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Revision as of 17:08, 8 June 2010

Presidency College
Logo of Presidency College, Kolkata
TypeState Unitary University
Established20 January, 1817
FoundersRaja Rammohan Roy
PrincipalProf. Amitava Chatterjee.
Students2202 (in 2004)
(951 male, 1251 female)
Location86/1 College Street, Kolkata
CampusUrban
AffiliationsUGC
WebsiteOfficial website

Presidency College, Kolkata is a renowned unitary, state aided university, located in Kolkata, West Bengal and one of the top ten Indian colleges. In 2002 it was ranked number one by the weekly news magazine India Today. Established in 1817, it is the oldest educational institution in India. It was founded by Raja Ram Mohan Roy, and a number of other eminent personalities of Bengal, such as Raja Radhakanta Deb, Maharaja Tejchandra Ray of Burdwan, David Hare, Justice Sir Edward Hyde East and Babu Buddinath Mukherjee.

Initially established as the Mahapathshala wing of Hindu College, it was renamed Presidency College, i.e. the college of the Bengal Presidency, in 1855. In 2010 it was upgraded to the status of a full university by the Presidency University Act, 2010 passed in the West Bengal Legislative Assembly.

The longest serving Principal of Presidency College was J. Sutcliff, who was its Principal intermittently for 20 years, from 1852-1875. He was the Principal of the college when the college was renamed in 1855 and the new building at 86/1, College Street was built a few years later. The first Indian (acting) Principal of the college was P.K.Roy (1902; 1903 and 1905-1906) and the first Indian (full-time) Principal of the college was B.M.Sen (1931-1934 (acting) and 1934-1942).

The university offers undergraduate and postgraduate degrees as well as Ph.D. degrees in the natural sciences, humanities and the social sciences.

History

Principals

Origin

With the creation of the Supreme Court of Calcutta in 1773 many Hindus of Bengal showed eagerness to learn the English language. David Hare, in collaboration with Raja Radhakanta Deb had already taken steps introduce English education in Bengal. Babu Buddinath Mukherjee advanced the introduction of English as a medium of instruction further by enlisting the support of Sir Edward Hyde East, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court who called a meeting of 'European and Hindu Gentlemen' in his house in May 1816. The purpose of the meeting was to "discuss the proposal to establish an institution for giving a liberal education to the children of the members of the Hindu Community". The proposal was received with unanimous approbation and a donation of over Rs. 100, 000 was promised for the setting up of the new college. Raja Ram Mohan Roy showed full sympathy for the scheme but chose not to come out in support of the proposal publicly for fear of "alarming the prejudices of his orthodox countrymen and thus marring the whole idea".

The College was formally opened on Monday, January 20, 1817 with 20 'scholars'. The foundation committee of the college, which oversaw its establishment, was headed by Raja Rammohan Roy. The control of the institution was vested in a body of two Governors and four Directors. The first Governors of the college were Maharaja Tejchandra Bahadur of Burdwan and Babu Gopee Mohan Thakoor. The first Directors were Babu Gopeemohan Deb of Sobhabazar, Babu Joykissen Sinha, Babu Radha Madhab Banerjee and Babu Gunganarain Doss. Babu Buddinath Mukherjee was appointed as the first Secretary of the college. The newly established college mostly admitted Hindu students from affluent and progressive families, but also admitted non-Hindu students such as Muslims, Jews, Christians and Buddhists.

At first the classes were held in a house belonging to Gorachand Bysack of Garanhatta (later renamed 304, Chitpore Road), which was rented by the college. In January 1818 the college moved to 'Feringhi Kamal Bose's house' which was located nearby in Chitpore. From Chitpore, the college moved to Bowbazar and later to the building that now houses the Sanskrit College on College Street.

Early 19th century

The increasing realization of the value of western education made the college a coveted destination for scholars from all over the subcontinent. Pupils have come from almost all parts of the country, most notably from Bihar, Andhra Pradesh and Orissa. By 1828 enrolment of students steeply rose to 400. The obvious question, that then arose, was whether it would not be wiser for the Government of Bengal to establish a new 'English College' open to all classes and community of students. The Committee of Managers of Hindu College had soon after the inception of the college become dependent on government subsidy, due to serious shortage of funds. The government had began to play a greater role in the administration of the College.

By the middle of the nineteenth century the college had outgrown the plans made by its founders. Not only did it attract an ever-increasing number of scholars from the province and the rest of the Bengal Presidency, but it had also introduced courses in Law, Drawing, and Engineering, which catered to the needs of all classes of students - Hindus as well as non-Hindus. The government had also to consider whether this growing institution, spending a good deal of public money, could be retained as a non-governmental institution, particularly when Calcutta had no general college managed exclusively by the Council of Education. When other towns in Bengal had government colleges, it was felt in official and non-official circles that Calcutta should also have one.

From Hindu College to Presidency College

The proposal to set up a new college called the Calcutta College, or the Metropolitan College, open to students from all communities had already been mooted, but this would have meant greater financial liability for the government, which would also have to provide it with a competent faculty. A viable alternative seemed to be the conversion of Hindu College into a general institution open to all communities, managed by the government. On 21 October, 1853, Lord Dalhousie, the Governor of Bengal, suggested that

a new general college should be established at Calcutta by the government and designated "The Presidency College" .. the College should be open to all youths of every caste, class or creed.

