They genuinely loved his wife Jan, whom they called "Mum" and they feared that exposing her husband as an abuser might destroy her. Throughout adulthood she has suffered from a depressive illness and lives on 50-a-week disability allowance because she can't work. Exploring abuse and . An elderly care home now occupies the premises. _8pA,-53x u-Oi/++!0b4aj#SU. Quarriers first shipment of children left in 1872 for Annie MacPhersons Homes. PeterHigginbotham. It is a lovely village for a quiet walk. If the persons date of birth was more than 100 years ago, we can release their records without a death certificate. Registered and Head Office: Quarriers, Quarriers Village, Bridge of Weir PA11 3SX Call 01505 616000/612224 Email hello@quarriers.org.uk www.quarriers.org.uk Quarriers is a registered Scottish . They were also required to attend school classes in the evening and a Sunday school. But by the late 1950's according to witness testimonies, many childhoods were being destroyed and what emerged at Wilson's trial was a merciless culture of child abuse spanning decades. You may also find it useful to consult the Children's Homes website, a very useful resource where you can search for institutions by location or type and read about their history as well as view photographs of buildings and the people living in them. People across the country were moved by this proposal and began to send in donations. There are no upcoming events at this time. PeterHigginbotham, Quarriers Homes drapery store, c.1910. With her support, he opened his own shoe shop at 23 and eventually married Isabella, her daughter. Subscribe now for regular news, updates and priority booking for events, All content is available under the Open Government Licence v3.0, except where otherwise stated, 1871-1975: history books, diaries, admission registers etc, Collection held privately: enquiries to National Register of Archives for Scotland, About our
Between 1869 and 1932, over 100,000 children were sent from Britain to Canada through assisted juvenile emigration. Lady Smith has not taken these decisions lightly but we must put the well‐being of our applicants, witnesses, staff and our communities at the forefront of our decisions. More than 30,000 children lived at Quarriers Orphan Homes since its beginnings in 1871 to the closure of the last childrens cottage in 1998. Abby Greenhoff had a round of 100. Each childs entry would have been recorded either in the history books or by an admission form. Upon arrival in Canada, the children were distributed to MacPhersons Homes in Knowlton, Quebec, Belleville Ontario and finally Galt, Ontario. Further updates will be provided on our website and via Twitter. Her favourite form of mental torture was to lock the youngsters in cellars, cupboards and outhouses with the figure. PeterHigginbotham. We will request two forms of identification one item must be photographic, and the other being proof of your current address. the name of the archive where they are held, and reference information to help you find the collection. Seeing there was more to be done, he wrote to the Glasgow Herald announcing plans to create a childrens village. (5.29) [COL] Epilepsy colony - farm. On one occasion, as a child was leaving the home Drummond burnt the little girl's toy golliwog as her friends watch in horror. During the 1920s and 1930s, the Homes housed up more than 1,500 children at any one time. Phonelines open from Thursday the 9th December after 10am. Copyright 2023 Quarriers. However, with changes in child-care practice and legislation, numbers residing at the village declined steadily from the 1970s onwards. 3 0 obj
William Quarrier passed away in October 1903, and his wife Isabella passed away the following year. Avery Haskell had round of 111. More than 30,000 children lived at Quarriers Orphan Homes since its beginnings in 1871 to the closure of the last childrens' cottage in 1998. You can purchase the book for 9.99 through our fundraising department on 01505 616132 / 616054 or email [emailprotected]. 1948 also saw the establishment of the NHS, which meant that medical facilities such as the Consumption Sanatoria were now run by local health boards. In 1876, William purchased land at Nittingshill Farm near Bridge of Weir. PeterHigginbotham. PeterHigginbotham. PeterHigginbotham. In 2004 Quarriers apologised to individuals affected and will continue to offer support to anyone with a grievance. Impressed by contemporaries Thomas Barnardo and Annie Macpherson using emigration to improve the lives of children in their care, William established a programme of emigration to Canada. Busy Days of preparation lead up to the event, the Colony patients taking their share. For the girls, this included laundry work, while the boys learned carpentry. We speak ever so often but we never mention those dreadful times". Marks. ", "That place was a hunting ground for perverts who ruined thousands