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Heritage House To Showcase Empire Builder

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  • Heritage House To Showcase Empire Builder

    HERITAGE HOUSE TO SHOWCASE EMPIRE BUILDER

    Times of India
    http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Chennai/H eritage_house_to_showcase_empire_builder/articlesh ow/4077783.cms
    Feb 5 2009
    India

    CHENNAI: A once ill-maintained corner in a colonial structure in
    Charles Street inside Fort St George will open its windows on Thursday
    to showcase to the public the fascinating life of Robert Clive, who,
    it can be said with some justification, laid the foundations of the
    British empire in India.

    Called Clive's House, for it was where Rober Clive lived for a
    while (the only other place where Clive lived in the south was
    the Collector's House in Old Cuddalore), the 300-year-old imposing
    brick-and-mortar structure, complete with wooden floors and staircases,
    high ceilings, and a roof supported by British steel girders, was
    originally called Admiralty House because the courts of Admiralty
    established in 1687 as a court of appeal sat in this building.

    Clive is said to have rented this house from an Armenian merchant. It
    even served as the governor's town house for some time. Today, of
    course, it is the southern regional headquarters of the Archaeological
    Survey of India (ASI).

    "We have created a Clive's Corner, chronicling his life, his battles,
    correspondence and excerpts from his speeches," says Sathyabama
    Badrinath, superintending archaeologist, ASI, Chennai Circle.

    Son of a Shropshire squire, Clive arrived in Madras in 1743. Aged 18,
    he was a writer or clerk for the East India Company. Clive is, of
    course, well known for having successfully captured Arcot, capital
    of the Carnatic then, to provide the momentum for the British to
    expand, at the expense of the French, as well as for his defeat of
    Siraj-ud-Daulah with the help of Mir Jafar in the famous Battle of
    Plassey. In both instances, Clive showed supreme resilience, battling
    with far fewer troops than his adverseries.

    The first marriage register of the St Mary's Church in the Fort records
    the marriage of Robert Clive with Margaret Maskelyne. Their marriage
    was registered and solemnised at the church, which, consecrated in
    1680, is the oldest Protestant church this side of the Suez.

    The opening of Clive's Corner, a permanent exhibition, is a welcome
    effort by ASI to highlight the life and times of a man, an empire
    builder, who also learnt his craft in Madras that is Chennai.
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