Grant was born at the farmhouse of
Aldourie, Inverness-shire,
Scotland in March 1746, when his father, Alexander Grant, known as 'Alister-an-claigh' ('Alexander the Sword(sman)')– a reflection of his martial talents, was fighting for the
Jacobites, against the British Crown, and the following month fought at the
Battle of Culloden. His father was severely wounded but survived, joined a Highland regiment which the government raised for service in America and died at Havana in 1762, of fever he contracted during the
siege of Havana. Charles Grant's mother was Margaret MacBean, daughter of Donald Macbean Esq., Tacksman (tenant) of Aldourie in the parish of Dores, descended from the
Macbeans of Kinchyle. However, Charles Grant himself was one of the growing number of Scots who prospered in the service of the
British Empire. In 1767, Grant travelled to India to take up a military position. Over subsequent years, he rose in the ranks of the British
East India Company. Initially, he became superintendent over its trade in
Bengal. Then, in 1787, having first acquired a personal fortune through silk manufacturing in
Malda,
Lord Cornwallis the Governor-General appointed Grant as a member of the East India Company's board of trade. Grant lived a profligate lifestyle as he climbed through the ranks, but after losing two children to
smallpox he underwent a
religious conversion. Viewing his life, including his efforts in India, from his new evangelical Christian perspective, moulded his career for the rest of his life. Grant returned to Britain in 1790 and was elected to
Parliament in 1802 for
Inverness-shire. He served as an MP until failing health forced him to retire in 1818. However, his relationship with the East India Company did not end. In 1804, he joined the company's Court of Directors, and in 1805, he became its chairman. He died on 31 October 1823, at his home, No.40
Russell Square, London, at the age of 77. His eldest son,
Charles, was born in India and later followed his father into politics, eventually becoming a
British peer as Baron
Glenelg. His other son,
Robert, followed his father into the Indian service and became
Governor of Bombay, as well as being a Christian
hymn writer. ==Indian affairs==