Business Standard

Howrah in 1909

The district gazetteer for Howrah in 1909 has a descriptio­n of the district that is considerab­ly different from today’s Howrah

- The author is chairman, Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister. Views are personal BIBEK DEBROY

The old Howrah district was considerab­ly different from today’s Howrah. There was a district gazetteer for Howrah in 1909 and this is what it said: “The history of Howrah, prior to the advent of European merchant adventurer­s, is practicall­y unknown, and any attempt to trace it must necessaril­y lead along a wide and somewhat insecure track of conjecture... With an area of 510 square miles and a population of 850,514 persons, it is the smallest district in Bengal and has a less numerous population than any district in the province except Angul, Palamau, Singhum and Darjeeling... The district contains two towns, Howrah and Bally, which extend along the river Hooghly for about 10 miles and contain more than one-fifth of the total district population. Since the constructi­on of the Hooghly bridge and the extension of tram lines there has been a growing tendency for workmen, who spend their days and earn their livelihood in the metropolis, to have their homes in Howrah; while several European and Indian gentlemen of Calcutta have houses or gardens in the town or its suburbs.”

Here is a descriptio­n of the state of vital statistics, with the system having been introduced in 1892: “Under the present system, compulsory registrati­on is in force in the towns, i.e. parents, guardians or the persons directly concerned are required to report births and deaths to the town police. In rural circles each village watchman is provided with a pocket book, in which he is required to have all births and deaths that may occur within his jurisdicti­on recorded by the village panchayat; these are reported on parade days at the police stations and outposts, which are the registerin­g centres. The statistics thus obtained are compiled and classified by the police, and submitted monthly to the Civil Surgeon, who prepares the figures for the whole district for inclusion in the annual report of the Sanitary Commission­er. The statistics are checked from time to time by superior police officers and by Inspectors and SubInspect­ors of Vaccinatio­n. In the towns, the higher level of intelligen­ce and the fear of legal penalties tend to make registrati­on and the classifica­tion of diseases more accurate than in the rural tracts. In the latter the reporting chaukidar is generally illiterate, and vital registrati­on is less correct, the chief defects being that still-births are very often omitted, while births of females and births in outlying parts, and among the lowest castes, are overlooked. Deaths are more carefully recorded, but the causes of death, except cholera and small-pox, are hopelessly confused, the bulk being classified under the general head of fever.”

How can there not be a descriptio­n of fish? “The principal varieties of river fish netted in the Hooghly river are hilsa, bhetki, tengra, and, during the season, tapsi or mango-fish (Polynemus paradiseus). The Hooghly from Uluberia to Diamond Harbour is in fact, noted for the delicious fish last named, which is described by Walter Hamilton (1820), “as the best and highest flavoured fish not only in Bengal, but in the whole world".” Bengalis do love to pse (as it is now spelt), but I wouldn’t have expected its descriptio­n in such superlativ­e terms. Non-Bengali Indians find hilsa difficult to handle. But another surprise: “Hilsa and mango-fish are especially popular among Europeans; but among Indians carps take the first place, the rui (Sanskrit rohita) being considered the king of fresh-water fish.”

“During the period preceding British rule roads in the modern sense of the word appear to have been unknown in the district... Nor is this to be wondered at, for, the country being intersecte­d by rivers, creeks, and channels, the waterways then as now furnished a natural and easy means of transit... On account of the large number of rivers and waterways, both Municipal and District Board roads have to be provided with many bridges, and in Howrah town several bridges have been built over the East Indian Railway and the Bengal-Nagpur Railway lines, the finest being the Buckland Bridge leading to Howrah station, which is more than a quarter mile long... By far the most important bridge, however, is the Howrah Bridge over the river Hooghly, which connects Howrah with Calcutta. This is a floating bridge, the middle section of which is movable so as to allow of the passage of vessels up and down the river... In 1871 an Act was passed empowering the Lieutenant-Governor to have the bridge constructe­d with Government capital, to make and maintain ways and approaches, to authorize the levy of tolls and to appoint Port Commission­ers to carry out the purposes of the Act. A contract was entered into with Sir Bradford Leslie for its constructi­on, and the work was forthwith commenced in England, the different portions of the bridge being sent out and put together in Calcutta. The work of constructi­on was completed in 1874; and the bridge having been opened to traffic in October of that year, was made over to the Port Commission­ers for management... The main item in the receipts consists of a small toll on railway traffic at the rate of ~1 per 100 maunds of goods, which is paid by the East Indian Railway.”

“Howrah, with its large labour force and fluctuatin­g population, is a convenient centre for criminals, and is frequented by profession­al criminals from up-country... They display a considerab­le amount of ingenuity and adopted up-to-date devices, e.g. by disguising themselves as policemen and using boats like those of the Port Police.”

 ??  ?? The Hooghly river in Calcutta during the British era
The Hooghly river in Calcutta during the British era
 ??  ?? The history of Howrah, prior to the arrival of European merchant adventurer­s, is unknown
The history of Howrah, prior to the arrival of European merchant adventurer­s, is unknown
 ??  ??

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