Supporters
Thanks to so many of you for your huge generosity
South African Airways, for flying our first consignment of over 6000 shirts to Johannesburg for free.
South African youth charity Nkosi’s Haven, for receiving and distributing our first consignment.
Cardboard box manufacturer Jaffabox, for packing and shrink-wrapping our first consignment.
Bespoke school bus service The Green Bus, for helping collect in kits in the UK.
ClearFreight Inc, our freight forwarders in South Africa.
Kintetsu World Express, who transported the first consignment from Birmingham to Heathrow.
Recycling business First Mile, for supplying 200 collection boxes for free and delivering many to site.
The NEC and Brindleyplace, for storing vast quantities of shirts before they left for South Africa.
Telford Laundry, Elite Cleaners, City Inn, Hotel du Vin and Radisson Blu, for cleaning the shirts.
Kall Kwik and Prontaprint, for printing Strip Amnesty posters.
RAF Shawbury and Squadron Leader Neil Hope, for pump priming our collection with more than 3000 shirts.
KitAid and founder Derrick Williams, for doing likewise with another 1000 shirts.
West Brom, Wolves, Stoke and Aston Villa, for letting us collect on match days.
Law firm Eversheds, for a generous donation and stacks of kit, including shirts from the Lithuanian national football team.
Power company EDF Energy, for joining the cause across their UK business and collecting kit for a week in April, culminating on Wear Your Shirt Day on St George’s Day, Friday 23 April.
Recruitment consultants SF Group, who collected more than 300 shirts.
Katherine Molloy and Chiropractick Health in Sutton Coldfied, who collected over 150 shirts and spread the word with posters and an article in the Sutton Observer.
Kevin Briggs and the team at Moor Hall Hotel, for collecting hundreds of shirts.
Andrew Cotterill for firing up Bishop Vesey School to collect 150 shirts.



