--- On Mon, 5/4/09, B P G PAI <[email protected]> wrote:


From: B P G PAI bpgpai@


 





 very interesting..... a peek at history
 
The city of Bombay originally consisted of seven islands, namely 
Colaba, Mazagaon, Old Woman's Island, Wadala, Mahim, Parel, and 
Matunga-Sion. This group  of islands, formed part of the kingdom of King Ashoka 
(170 B.C.), which have since been  joined together by a series of reclamations. 
 
After his death, these islands passed in to the hands of various Hindu 
rulers until 1343. In that year, the 'Muslim Rulers' of Gujarat took 
possession of the islands, and ruled that province  for the next two centuries. 
The only vestige of their dominion over these islands that remains today is the 
 mosque at Mahim. Who tore everything down? The Portuguese/British perhaps? 
Post partition anti-muslim mobs perhaps? 
 
In 1534 the Portuguese, who already possessed many important trading centers  
on the western coast, such as Panjim (Goa), Daman, and Diu, took Bombay by  
force of arms from the 'Mohammedans' . This led to the establishment of  
numerous churches which were constructed in areas where the majority  of people 
were  Roman Catholics. There used to be two areas in Bombay called 
'Portuguese Church'. However, only one church with Portuguese-style facade 
still   remains; it is the St. Andrew's church at Bandra. The Portuguese also 
fortified their  possession by building forts at Sion, Mahim, Bandra, and 
Bassien  which, although in disrepair, can still be seen. They named their new 
possession as 'Bom Baia' which in Portuguese means 'Good Bay'. 
 
This name was later changed to 'Bombay' by the British and much later  
challenged by the Shiv Sainiks, a  political party in the state, saying that 
the name of the city was ' Mumbai' from the Mumbadevi temple. Nobody really  
put up a fight. The fact of the matter is the Kohlis who are the fishermen of  
that area, called a small section (Babulnath to be precise) of the 
islands, 'Mumba'. This in the mid 1990's became a huge political issue with the 
Shiv Sena party, who were losing a grip on the city.  
 
About 130 years later the islands were given as dowry to the English 
King Charles II on his marriage to Portuguese Princess Catherine of Braganza 
in 1662. In 1668 the islands were acquired by the British East India Company 
on  lease from the crown for 10 pounds in gold/per annum. Obviously the British 
did not value these islands at that time. The Company, which was operating from 
Surat, was in search for another deeper water port so that larger vessels could 
dock, and found the islands of Bombay suitable for development. The 
shifting of the East India Company's headquarters to Bombay in 1687 led to the 
eclipse of Surat as a principal trading center. The British corrupted the  
Portuguese name 'Bom Baia' to ' Bombay'.

The first Parsi to arrive in Bombay was Dorabji Nanabhoy Patel in 1640. The 
Parsis, originally from Iran, migrated to India about 900 years ago. This they  
did to save their religion, Zoroastrianism,  from invading Arabs who 
proselytized Islam. However, in 1689-90, when a severe plague had struck down 
most of the Europeans, the Siddi Chief of Janjira made several attempts to  
re-possess the islands by force, but the son of the former, a trader named 
Rustomji Dorabji Patel (1667-1763), successfully warded off the attacks on 
behalf of the British with the help of the 'Kolis', the original fisher-folk 
inhabitants  of these islands. The remnants of the Koli settlements can still 
be seen at Backbay reclamation, Mahim, Bandra, Khar, Bassien and Madh island. 
 
Bombay then had a sucession of British governers, who attracted Gujarati 
traders, Parsi ship builders, Hindu and Muslim businessmen; and made the city 
more populous. A city court was started to uphold the law. A fort was also 
built, none of which remains, except a small portion of the wall.  Governers 
like Oxenden, Aungier & Grant helped Bombay grow and set up hospitals, roads 
etc 
 
The Zoroastrian Towers of Silence on Malabar hill were built by Seth Modi Hirji 
Vachha in 1672.The first fire-temple was also built in the same year by Seth 
Vachha opposite his residence at Modikhana within the British fort. Both of the 
these structures can still be seen today although they have been  expanded and 
strengthened. 
 
