Remembering Those Who Stream-rolled British on High Seas ~ Great Martyrs of Land
Posted on the 02 February 2015 by Sampathkumar Sampath
I
had proudly posted about the great person who launched two vessels against the
British Imperialists with the support of Tilakar. In Nov 1906, steamships ‘S.S.Gaelia’ and
‘S.S.Lawoe’, were launched which I thought, ought to be viewed as the
foundation of shipping industry of the Nation.
Till it was challenged thus, shipping was
a monopoly enjoyed by the British
India Steam Navigation Company. The wily British reportedly slashed the fare
per trip to Re.1 (16 annas) per head.
Later the British company went
further by offering a free trip to the passengers plus a free umbrella, which
had ‘S.S.Gaelia’ and ‘S.S.Lawoe’ running nearly empty. The restrictive trade practices coupled by
the political actions taken against the
pioneer and other freedom fighters pushed the company towards bankruptcy is the
sad history. The exemplary fighting qualities made Sri V.O.
Chidambaram Pillai [fondly VOC – Kappal Ottiya Thamizhan] establish the
“Swadeshi Steam Navigation Company” during Nov 1906
The
British India Steam Navigation Company had earlier been formed in 1856 as the ‘Calcutta and Burmah
Steam Navigation Company’. The company had been formed out of Mackinnon,
Mackenzie & Co, a trading partnership of the Scots William Mackinnon and
Robert Mackenzie, to carry mail between Calcutta and Rangoon. Under the hand of
Lord Inchcape (James Lyle Mackay) who had become chairman in 1913, the company
became part of the P&O group of companies in 1914 through a complex
amalgamation, but continued with its own identity and organisation for another
nearly 60 years until 1972, when it was entirely absorbed into P&O.
As
one of the largest shipowners of all time, the company owned more than 500
ships and managed 150 more for other owners. At its height in 1922, BI had more
than 160 ships in the fleet, many built on Clydeside, Scotland.
Then
there was the Scindia Steam Navigation
Company, one of the oldest Indian
shipping companies that was founded in 1919, envisioned by Walchand Hirachand. It was a joint venture of Walchand along with
Narottam Morarjee, Kilachand Devchand and Lallubhai Samaldas all of them businessman
hailing from Gujarat. It was the first large scale Indian owned shipping
company and started an India — Europe service with the Loyalty (ex-RMS Empress
of India), but was forced to sign a 10 year agreement with British companies
and its shipping route was restricted to the Indian coastal shipping trade for
this period.
In
Oct 2013, there was this article in Times of India ‘They steamrolled British on
high seas in 1800s’ – which makes a very interesting reading – bringing forth,
hitherto unknown facts. Here is the same
reproduced :
An unexplored chapter
in Indian history has come to light with Paris based academic J B P More’s
latest work about the early history of steam navigation in India from 1836 to
1910 — the story of the Indians who defied the British and operated their own
fleets of steamships, which often sank due to pressure from the colonial
rulers. More, who’s in Chennai to deliver a lecture,
writes about an episode rarely touched upon by historians. Dwarkanath Tagore
and Jyotirindranath Tagore of today’s West Bengal, Dharmanathan Prouchandy of
Puducherry, Jamsetji Tata of Maharashtra, and V O Chidambaram Pillai (aka VOC)
of Tamil Nadu are among the businessmen who dared to run fleets to oppose the
British monopoly of sea routes.
Dwarkanath Tagore,
said More, was the first Indian to launch steam navigation in the Hooghly in
Bengal. “He couldn’t withstand the cutthroat competition from the British. In
1891, Prouchandy of Pondicherry launched a steam navigation line in the Mekong
delta of French Indochina. Due to obstruction by the French colonial
authorities, he soon wound up his business. Even though industrialist Jamsetji
Tata started the Tata Line to transport goods in 1894, it too closed down in a
year due to pressure from British,” said More, whose book ‘Indian Steamship
Ventures, 1836-1910’ explores the hidden history of Indian steam navigation.
Steam navigation
ventures were also started in south India at the same time. In 1906, two
navigation companies were launched in Tamil Nadu. “Si. Va. Company was the
first Indian and Tamil company to ply steamers between Tuticorin and Colombo.
They had a steamer called ‘Chusan’, but unable to bear the competition from the
British India Steam Navigation Company, they had to wind up. The failure of Si.
Va prompted VOC to mobilise funds and launch the Swadeshi Steam Navigation
Company in 1906. Even this company came under attack from the British and was
finally closed. The British literally shattered the dreams of Indians in steam
navigation,” said More, who teaches at INSEEC, Paris.
Although Dwarkanath
Tagore was the pioneer of Indian steam navigation, Prouchandy, a Tamilian from
Puducherry, was the first to establish steam navigation on his own in 1891.
Prouchandy ran his firm for a decade “Prouchandy ran his first two steamers
between Cambodia and Cochinchina [a region in Vietnam] in 1891. He is the first
Indian and Tamilian who founded a successful steam navigation line that
transported passengers, goods and postal items in French Indochina. He is the
first Indian to attempt to run a passenger steamer line in 1895 in the South
China Sea,” he said. Though Prouchandy succumbed to the British
tactics, he ran his company for almost a decade. “He was most successful in
withstanding pressure from the British. Even poet Subramania Bharati, who was
involved in promoting VOC’s venture, was unaware of the exploits of
Prouchandy,” said More.
Oct
2013 : http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Indians-steamrolled-British-on-high-seas-in-1800s/articleshow/23619634.cms
With
regards – S. Sampathkumar
30th
Jan 2015.