- TITLE
- Letter to Grant from Skinner, 5 Jan 1906, page 6
- EXTERNAL ID
- Z_GB1796_GRANT_979_65_SKINNER_039_004
- DATE OF IMAGE
- 1906
- PERIOD
- 1900s
- SOURCE
- Inverness Museum and Art Gallery
- ASSET ID
- 7182
- KEYWORDS
- fiddlers
fiddles
fishing rods
musicians
composers
strathspeys

Alexander Grant (1856 - 1942) was a native of Battangorm, Carrbridge, which gave rise to his familiar name - 'Battan'. As a boy he was exposed to what were to become his two great passions - fiddling and fishing. He went on to excel in both areas; as an angler by inventing his own unique fishing rod known as the 'Grant Vibration Rod', and as a fiddler by leading the Highland Strathspey and Reel Society for almost forty years and by becoming an expert in fiddle making techniques. He also invented a unique disc-shaped violin known as a 'Rondello'. An example of Grant's fishing rod, fiddle and Rondello can be seen at Inverness Museum and Art Gallery (IMAG).
Grant was a great friend of fellow musician and composer James Scott Skinner (1843-1927), a major figure in the development of Scottish traditional music, often referred to as 'The Strathspey King'. This letter dated 5 January 1906 was sent to Grant by Skinner from Monikie, by Dundee. In page 6 Skinner mentions he is working on a new book of solos, duets, trios and quintets