The inroads of the sea at Worli, Mahim, and Mahalaxmi turned the ground between 
the islands into swamps making Bombay an extremely unhealthy place at that 
time. Reclamation work to stop the breeches at Mahalaxmi and Worli were 
undertaken. In 1803 Bombay was connected with Salsette by a causeway at Sion. 
The island of Colaba was joined to Bombay in 1838 by a causeway now called 
Colaba Causeway and the Causeway connecting Mahim and Bandra was completed in  
1845, which was done by Lady Avabai Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy. 
 
In the mid 1800's the cattle that people owned used to graze at the lush Camp 
Maidan (Azad Maidan). The British, always ready to levy taxes, started a  
grazing tax, which most people could not afford. Sir Jamshedji Jeejeebhoy spent 
Rs. 20,000 to buy some grasslands near the sea front at Thakurdwar and saw that 
the starving cattle grazed without a fee in that area. In time the area  became 
to be known as 'Charni' meaning grazing. When a railway station on the BB&CI 
railway was constructed there it was called Charni Road. 

On Saturday 16th of April, 1853 a 21-mile long railway line, the first in  
India, between Bombay's Victoria Terminus and Thana was opened. In 1860, the 
railroads connected Baroda and Central India. With the Suez canal also opening 
in Africa, Bombay saw a great ecomonic boom. Cotton being the main export.  
Many families made their fortunes during that time. Even the Americans 
imported cotton during the Civil War that started in 1861. The population of 
the city went from about 13,000 in 1770 to about 644,000 in 1870.  
 
In 1858, after the first war for Independance, where people like the Rani of 
Jhaansi played a big part, Bombay was taken back by the crown and the East 
India Company was in dire straits. Governer Frere had a fountain made in his  
honour at that time. Which was later called Flora Fountain, but this is a fact 
that is quite unknown to the general public. 

Then in 1863, the Governer got piped water from the lakes ( Tulsi, Vehar &  
Tansa). After which they banned all open water storage systems like water tanks 
and wells, which were breeding grounds for mosquitos This was met with a lot of 
opposition. 

The later half of the 19th c entury was also to see a feverish construction  of 
buildings in Bombay, many of which such as, the Victoria Terminus, the General 
Post Office, Municipal Corporation, the Prince of Wales Museum, Rajabai Tower 
and Bombay University, St. Xavier's College, Elphinstone College and the  
Cawasji Jehangir Hall, the Crawford Market, the Old Secretariat (Old Customs 
House) and the Public Works Department (PWD) Building, still stand today as 
major landmarks. The Gateway of India was built to commemorate the visit of  
king George V and Queen Mary for the Darbar at Delhi in 1911. The Princess Dock 
was built in the year 1885 and the Victoria Dock and the Mereweather Dry Docks 
in 1891. Alexandra Dock was completed in 1914. 

Soon Bombay saw the rise of the Parsi Liquor Mafia in the 'Play House' area, 
which was later changed to Pillhouse by the locals and became a red light 
district. At this time a terrible episode of Bubonic Plague wiped out a huge  
population of Bombay.

The Bombay Gymkhana was formed in 1875 exclusively for Europeans, who played 
the game of cricket there. Other communities followed this example, and various 
Parsi, Muslim, and Hindu gymkhanas were started nearby with fierce sports 
competitions among them being organized on a communal basis. This was opposed 
by several secular minded persons, such as the late A.F.S. Talyarkhan, and 
sports teams based on community, especially cricket teams, came to an end  
gradually after independence from British rule in 1947. 



 Lord Sandhurst was the Governer after that from 1895-1900 and he was 
commemorated by naming a road and railway station after him.
 
Around 1914, a train line was started from Ballard Pier to Wadala, around the 
same time Tata Power Company set up overhead transmission lines. In 1927, 
electrical locomotives were imported from England (Vickers) and serviced the  
route between Pune and Igatpuri. These helped carry troops from Bombay to the 
rest of the country later, during WW-II. 
 
