History of Mumbai
Ancient yet modern, fabulously rich yet achingly poor.
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, which have since been
joined together by a series of reclamations, formed part of the kingdom of Ashoka, the
famous Emperor of India.
After
his death, these islands passed into the hands of various Hindu rulers until
1343. In that year, the Mohammedans of Gujerat took
possession and the Kings of that province
of India ruled for the
next two centuries. The only vestige (mark) of their dominion over these
islands that remains today is the mosque at Mahim.
In
1534 the Portuguese, who already possessed many important trading centers on
the western coast, such as Panjim, 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".
A
hundred and twenty-eight years later the islands were given to the English King
Charles II
in dowry on his marriage to Portuguese Princess Catherine of Braganza in 1662. In the year 1668 the islands
were acquired by the English East India Company on lease from the crown for an
annual sum of 10 pounds in gold; so little did the British 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 Kolis used to call the islands "Mumba" after Mumbadevi, the
Hindu deity to whom a temple is dedicated at Babulnath
near Chowpatty's sandy beaches.
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.
Sir George Oxenden became the first British
Governor of the islands, and was succeeded later by Mr. Gerald Aungier who made
Bombay more
populous by attracting Gujerati traders, Parsi ship-builders, and Muslim and Hindu manufacturers
from the mainland. He fortified defenses by constructing the Bombay Castle
(the Fort, since then vanished except for a small portion of the wall) and
provided stability by constituting courts of law.
Between 1822
and 1838, cattle from the congested fort area used to graze freely at the Camp Maidan (now called Azad Maidan), an open ground opposite the Victoria Terminus. In
1838, the British rulers introduced a 'grazing fee' which several cattle-owners
could not afford. Therefore, Sir
Jamshedji Jeejeebhoy spent
Rs. 20,000 from his own purse for purchasing some grasslands
near the seafront 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.
The Zoroastrian Towers of Silence on Malabar hill were
built by Seth
Modi Hirji Vachha in 1672. The
Zoroastrians believe in venerating the earth, fire, and water and hence they
prefer to expose their dead to the elements and flesh-eating birds within the
confines of the Towers of Silence. 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. Many commuters going to the Fort by
boat between islands lost their lives when there was a storm during the
monsoons (July to September). During the next 40 years much was done to improve
matters. Reclamation work to stop the breeches at Mahalaxmi
and Worli were undertaken. The Hornby Vellard was completed in 1784,
during the Governorship of Mr. Hornby. 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 at the total cost of Rs.1,57,000
donated entirely by Lady Avabai Jamsetjee
Jeejeebhoy, wife of the first baronet Sir Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy with a
stipulation that no toll would be charged to citizens for its use by the
government. Initially the cost was estimated at Rs.100,000
but as the work commenced in 1842 the cost escalated. When the initial sum was
exhausted and work about to stop Lady Jeejeebhoy once again dipped in
to her personal purse with a second donation to the treasury of Rs.57,000.
Sir Robert Grant (1779-1838)
governed Bombay from 1835 to 1838 and was
responsible for the construction of a number of roads between Bombay and the hinterland. The Thana and Colaba
Causeways were built during his tenure as well as the Grant Medical
College attached to the
Sir Jamshedji Jeejeebhoy
(J.J.) Group of hospitals.
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.
The Great Indian Peninsular (GIP) and the Bombay Baroda and Central
India (BB&CI) Railway were started in 1860 and a regular
service of steamers on the west coast was commenced in 1869. Also during this
period Bombay
enjoyed great economic wealth. Raw cotton from Gujerat
was shipped to Lancashire in England
through Bombay
port, and after being spun and woven into cloth, returned to be sold in the
Indian market. The outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861 increased the
demand for cotton in the West and several personal fortunes were made during
this period from the resulting trade. The opening of the Suez Canal in 1869
brought the West closer to Bombay,
and as the city became more prosperous, many schemes were launched for
reclaiming additional land and building more roads and wharves. Bombay began to attract
fortune hunters by the hundreds and the population had swelled from 13,726 in
1780 to 644,405 in 1872, in a little less than a hundred years. By 1906 the
population of Bombay
was to become 977,822.