of lives. A similar scheme followed for another group of Glasgow children who sold newspapers in the city's streets. The Colony, which was opened by William and Isabellas daughter Mary in 1906, offered a comfortable environment for people affected by epilepsy to undergo treatment as well as learning skills in the workshops and at evening classes. The Village at Bridge-of-Weir, as it was later known, was opened in 1878 and became the primary Orphan Homes of Scotland Home (Quarriers). A massive shake-up of Scottish children's homes which could have spared thousands from a life of abuse was shelved after Labour lost the 1970 election. In 1871, Glasgow shoemaker William Quarrier founded an organisation which offered help to the thousands of destitute children in Glasgows infamous slums. By continuing to use the site you agree to our use of cookies. When William was seventeen, he went to work as a shoemaker for a Mrs Hunter and began attending Blackfriars Baptist Church where he became a Christian. <>
She tormented children as young as five with a "bogey man" called Baw Baw, made from a mop with a grass skirt. In 1898, the first Consumption Sanatoria building opened in Quarriers Village. We place some essential cookies on your device to make this website work. It cost ten pounds per child to outfit and transport them. Once, when she returned to the home with her toddler daughter to visit Mrs Wilson, Mrs Wilson's husband sexually abused her again. This submission relates to the Redress for Survivors (Historical Child Abuse in Care) (Scotland) (SP Bill 79) as introduced in the Scottish Re: orphanage or poorhouse Kilmacolm Renfrew. Realty Pro 100. These include: Home of Industry, Spitalfields: History books, register and emigrant register (1870-1924), Annie Macpherson Home, Stratford, Ontario: Register and history books of children sent to Canada (1871-1915), Marchmont Homes, Canada: History books and lists (1870-1914). The subject is deceased THESE INCLUDED DIFFICULTIES WHEN WE REQUESTED THE ACCOUNTS, WHICH WE WERE ENTITLED TO AS PER THE CONSTITUTION, PRIOR TO THE AGM. Records generally include more information about the progress of the individual child from the mid-1960s. https://www.childabuseinquiry.scot/news/covid-19-update/. ;g\84gA$p#>\C#vYCb}}g?Co>-9;1|mF j ]~D&?D0.M`WM;yOsAH@b,X2 $$6M|6>> v`pYsG9,ro
,X9B Aged just seven, William began working as a pin maker, and at age eight, he was an apprentice shoemaker. PeterHigginbotham, Quarriers Homes school building, 2005. Quarrier's Village is a very small village, right on the edge of the region. [*1949, COL] c/u Photograph of William Quarrier (11.09) c/u plaque "Broadfield Home for orphans and destitute children erected in affectionate memory of Charles Moore Stoddard by his parents 1877" and brief shot of house (11.15) c/u plaque "Glasgow Home erected in memory of Mrs John MacKay a Beloved Mother by her Daughter" and brief shot of house (11.19) 1878 - 1881 with animated map of expansion of the village (11.28) Shots of village, including small children sitting in an open window, looked after and read to by nurses, c/u shoes (11.48) Flower bed with words: "Have Faith in God" [now reading in the right direction] (11.52) 1882-1886 animated map of village (12.02) gvs buildings in village (probably illustrated in previous animation), includes brief shots of women with prams and toddlers and boy pushing a wheel barrow in gardens (12.44) 1887 In this year the heart of village was built. Quarriers Homes, Bridge of Weir, Renfrewshire This page has now been migrated to the new Children's Homes site www.childrenshomes.org.uk where extensive information can also be found on many hundreds of other children's homes. How can they live with what they have done?". We believe we have evidence that they have also covered up this abuse, and some of the Association members have been directly involved. These include: Wilson was one of the worst. The City Orphan Home, which had been used for for many years as a hostel for working boys, finally closed in 1937. "You came in with nothing and you will leave with nothing," the care worker told the child. 1 0 obj
Both Renfrew locations were closed and Cessnock was begun to be used exclusively for children preparing for emigration. including elevated shots of children walking through streets (1.53) shot of man walking out of building carrying suitcases, followed by an adolescent black? Former house parent Joseph Nicholson - nicknamed "Uncle Joe" - from Aberdeenshire, was jailed for two years in 2001 for abusing a 13 year-old girl over an 18-month period during the late 1960's. x]o6=@"+DI@I
.MrCeWk[IvofH}%4@l}Prf8_O~|'?6M'v2/&'o>5Ut|s=Q&JVe+? The jury at the High Court in Glasgow unanimously found him guilty of 15 charges of molesting children. CHILD abuse survivors at a Bridge of Weir home say the scale of attacks is comparable to a "house of horror" where eight people have been prosecuted for 145 criminal offences. The subject has given consent or legal authority to a third party (i.e. Its dark history is now a memory - a sickening memory forever imprinted on its victims' souls! Shotlist:
