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The sleepy little town that Bangalore was when I
landed there in 1951 to join college has grown into a huge metropolis of 6.5
million people. It is now the third most populous city in the country. The
transformation was slow to start with but gained rapid momentum with the IT
explosion in the early nineties. The place that used to be called ‘Pensioners
Paradise’ became ‘Silicon Valley of India’.
In October 2006 the Karnataka State
Government decided to change the city’s name from Bangalore to Bengaluru. There is a tradition
behind this. An 11th century Hoysala king, according to legend, was
lost during a hunting expedition. Wandering hungry and tired, he came across an
old woman who gave him boiled beans to eat. The king called the area
‘benda-kal-ooru’ which, in the local language Kannada means ‘place of boiled
beans’. This tag became mutated to ‘Bengaluru’. Bangalore is its Anglicized version.
Bangalore was once, long ago, called ‘AuspiciousCity’.
Then, ‘Land of Heroes’. Labels for the place in the modern times include
‘Garden City’, ‘Stone City’ because of the light gray granite available
abundantly in the area, ‘City of Pubs’, ‘Floriculture Capital of India’, ‘Fashion
Capital of India’ and ‘Fruit Market of the South’.
Different dynasties including Western Gangas, Cholas, Hoysala and Vijayanagara have
ruled over the area, but the township was founded by Kempe Gowda I, who raised
a mud fort there in 1537 A.D. The Bijapur army defeated Kempe Gowda III in 1638
and captured Bangalore.
It was then bestowed on Shahji Bhonsle. But Bhonsle’s son Venkaji was
vanquished by the Mughal general Kasim Khan in 1687. The Mughals sold the city
to Chikkadevaraja Wodeyar of Mysore.
In 1759 the then king of Mysore
gifted it to his commander Hyder Ali. The British defeated Hyder’s son Tippu
Sultan in 1799 at Sreerangapatana and restored Bangalore
to the Mysore
kingdom.
In 1809 the British moved their troops from
Sreerangapatna to a large cantonment they built at Halsur (Ulsoor) on the North
East of the old Bangalore
town. This resulted in Bangalore
growing as two distinctive segments – the old ‘City’ and the Cantonment.
The City was under Mysore rule. The Cantonment was part of the
Madras Presidency and a major seat of the Raj in the South. It became a world
of sahibs, soldiers and Anglo-Indians, of butlers, ayahs, malis and a retinue of
servants, of horses, racing and clubs, of bungalows and gardens, of football,
cricket, hockey, boxing and golf.
This scenario had not changed too much when
I reached Bangalore Cantonment Station one June morning fifty-eight years back.
The first thing that hit me was the cold. The elevation of Bangalore, which is
located in the south-eastern part of Karnataka (formerly Mysore) on the Deccan
Plateau (12.97° N 77.56° E), is a little over 3000 feet (980m) above sea level.
Though warmer now than it was half a century back, the climate is still
reasonably comfortable.
The place did not have many taxis or buses
those days. I took a jutka (horse drawn carriage) to St. Joseph’s College Hostel on Lal Baugh Road; it
was a semi-circular granite building that was a landmark. Along the way we did
pass a few cars but mostly it was horse carts and hordes of bicycles. Bangalore then had a
large two wheeler (no scooters) population. Rent-a-bicycle shops were quite
popular.
Like me, many youngsters from different
parts of India
and abroad flocked to the cool, quiet and green city for studies. Even those
days the place had good schools, colleges, and major research institutions.
This base in educational facilities in the early days and its subsequent growth
certainly contributed to Bangalore’s
transition from a quaint little town to a vibrant knowledge and hi-tech capital.
With Independence
the City and Cantonment were brought under one administration. The process of
integration was slow but sure and Bangalore
turned into a truly cosmopolitan metropolis. Today on the streets one can hear
not only English, Kannada and other South Indian languages, but also Hindi,
Punjabi, Bengali and even, occasionally, French and Japanese.
