The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Cop to violin shop

Bob Beveridge is a Falkland violin collector and The Violin Shop owner. He talks to Michael Alexander, who discovers he has more than a few strings to his bow

-

Falkland violin shop owner Bob Beveridge is a former policeman who left the force for things of beauty.

Retired Scottish Crime Squad detective Bob Beveridge can recount many colourful tales about the last 40 years he has spent collecting – and selling – violins from his shop in Falkland. From the times he got to know legendary American singer-songwriter Johnny Cash and his daughter Rosanne who were researchin­g their Fife roots, to the day he found an unexploded Luftwaffe bomb during his daily run up the East Lomond and caused “panic” when he carried it down the hill to be made safe.

And with his shop front being used for several scenes in the British-American TV drama Outlander, as well as gifts he’s recently received from Russian visitors, he admits it’s “never been a dull moment”.

But the 75-year-old becomes subdued when he thinks back to the day, almost 40 years ago, when he decided to cut short his police career.

One Sunday morning Bob was working in the identifica­tion bureau with Glasgow CID when he was called to the police mortuary to fingerprin­t three murder victims. One had been stabbed, the second shot and the third had been kicked to death after a farewell party.

That grim scene, coming soon after Bob had to photograph the charred remains of three boys after a house fire, convinced him that working seven days a week and sometimes nearly 24 hours a day was not for him or his family.

So after 15 years in police work he decided to make a clean break and set up The Violin Shop back home in Fife – a string to his bow he’s been plucking ever since!

Raised in Kingskettl­e, Bob first became interested in violins as an 11-year-old when his family inherited a house containing old instrument­s including a cello. His aunt played the piano and his dad was a member of Kettle Brass Band.

But Bob never learned to play the violin and his guitar-playing abilities were cut short after he broke his finger in the Ben Nevis Race one year.

Leaving school at 15, and working for a spell with J&G Innes at Edenside Works, Cupar, he joined Fife Police aged 19 in 1962.

While with Glenrothes CID, he investigat­ed the “Unknown Bairn” who was found dead on Tayport beach in May 1971 and dealt with many “harrowing and disturbing” murders after being seconded to the Scottish Crime Squad in Edinburgh.

When he decided to go full time in the violin trade, however, he found his training with Glasgow CID helped him identify forgeries and fakes.

“I had been picking up old violins from junk shops since 15 years of age and had a huge collection,” he says, “So I decided to go into business as a violin dealer which I have been doing ever since.”

“When I left Glasgow Police I started selling violins at the famous Barras Market in Glasgow’s East End.

“Today, I do a lot of business with solicitors – house clearances and auctions. The most I’ve paid for one is £2,000 – £3,000.”

Bob says what he enjoys most is meeting people from all over the globe.

“It’s the palace that attracts them,” he adds. “Once you’ve been to the palace in a wee place like Falkland they often finish up in my shop.”

The most I’ve paid for a violin is £2,000 – £3,000

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom