Background
Quarrier was born in Greenock on 29 September 1829, but moved to Glasgow aged three following the death of his father and spent most of his childhood in poverty.
Quarrier was born in Greenock on 29 September 1829, but moved to Glasgow aged three following the death of his father and spent most of his childhood in poverty.
Reflecting on his charitable acts in 1872, he accredited his philanthropy largely to these experiences:
"When a little boy, I stood in the High Street of Glasgow, barefoot, bareheaded, cold and hungry, having tasted no food for a day and a half, and, as I gazed at each passer-by, wondering why they did not help such as I, a thought passed through my mind that I would not do as they when I would get the means to help others"
At 17 he began work as a shoemaker after training as an apprentice. At this stage, he became a devout Christian. Quarrier fathered four children: Isabella, Agnes, Frank and Mary Quarrier.
Quarrier is best known for his charitable work.
In 1871 he opened a night refuge for homeless children in Renfrew Street, Glasgow. Then in 1876, using charitable donations, Quarrier began to build the Orphan Homes of Scotland on a piece of land now in Inverclyde and between the villages of Kilmacolm and Bridge of Weir, falling within the civil parish of the former.
By the 1890s "Quarrier"s Village", as it is now known, was home to 34 cottages, a school, a church and a fire station. The village was home to up to 1,500 children at a time.
Children in need could be housed in conditions close to a home environment.
Children were taught self-reliance and were well educated in the village school. From 1870 to 1936 the Orphan Homes of Scotland founded by William Quarrier participated in the British child relocation program sending more than 7,000 young people to Canada where they were employed, as farm labourers. William Quarrier died on 16 October 1903.
His work continues through the social care charity Quarriers, which is still based at Quarriers Village.