 40,000 children in need. It now runs a diverse range of support and care programs for children, adults, and families in 85 projects across Britain.
In this book, Anna Magnusson explores the stories of the many people, both past and present, who have helped make Quarriers what it is today and celebrates the achievements of the charity over the past century. The result is a detailed record of the organizations evolution and an inspiring story of one mans legacy.
Anna Magnusson is a radio producer and broadcaster with BBC Scotland. In 1984 she published the first edition of The Village, the history of Quarriers Homes, and in 1996 she produced a two-part radio documentary about the Quarriers home children sent to Canada as part of a mass child emigration movement.