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  • The peregrinating cemetery

    Life & Style - Metroplus January 17, 2010

    The peregrinating cemetery

    The Hindu Hynmer's Obelisk


    It was 250 years ago this year that the British decided to raze the
    Indian settlement, Black Town, that they had encouraged to develop
    just north of the Fort's walls on what is today the High Court
    campus. And, as the settlement was cleared, the New Black Town,
    today's George Town, began to develop beyond the boundary of the
    Esplanade that replaced the levelled old town to provide the Fort's
    guns a clear field of fire.

    To the northwest of Old Black Town, in what is now the Law College
    campus, was the first British cemetery in South India. Lockyer, who
    c. l703 saw the old burial ground, wrote, `(It is) adorn'd with many
    stately Tombs... Some with lofty Spires carved with different Fancies,
    after the Indian manner; others in a lower Sphere gravely express the
    Merits of the Person for whose sake they were erected; and all in
    general have the most curious Workmanship in India bestow'd on them.'
    When the creation of the Esplanade started in 1760, the cemetery too
    was flattened. Only two monuments, considered non-threatening, were
    spared and they still survive behind the Law College hostel, the
    Hynmer's Obelisk, where the child David Yale is also interred, and the
    Powney vault. The two monuments had, in the 19th Century, been
    considered isolated memorials. It was only in the 1890s that it was
    discovered that they were part of a burial ground; when excavation
    work began for the Henry Irwin-designed, Namberumal Chetty-built Law
    College, and large quantities of bones were unearthed!

    The tombstones that survived the clearing operation were moved in 1763
    to St. Mary's Church in the Fort, where they were used to pave the
    courtyard. But even these suffered further damage when they were dug
    out and used to serve as gun-platforms on the ramparts when Hyder Ali
    threatened the Fort. Today, after having been replaced in the yard
    haphazardly, only 104 survive.

    The oldest British tombstone in South India, perhaps even in India...

    I don't know whether Surat or Machilipatnam have anything to say
    about that. It is now part of the St. Mary's courtyard, pieced
    together after fragments of it - collaterally damaged during the
    French 1758-59 siege - were found in the old burial ground. The
    inscription identifies it as the tombstone of Elizabeth Baker, wife of
    President Aaron Baker. She died at sea on their voyage from the Bantam
    settlement in Java, from where Baker was coming to Madras in 1752 to
    take charge of what had been named as the chief settlement of the
    British in the East. It was a position Madras was to enjoy till it was
    decided to transfer power to Calcutta in 1774. Elizabeth Baker died
    during childbirth shortly after leaving Bantam, and it was three weeks
    later than she was buried in Madras.

    A new St. Mary's cemetery was established on The Island c.1761, next
    to what is now the Metropolitan Transport's headquarters.

    When the postman knocked...

    * My reference to Blackbird fountain pens made in India by P. Orr's
    (Miscellany, December 21) has had V. Theetharappan recalling that
    P.A. Sanjeevi started the Pilot Pen Company sometime before World War
    II with Japanese inputs. When the Pilot Pen Company closed, Sanjeevi
    opened the Pilot Theatre in Royapettah.
    * Say something about the demolishing of the Binny's headquarters
    building on Armenian Street, `a beautiful heritage building,' says
    reader Rajesh Malhotra. What more can I say than what I said in July
    2005, and I quote: `A landmark in George Town, the headquarters of
    Binny's, has passed into the hands of the Indian Bank-I only hope the
    37,000 grounds-will not meet the same fate as so many other heritage
    properties owned by Government and units in the public sector. Most of
    these owners have the wherewithal to restore these properties,
    preserve a bit of our heritage and still earn something from
    them. But, the tendency has long been to pull down such properties and
    replace them with high-rises that earn already rich organisations
    substantially more. I hope that the Indian Bank will ensure that does
    not happen to a significant bit of Madras commercial history that it
    now owns-I hope-it will take its cue from Parry's where restoration
    has made an old landmark a striking monument to heritage.'
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