In April 1944, a fire started in the holds of the ship 'Fort Stikine' (7420  
tons), which was carrying Dried fish, Cotton bales, Gunpowder, Timber, 
Ammunition and Gold bars from London. There was about 2 million pounds sterling 
in gold, to stabilize the Indian Rupee.. The explosion, was so big and loud 
that  it could be felt till Dadar, more than 8 miles away. The docks and the 
surrounding areas were completely destroyed. Over 120 brave men from the Bombay 
Fire Brigade in the second blast and hundreds of dock workers lost their life 
(a monument was erected for them). The locals thought that the Japanese had 
attacked (like Pearl Harbour), which was not true, since they were currently 
fighting a losing battle. All the gold bars (which had landed all over the  
place) were subsequently returned over the next 30 years to the British 
government. All citizens who reported any damage to property or self, were 
promptly paid compensation. 
  
The historic session of the All India Congress Committee began on the 7th of  
August 1942. Its venue was the Gowalia Tank Maidan, where the congress was born 
in 1885. It was at this session that the 'Quit India' call was given by Mahatma 
Gandhi and other Indian National Congress leaders. The Indian leaders  were 
arrested by the British soon afterwards but the momentum of the Quit India 
movement could not be stopped and led to the final withdrawal of the British on 
15 August 1947. The last British troops on Indian soil left  for England 
through the archway of the Gateway of India on that day. They bade farewell 
from where they had entered 282 years before. The people of Bombay, in a 
gesture of generosity wished them bon voyage, forgetting the bitter memories 
of  the fight for independence. Today the maidan from where the call to 'Quit 
India' was given is called the 'August Kranti Maidan'. 
 
After independence the Congress party led by Jawaharlal Nehru at the Center  
was swept to power in most of the Indian States, which were constituted on the 
basis of language spoken by the majority of its people. The Bombay State 
included the city as its seat of government. In 1960 the state of Bombay was  
split into Maharashtra and Gujarat states again on linguistic basis, the former 
retaining Bombay city as its capital. The Congress party continued to 
administer Maharashtra until 1994 when it was replaced by the Shiv 
Sena-Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) coalition. 
 
The Stock Exchange at Bombay was established in 1875 as 'The Native Share and 
Stockbrokers Association' which has evolved over the decades in to its  present 
status as the premier Stock Exchange in India. It is one of the oldest in Asia 
having preceded even the Tokyo Stock Exchange which was founded in 1878. In the 
early days the business was conducted under the shade of a banyan tree in front 
of the town hall. The tree can still be seen in the Horniman Circle Park.
 
With the success of the back-bay reclamation scheme in the late 1960s and early 
1970s Nariman Point became the hub of the business activity. Several  offices 
shifted from the Ballard Estate to Nariman Point which ultimately became one of 
the most expensive real estate in the world as high demand pushed prices to 
astronomical limits. Nariman Point is named after KF. Nariman, president of the 
Bombay Provincial Congress Committee and former mayor of Bombay.
 
'Bollywood' is a term used to describe the Indian film industry. It has been a 
long story of a century, starting in 1901, with the early shaky screen  images 
turning into a multi pronged and multi winged empire of its own, that has 
yielded about 30,000 feature films and thousands of documented short films. 
These are almost all musical family melodramas which rule the roost. Cinema  
has raised India's flag high in the world as the consistently largest film 
producer. But when it comes to quality the flag has to fly half mast. 
 
The glamourous image of Bombay and the rumour that everyone is as beautiful as 
the movie stars, attracted people from all over India to this city. But 
eventually the city could not provide jobs to these teeming millions and these 
people had to beg for a living and slowly slums began to flourish all over  the 
city, especially near the railway lines. The city also has the dubious record 
of the second biggest slum in the world (Dharavi). 
  
Crime is on my mind: terrorists, contract killings, extortion, explosions, 
shoot-outs, naaka-bandi, encounter deaths.... The slums and the poor strengthed 
Bombay's immense mafia presence. There is huge evil nexus of the underworld, 
politicians and Bombay's police force. Indian politics are filled with  
convicted felons/criminals, more tha n 700. Slum lords and smugglers like 
Dawood Ibrahim, Abu Salem and Iqbal Mirchi rose to fame. They became the feared 
names in India. The untouchables.
 
Today Mumbai/Bombay is the financial and business capital of India. 
 
 
 






 


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