In 1858, following the First War of Independence
(the British called it the "Sepoy Mutiny")
of 1857 in which the Rani of Jhansi
and her infant son strapped on her back were killed, the East India Company was
accused of mismanagement and the islands reverted to the British Crown. In 1862
Sir Baartle Frere was appointed Governor,
an office which he held until 1867. By 1862 the town had spread over the lands
reclaimed through constructions of causeways and it is from this date we have
the rise of the modern city of Bombay.
In 1864 a fountain was to be erected in his honour at
the Victoria Gardens by the Agri-Horticultural
Society of Western India. Somehow, the plans were changed at the last moment
and the fountain, named after the Greek goddess Flora,
was placed in the centre of the city on what used be known as Hornby Road.
Unfortunately, no plaque was placed on the fountain to commemorate the name of
Governor in whose memory it was supposed to have been erected.
Around
1860 the piped water supply from Tulsi and Vehar lakes (and later Tansa) was
inaugurated. One reform which met with much superstitious opposition, before it
was implemented, was the sealing and banning the use of water from open wells
and tanks that bred mosquitoes. A good drainage system was also constructed at
the same time. However, several decades later, the same wells were to serve Bombay by providing
non-potable water to supplement the same from the lakes. This was true
especially during those years when the monsoons failed to provide sufficient
water in the catchment areas of the lakes. However,
well water is now used all over the city to supplement the water received from
the lakes.
The later half of the 19th century 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, 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
docks at Bombay are a monument of the industry,
enterprise and integrity of the Wadia family which
moved in from Surat
at the instigation of the British. In 1870 the Bombay Port Trust was formed. In
1872, Jamshedji
Wadia, a
master ship-builder constructed the "Cornwalis",
a frigate of 50 guns, for the East India Company, a success which led to
several orders from the British Navy. In all the Wadias,
between 1735-1863 built 170 war vessels for the Company, 34 man-of-war for the
British Navy, 87 merchant vessels for private firms, and three vessels for the
Queen of Muscat at Bombay docks.
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. The
closing years of the 19th Century were tragic for Bombay as the bubonic plague caused great
destruction of human life once more. One significant result of the plague was
the creation of the City Improvement Trust which in later years encouraged the
development of the suburbs for residential purposes to remove the congestion in
the city.
As Bombay's
superintendent of police in 1885, Charles Forjett
was a favourite of the Indian people. Many wept
openly when he returned to England.
He sacked British constables who unduly harassed the locals and cracked down on
the Parsi mafia which was involved in the liquor
business in the Falkland Road
area, which included the famous "Play House" which the locals
corrupted to "pillhouse". The "Pillhouse" area would acquire notoriety in later years
as the infamous "cages" area housing Bombay's infamous red-light district.
Lord Sandhurst governed Bombay
between 1895 and 1900 and it was during his tenure that the Act was passed
which constituted the City Improvement Trust which, among other things, built
the Sandhurst
Road in 1910 and handed it over to the municipality.
The Sandhurst
Road railway station (upper level) was built in
1921.
As a
result of a mysterious fire which started in one of its holds, on a very hot
summer's day on Friday April 14, 1944, the ship "Fort
Stikine"
(7420 tons) blew up in the Bombay
docks. At the time the ship was about to unload a lethal combination of cargo
of dried fish and cotton bales (loaded from Karachi), timber, gun powder,
ammunition, and gold bars from London (the latter to stabilize the Indian
Rupee, which was sagging due to the Second World War and fear of invasion from
Japan). The gold bullion was valued at approx. two million Pounds Sterling at that time.
