Eilidh Watt


Eilidh Watt was a Gaelic broadcaster and writer from the Isle of Skye. She was a campaigner for equality and women's rights.

Early life

Eilidh MacAskill was born on the Isle of Skye on 22 January 1908. Her mother was Chirsty MacLean, and her father was the local blacksmith in the township of Skinidin.

Education and career

Watt attended Portree High School and graduated from Glasgow University. She then worked as a school teacher, teaching English in Tarbert, Harris, and Portree before marrying Robert Watt and relocating to his native Dunfermline.
Upon her marriage, she was required to retire from teaching, but was brought back into service as a teacher during the Second World War, rising to the position of Deputy Head of Moss-side Secondary School in Cowdenbeath. She became a campaigner for equality with both the and the newly formed Commonwealth Party.

Literary contributions

Eilidh Watt was a prolific writer of Scottish Gaelic short stories and a regular contributor to the quarterly magazine Gairm; she pioneered child-oriented
stories as well. A number of her short stories were also collected and published as books.

Later life

Watt retired in 1969 and moved back to the Isle of Skye, where she lived until she passed away in Inverness on 25 August 1996. She was survived by her son, Ronald Watt.

Books