Former Boys and Girls Abused in Quarriers Homes . Ft. 1951 E Whittier Blvd, La Habra, CA 90631. 2023Peter Higginbotham. Six years later, he opened his own shoe shop, soon followed by two more. All in all, over 7,000 children were sent to Canada by the Orphan Homes of Scotland (Quarriers). 1. The children's homes (with their date of completion and number of places) were as follows: Quarriers Homes children's houses on Faith Avenue (Dalry Home nearest camera) -, 2005. The full horror of Quarriers was revealed six years ago when one of McBrearty's victims went to her lawyer about an unconnected matter and mentioned what had happened at the home. We are proud of the significant good that Quarriers has achieved. Quarriers archive contains evidence of both success and failure of individual children in their quest for a new life and, as one would expect, success stories tend to be given greater prominence in reports and other published accounts. (0.59) Arial shots of the Village (1.21) Shots of children filing through street (1.32) boys playing football (1.42) Shot over the roof of the church, (filmed from the tower?) Throughout the 1940s and especially after the end of the war, child welfare became an increasingly important issue for both the government and the public, and The Childrens Act was introduced in 1948. [CDATA[ require(["mojo/signup-forms/Loader"], function(L) { L.start({"baseUrl":"mc.us10.list-manage.com","uuid":"a3bf6b988b3a7075347b15db0","lid":"ef1ce67315"}) }) // ]]> William Quarrier was born in Cross Shore Street in Greenock in 1829. Title:
[Top of Page] [Pauper emigration] [Home Page] * * * For US readers * * * PeterHigginbotham. The horror of life at the Quarriers Village orphanage near Bridge of Weir, Renfrewshire was recalled this week when Wilson became the fourth paedophile in three years to be jailed for abusing the orphans and abandoned children. Quarriers records also report the visits of many former children to the Village as travel . My name is Donald Hannah I was in Quarrier's Home in 1955-60 in cottage 21+27+34 Mr&Mrs Young where my House Parents. Quarriers Fairknowe Home. William Quarrier opened Renfrew Lane Homes in 1871 for orphaned and destitute children living in Glasgow, with two more homes to come in the following year. (19.50) gvs church going, fields around the village, and the village itself (20.51). flag flying from tops of buildings, includes shots of groups of children walking along the street. An illustration of the role of Quarriers homes for orphans. Next night it would be another girl". As the numbers of children grew, a second house was rented on Renfield Street where the girls were housed, while the boys were moved to a mansion in Govan named Cessnock House. The Elizabethan-style building had boys' and girls' wards, providing a total of thirty beds, and an operating theatre. Title: QUARRIER'S HOME FOR CHILDREN, BRIDGE OF WEIR Reference number: T2214 Date: [1970] Production company: Scottish Television Sound: sound Original format: 16mm Colour: col Fiction: non-fiction Running time: 14:23 Description: Documentary profiling the Quarrier's home for abandoned children in Bridge of Weir. <>/Metadata 337 0 R/ViewerPreferences 338 0 R>>
Contact: Quarriers: website: www.quarriers.org.uk; e-mail: einquiries@quarriers.org.uk or josie.bell@quarriers.org.uk more information athttp://content.iriss.org.uk/goldenbridge/nof/index.html, Receiving or Distribution Homes in Canada: Quarriers: Marchmont Homes in Belleville, ON and Fairknowe Homes in Brockville, ON. homes. She said, "People say we should have told someone but when some of the girls tried to report the abuse to the most senior person, he did not believe them. Quarriers Homes bakery, early 1900s. Two more sanatoria buildings and a hospital would follow, and over 11,000 patients affected by tuberculosis were treated in these facilities between 1898 and 1948. At this point, sixty children a year were being sent to Canada by Quarriers Orphan Homes of Scotland. There are lovely examples of beautiful Victorian houses in the area. The idea of sending children to Canada greatly appealed to him. More Details animated map of village (12.51) gvs of church intercut with shots of children filing into the church in their Sunday best; one black girl (13.05) 1887 - 1890 animated map of village (13.14) gvs of village, shots of girls juggling balls against a wall, children playing in front of a fountain (13.47) gvs white, black and russet chickens in several pens (14.05) 1891-1901 animated map of village (14.20) Shot of school, includes montage of girls of ascending age filing out of the school by twos and then boys (14.54) gvs boys walking through streets (15.02) shots of small children in white smocks led by two women (15.11) Shots of two women pushing prams filled with four and six toddlers, others walking beside includes another shot of small smocked children (15.29) gvs views of the village (15.45) c/u sign above Fire station door " 1900 Fire Station given by J.C. Jr. Paisley" includes shot of station (15.52) gvs children on a countryside walk. Then there was Samuel McBrearty, 75, a vicious paedophile whose reign of terror began in 1961. Having risen out of poverty himself, Quarrier was driven to help the poor and helpless children running rampant in the slums of Glasgow. %