Nobody is certain as to how the fire started but the two explosions which
followed were so loud that windows rattled and/or shattered as far away as Dadar, a distance of 8 miles. The destruction in the docks
and surrounding area was immense and several hundred dock workers were killed
instantly. A majority of brave men of the Bombay Fire Brigade, who answered the
call to duty immediately after the first blast, lost their lives in the second
explosion (a monument has been erected in the docks in their honour). The population of the city was panic stricken as rumours spread rapidly that the explosions signaled the
commencement of hostilities by the Japanese on the same style as the surprise
attack on Pearl Harbour in the Hawaiian
islands in December 1941. The Japanese
were in fact nowhere near Bombay since they were
engaged in fighting a losing battle with the British army in Burma at that
time. Nevertheless, the Bombay Central (BB&CI) and Victoria Terminus (GIP)
stations were packed to capacity with terrorized people fleeing the city in
whichever train they could board for their villages with all belongings they
could carry. At the time of the explosion, one of the gold bars crashed through
the roof of the third floor apartment of a Parsi
named D.C. Motivala more than a mile from the docks.
He promptly returned the gold bar to the authorities. Almost all of the other
gold bars were subsequently recovered from different parts of the city; the
last ones to be found were hauled up from the bottom of the sea in the docks.
However, during normal dredging operations carried out periodically to maintain
the depth of the docking bays one or two gold bars were found intact
sporadically as late as the 1970s and returned to the British government. The
government took full responsibility for the disaster and monetary compensation
was paid to citizens who made a claim for loss or damage to property.
The
Port Trust Railway from Ballard Pier to Wadala was
opened in 1915. Along this railway were built grain and fuel oil depots. The
kerosene oil installations were developed at Sewri
and for petrol at Wadala. In the same year the first
overhead transmission lines of the Tata Power Company were erected, and in 1927
the first electric locomotives manufactured by Metropolitan Vickers of England
were put into service for passenger trains up to Poona and Igatpuri
on the GIP railway and later electric multiple unit (EMUs)
commuter trains ran up to Virar on the BB&CI
railway and up to Karjat and Kasara
of the GIP railway. During the Second World War these EMUs
were joined together to form long trains which carried troops and small arms
and ammunition to and from Bombay
to the hinterland.
The
Fort (downtown) area in Bombay derives its name
from the fact that the area fell within the former walled city, of which only a
small fragment survives as part of the eastern boundary wall of the St. George's Hospital. In 1813 there were 10,801
persons living in the fort, 5,464, or nearly 50%, of them Parsis.
With the growth of the city more people came from the Fort to such suburbs as Byculla, Parel, Malabar Hill, and
Mazagaon. European sports clubs for cricket and other
games came in to existence early in the 19th Century. The Bombay Gymkhana was
formed in 1875 exclusively for Europeans. 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.
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.
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 K.F. Nariman,
president of the Bombay Provincial Congress Committee and former mayor of Bombay. Churchgate Street
was also renamed as Veer Nariman
Road after independence.
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.
In 1850 the Companies Act was passed and that heralded the commencement of the
joint stock companies in India.
The American Civil War of 1860 helped Indians to establish brokerage houses in Bombay. The leading
broker at the time, Premchand Roychand, assisted in framing
conventions, ground rules and procedures for trading which are respected even
now. He was the first Indian broker who could speak and write in fluent
English. The exchange was established with 318 members with a fee of Re. 1/-.
This fee has gradually increased over the years and today it is a over a crore.
In January
1899, the Brokers' Hall was inaugurated by James M. MaClean, M.P.
After the First World War the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) was housed in an old
building near the Town Hall. In 1928, the present plot of land was acquired
surrounded by Dalal
Street, Bombay Samachar Marg, and Hammam Street.
A building was constructed in 1930 and occupied in December of that year.
In 1995 the operations and dealings of the BSE
were fully computerized and thus the famous out-cry system of share trading was
replaced by screen based trading as in other modern stock exchanges around the
world. Today Bombay is the financial and
business capital of India.
The BSE is housed in the 28-storied Phiroze Jeejeebhoy Towers
in the same place where the old building once stood. Sir Phiroze
Jamshedji
Jeejeebhoy
was the Chairman of the Exchange from 1966 till his death in 1980. The building
has been named after him since its construction commenced during his
Chairmanship and was completed just as he passed away.