One of the first visible impacts of Independence was the exodus of a friendly, colourful, and
lively people who were part and parcel of life in Bangalore - the Anglo Indians. Usually they
were thought of as engine drivers, secretaries and nurses. But the community
had made commendable contributions to sports, defense services, music, and to
the character of Bangalore
itself.
The city’s communal harmony was a factor
that helped its business boom. Two eminent men with great foresight – M.
Visvesvarayya and Mirza Muhammad Ismail - paved the way for the progress that
was to come.
Rail link to Madras was established and telegraph was
introduced in the second half of 19th century. Early 20th century saw Bangalore becoming perhaps the first city in India to be
electrified. It had major industries even before Independence. The most important one was
Hindustan Aircraft (now Hindustan Aeronautics Limited) set up in 1940. There
were several Americans attached to this establishment during WW II. They
introduced softball game and Bangalore
used to have a Softball League. Another American game, basketball, too was
popular.
After Independence
several Public Sector Undertakings and defence establishments came up. Bangalore was soon
recognized internationally as an industry-friendly city and attracted several
Indian and foreign investors. To man the new ventures, many bright young
scientists, technologists and management experts from all over India moved in.
It was a phenomenal growth. Today, according to one estimate, there are over 10,000
industrial units in and around the city.
All through the process of expansion, the
city breathed through its two beautiful parks - CubbonPark
and Lal Baugh - and the Place Grounds. But the mini-garden circles at road
junctions have mostly disappeared. The lakes in and around Bangalore – the major ones being Ulsoor,
Sankey and Yedyur - too help. Then there are the open spaces of the Parade
Grounds, and the city’s playing fields and stadiums which have produced many
eminent sports persons of All-India and international fame.
During the first part of my college days,
India Coffee House (now Indian Coffee House) on the MG Road was the place we used to
frequent. It had a laid back atmosphere and excellent coffee and snacks at
reasonable prices. One could sit there and talk for hours. When Parade Café
opened on St. Marks Road
around 1953, most of the college crowd shifted there. Occasionally we visited one
of the billiards parlours, Old Bull & Bush on Brigade Road. That was where the star of Bangalore’s boxing days,
Gunboat Jack used to hang around. This Afro American was on the skid row by
early 1950s. Later the US Government shipped him back home.
Today pubs with saucy names have taken-over.
The top bracket West End and modest Victoria
were the only hotels to speak of half a century back; Woodlands and others
opened later. Another one, Central Hotel near the CubbonPark
end of MG Road
closed down by 1960. Bangalore
is now jammed with luxury hotels but shortage of rooms is felt often.
The symbiosis of Bangalore nurtured diverse cultural
activities and art forms. Of late these are showcased in an annual winter event
called Bengaluru Habba. The mega show includes Carnatic music, jazz,
performing arts, crafts including pottery and weaving and painting. Enough
corporations and affluent people are around to extend patronage. A recent study
shows that Bangalore is the second ranked city
in India
for millionaire homes – over a hundred thousand of them! Many of the rich are
young.
Where have all the cute little bungalows and
gardens gone? Several of them were demolished to accommodate towering glass
fronted office buildings, lines of multi-storied apartment complexes, modern
Malls, multiplexes and lounge bars. The city is bursting at the seams,
spreading out in all directions. The skyline is changing almost daily. During a
recent visit to Bangalore
I lost my way at night in the Cantonment area which I used to know so well!
The vertical and horizontal expansion of the
city brings problems in its wake -traffic congestion, pollution, criminal
activity and so on. Civic amenities are severely stretched, be it power, water
supply, street cleaning or road repairs. Infrastructure development is
struggling to catch up with the fast mounting requirements.
The new International airport thirty kilometres
away from the city at Devanahalli, Tippu Sultan’s birth place, is a major
contribution to the development of Bangalore.
Another critical project is the Metro Rail. It got off to a start almost a
decade late. The first phase is expected to be completed in 2011.
Sixty years back Bangalore used to sleep by nine o’ clock at
night. Today it is known as a city that never sleeps. A silent witness to this
transformation is the Bugle Rock, an ancient granite formation that was Kempe
Gowda’s watchtower. It is one of the several interesting sights in the area.