The three brigades had a joint headquarters the 'Industrial Brigade Home' in the Trongate. (6.56) Slow tracking shot of Village (7.05) The Thanksgiving Services provide an annual meeting for friends of the Homes. These are just over the parish boundary from Bridge of Weir. The original headquarters were on Jamaica Street, followed by Bath Street and finally located at 114 Trongate where the three Brigades amalgamated into The Industrial Brigade. Children's Home Records Other Homes Getting Started If you're trying to locate records for yourself, or for someone you know (or suspect) was in some kind of children's home, a good first step is to organise and write down all the information you already know or can obtain first-hand. Quarriers Village was established in 1878 by philanthropist William Quarrier, a successful merchant who had started his working life at the age of seven as a pin maker. All titles with videos
Over 400 Quarrier children had already been sent to Canada in care of Annie MacPherson or Ellen Bilbrough but with the growing amount of children ready for immigration, Quarrier, in 1888, purchased a building in Brockville, Ontario, called Fairknowe to be used as his own receiving home. His mother took up laundry and sewing work to support William and his two sisters. The Central Hall shown in the above picture has since been remodelled as shown below. includes shots of a harvesting machine and men stacking sheaves (16.30) On 16th October, 1903, William Quarrier passed to his rest but his work continues still. [*1949, COL] c/u Photograph of William Quarrier (11.09) c/u plaque "Broadfield Home for orphans and destitute children erected in affectionate memory of Charles Moore Stoddard by his parents 1877" and brief shot of house (11.15) c/u plaque "Glasgow Home erected in memory of Mrs John MacKay a Beloved Mother by her Daughter" and brief shot of house (11.19) 1878 - 1881 with animated map of expansion of the village (11.28) Shots of village, including small children sitting in an open window, looked after and read to by nurses, c/u shoes (11.48) Flower bed with words: "Have Faith in God" [now reading in the right direction] (11.52) 1882-1886 animated map of village (12.02) gvs buildings in village (probably illustrated in previous animation), includes brief shots of women with prams and toddlers and boy pushing a wheel barrow in gardens (12.44) 1887 In this year the heart of village was built. Quarriers Director David Williams has confirmed that the Association of former boys and girls is NOT an official sanctioned organisation under the auspices of Quarriers Charity. In 1876, with the money raised from a growing band of supporters, Quarrier bought the 40-acre Nittingshill Farm located between Bridge of Weir and Kilmacolm. Collectively this adds to what may be referred to as the complexity of adversity experienced by the child. Contact the Inquiry's witness support team: FBGA Redress Information & Independent Legal Advice & Support ‐ Access Here. Call 0800 0891 331 Text Claim To 78866 How can we help? The Archives is open daily to offer assistance to local historians, property researchers, genealogists and students. SC001960, Quarriers Head Office, 20 St Kenneth Drive, Glasgow, G51 4QD / Tel: 01505 612224/616000, Photograph of cottage that they lived in (subject to availability). The awful irony is that Quarriers Village was supposed to be a haven, a warm and caring countryside environment for children who had already been exposed to more that their share of sadness. Natalie Berg had a 110. This can take up to one month to complete. Chillingly, McBrearty rose to be a respected senior social worker in Aberdeen before his retirement in 1995. This video is not available to view remotely, Full length video - full length available onsite, Children at the Quarriers home at Bridge of Weir spend their free time trampolining, swimming and playing football. SOLD FEB 8, 2023. The 75 year-old who used to tell children she had been sent by GOD, was put on probation for three years after she admitted five charges of cruelty. The children could buy sweets, postcards and other small items at the Homes' general store. PA11 3SX. Stories of migration, photos and Quarriers Narrative of Facts can be found here on The Golden Bridge. Select sheet 30 - Glasgow. Quarrier's first shipment of children left in 1872 for Annie MacPherson's Homes. As well as his work with children, Quarrier contributed to his country's health care provision. Unable to display Facebook posts.Show errorfunction cffShowError() { document.getElementById("cff-error-reason").style.display = "block"; document.getElementById("cff-show-error").style.display = "none"; }. Documentary profiling the Quarrier's home for abandoned children in Bridge of Weir. The organisation continued operating much as Quarrier had begun it until the early 1980s, with over 30,000 children being cared for during that period. William Quarrier (29 September 1829 - 16 October 1903) was a shoe retailer and philanthropist from Glasgow, Scotland. <>/ExtGState<>/ProcSet[/PDF/Text/ImageB/ImageC/ImageI] >>/MediaBox[ 0 0 595.56 842.04] /Contents 4 0 R/Group<>/Tabs/S/StructParents 0>>
The Quarriers Story, written by Anna Magnusson, chronicles the history of Quarriers from its earliest days as a refuge for thousands of destitute children in Victorian Scotland, through to becoming one of the 21st century's leading social care charities. The layout of the site as it was in the mid-1890s is shown on the map below. %PDF-1.7
At the time the abuse began the girls were aged just eight, ten and eleven. He also opened a night refuge in 1873. By 1905, their daughters Agnes Quarrier Burges and Mary Quarrier began sending children once again to Fairknowe in Brockville, with a break only during the First World War. PeterHigginbotham, Elise Hospital operating theatre, Quarriers Homes. Quarrier's ultimate vision was to take poor children completely away from the city streets. Please use the Hire, buy or ask a question button to ask about obtaining a copy of this film or a licence to use it, or to ask about its copyright status. "Would one of you girls come up and switch out the light!" The note in the right hand column shows the reason for his leaving - "Gone to Quarriers Home". He would creep into my bed one night. After his father, a ship's carpenter, died from cholera when William was just three, the family moved to Glasgow. PeterHigginbotham. Please note that the Aftercare Team will be working remotely for the foreseeable future. He went on to become a successful shoe merchant, owning several shops in Glasgow. In Wilson's case there was another heartbreaking reason why he was able to carry on preying on young girls from the 1960's into the 1980's. The Quarriers Story This website uses cookies so we can provide the best user experience. The 1890s parish map shows "Orphan Homes" in the south-east corner of the parish. Qui sont les petits immigrants britanniques et les enfants travailleurs migrants? Quarriers is a registered Scottish Charity - No. We applied for, and were granted, core participant status from the start because we feel strongly that care agencies should contribute fully and effectively in an open and transparent manner to help the Inquiry achieve its aims. SC001960, Quarriers Head Office, 20 St Kenneth Drive, Glasgow, G51 4QD / Tel: 01505 612224/616000. Quarriers co-operated fully with the authorities. Recognising that children in the homes were far less likely to be orphans due to changes in healthcare and the falling rates of diseases like smallpox, the Orphan Homes of Scotland changed its name to Quarriers Homes in 1958. Quarriers Homes aerial view. Brockville. Six years later, related inquiries are still going on. Note: many repositories impose a closure period of up to 100 years for records identifying individuals. PeterHigginbotham. PeterHigginbotham. This film is protected by copyright and is provided for personal, private viewing only. Any enquiries should be sent to [emailprotected] and we will get back to you as soon as possible. Exclusive archive artice. 35 children from Quarriers homes made the journey to Canada in 1872, and migrations to Canada continued until the 1930s and to Australia until the 1960s. It was named in memory of the wife of Sir Thomas Glen Coats who donated the 10,000 cost of its construction. includes shots of a harvesting machine and men stacking sheaves (16.30) On 16th October, 1903, William Quarrier passed to his rest but his work continues still. Then one would climb the stairs, steeling herself for what was to follow. We also joined the Boys Brigade Lifeboys at the time. girl (2.01) Shot of half-timbered sandstone building, intercut with c/u of plaque, reading "WILLIAM QUARRIER FOUNDER OF THE HOMES LIVED HERE FROM 1886 TO 1906" panning down to three men, including a minister, includes brief shot of boys playing (2.29) girl run along a street in kilts (2.41) Arial shot of village (2.56) gvs a man hands five loaves to two boys in short trousers who hand them to a woman standing outside a house, dropping one (3.13) Two boys carry a heavy basket numbered "2", includes brief shot of two boys playing (3.27) Brief shot of trunks, one labelled "BROCKVILLE, CANADA" (3.30) gvs of church, including shots of children filing in from the surrounding streets (3.55) children crossing bridge (4.09) boys take off coats and boots (4.16) gvs boy peels potatoes into a low square enamel sink, before bringing them through to a woman who is measuring flour in the kitchen (4.38) Man walks through into bathroom, and washes a small boy's hair, while an older boy scrubs another one at the other end of the bath (5.14) C/u shot of boy playing harmonica accompanied on piano, while other boys play table tennis or play with a train set. The information contained in these records may have included family circumstances and reasons for admission. The lawyer advised her to talk to the police. A few years after his ship-carpenter fathers untimely demise during a cholera epidemic in Quebec, William Quarriers mother moved her family to Glasgow. (19.50) gvs church going, fields around the village, and the village itself (20.51). One night in 1864, William met a boy who was crying. The Orange County Archives serves as the main repository for historic property documents, vital records and other materials from county government. With the decline in sailing vessels, the ship was eventually removed, although evidence of its keel can still be seen in the cellar of the house built on the site at what is now 45 Faith Avenue. William Quarrier took offence to this, believing children should not be discriminated against and stopped sending children to Canada under the age of 18. In 1876, two pivotal things happened: Nittingshill farm was bought at Bridge-of-Weir, in Renfrewshire, with the idea of building Homes there based on the cottage system and the City Orphan Home in Glasgow on James Morrison Street was opened. They were quickly both filled to overflowing, and a mansion was purchased in Cessnock, Govan for boys and two more were acquired for girls at Newstead and Elmpark in Govan Road. Today, Quarriers is one of Scotlands largest social care charities, and while its headquarters remain in Quarriers Village, the organisation supports thousands of people every day through over 100 services across Scotland. A land-locked ship, the James Arthur, was also in The Village in order to train up to 30 boys for the sea. And Wilson, who lost a leg through illness several years ago, claimed in court that that the eight women testifying against him had all lied. The information contained in these records may have included family circumstances and reasons for admission. animated map of village (12.51) gvs of church intercut with shots of children filing into the church in their Sunday best; one black girl (13.05) 1887 - 1890 animated map of village (13.14) gvs of village, shots of girls juggling balls against a wall, children playing in front of a fountain (13.47) gvs white, black and russet chickens in several pens (14.05) 1891-1901 animated map of village (14.20) Shot of school, includes montage of girls of ascending age filing out of the school by twos and then boys (14.54) gvs boys walking through streets (15.02) shots of small children in white smocks led by two women (15.11) Shots of two women pushing prams filled with four and six toddlers, others walking beside includes another shot of small smocked children (15.29) gvs views of the village (15.45) c/u sign above Fire station door " 1900 Fire Station given by J.C. Jr. Paisley" includes shot of station (15.52) gvs children on a countryside walk. The vessel, funded by a Clydeside ship-builder, was cemented into the ground in 1887. In 2002 Mary Drummond's terrifying regime of the 1950's and 1960's was revealed in court. For 30 years David didn't tell a soul . Major changes in childcare practice and legislation came into effect, which had a significant effect on how children were looked after, and ultimately led to the numbers of children in Quarriers Homes decreasing. Work on the homes continued steadily, and the village grew to include almost 40 cottages, a school, workshops, Mount Zion Church and a training ship where boys could learn skills for a career in the navy. At its peak in the 1920's and 1930's more that 1,500 children lived in the several dozen village cottages - many benefited enormously from the experience. Records for the homes run by Annie Macpherson were inherited by Barnardo's (see below). It has always been our intention to resolve the issues for the benefit of those former boys and girls abused in-care in Quarriers. Please read Understanding catalogue records for help interpreting this information and Using footage for more information about accessing this film. To those who suffered abuse while in our care, we offer an unreserved apology. The important work of the Inquiry continues. The Quarriers Story, written by Anna Magnusson, chronicles the history of Quarriers from its earliest days as a refuge for thousands of destitute children in Victorian Scotland, through to becoming one of the 21st centurys leading social care charities.