The new name, 'Presidency', referred to the Bengal Presidency, which was the local administrative unit of British India. Accordingly, the Committee of Management for Hindu College met for the last time on 11 January, 1854. The Court of Directors renamed the College as Presidency College. The College started functioning on 15 June, 1855. The 'scholars' of the College Department of Hindu College were transferred to Presidency College and 101 new students were freshly admitted. Of these 101 pupils, two were Muslims, while the rest were Hindus.

Initially, the Civil Engineering College and Medical College, that were located nearby, were associated with Presidency College. But with the formation of the University of Calcutta, also located close by, the Council of Education shelved plans for allowing the expansion of the these three premier institutions into a full fledged university. The college was formally placed under the control of the University of Calcutta in 1857.

Expansion of Presidency

The college continued to grow rapidly after its renaming and relocation. In 1856, it had 132 students on its rolls. 94 students were in the General Branch and 38 students were in the Legal Branch. Of them, 82 students had paid tuition fees, 43 were scholarship holders, and 7 enjoyed free studentships. The Legal Branch was given a measure of autonomy: its students were subject to examination by held by the branch itself. Two years later Bankimchandra Chattopadhyay, a student of the Law Department earned the distinction of being one of the first two graduates in Arts of the University of Calcutta.

The college became an institution preparing candidates for the BA examination under the aegis of Calcutta University. At the first Entrance Examination, held in 1857, it sent 23 students. The MA degree was conferred for the first time on six students of this college in 1863.

The College authorities were faced with space shortage even after the expansion of the Sanskrit College building. The process for acquisition of land for building a separate building and grounds started in September 1865 and in 1870 the principal of the college submitted a plan for the construction of a new building on the premises where it is presently located. The new building was opened on March 31, 1874 by the then Lieutenant–Governor Sir George Campbell in the presence of His Excellency, the Viceroy of India. The finishing touch was given by Babu Nuffer Chandra Pal Chaudhuri, who provided it with a turret clock, at a cost of nearly Rs. 5000 soon after the new building's inauguration. Professor J. Sutcliffe was the principal of the college when the new building was opened.

The First Arts or F.A. Examination was introduced in 1861. The first candidate to qualify in this examination from the college was Gooroodas Banerji, who later became the first Indian Vice-Chancellor of Calcutta University. The ever-increasing rolls of the college demonstrated the keen interest shown by students from all over the Bengal Presidency. The prestigious award of Gilchrist Scholarship for pursuance of further studies in England went to students of this college for four successive years since its introduction in 1868. Between 1868 and 1900, 25 students of the college were awarded the Premchand Roychand studentship, the highest honour for academic excellence awarded by Calcutta University. The college soon expanded its premises and the present edifice was officially opened by the Lieutenant Governor on 31 March, 1874 in the presence of the Viceroy.

The construction of the new building was beneficial for the science departments which now had adequate space for holding classes and carrying out laboratory work. The chemistry department introduced practical classes in the new building in 1875. Engineering classes, until then held at the college, were discontinued in 1880 when the Shibpur Engineering College was set up. In order to augment the Faculty of Science, a professorship in Geology was instituted in 1892. The Department of Biology was founded eight years later and Subodh Chandra Mahalanabish was made a professor there. The last two decades of the nineteenth century saw the appointment of distinguished scholars to teaching positions in the college. For instance, H.M.Percival joined in 1880, Bipinvihary Gupta in 1883, Jagadish Chandra Bose in 1885, Prafulla Chandra Ray in 1889, and Manmohan Ghosh in 1896.

In 1897 the colleges admitted female students for the first time.

The Baker Laboratory, named after Edward Norman Baker, the then Lieutenant Governor of Bengal, was formally opened on 20 January, 1913 and the Departments of Physics, Physiology, Botany and Geology were transferred to the new establishment. One of the biggest rooms in the Baker Laboratory accommodated the science library (the Peake Library, named after Professor C.W. Peake). Commerce classes were started in 1903.

The outbreak of World War I in 1914 interrupted plans for the building of an additional hostel and other facilities but the college continued to cross important milestones in the advancement of teaching and higher learning. New dimensions were added to the college with the reorganisation of the college library in 1908 and the introduction of a College Union in 1914. The 1920s continued to see eminent teachers such as Professor Wordsworth, Professor Sterling, Professor Home and Dr. Harrison increase the reputation of the college.

Presidency during the Indian freedom struggle

During the Non-Cooperation Movement and the Civil Disobedience Movement J.R.Barrow was the principal of the college. He set the highest standards of discipline and academic excellence, but also meted out punitive action to students participating in the National Movement. His objective, of increasing the academic standards of the college and its reputation, however, was never in doubt, and he earned the deep respect and appreciation of teachers as well as students. This was the period when the Oaten Affair, in which Subhas Chandra Bose, then a student of the college, insulted by Professor Oaten, happened. Bose, responding angrily to a racial insult made by Oaten, had pushed the professor down the main building's staircase.

From the early 1930s, Indian principals headed the college, though the Education Department formally retained the services of British officers until 1947. From the 1920s to the end of the 1940s the college remained an important centre of nationalist activities. Throughout this period the college continued to enjoy a great deal of popularity and prestige in bhadralok society.

Presidency after independence

The college's continued presence in Bengal's higher education was evident in its predominance as an undergraduate and postgraduate institution even at the time of India's independence. Before 1947 and soon after, especially in the 1950s the college was still the numero uno of Indian education. Anybody who was somebody in India had to be a student of this college. In 1956 the centenary celebrations of the college were organised. The building in which the economics, political science and sociology departments as well as the Derozio Hall are presently located was built during the centenary celebrations under the stewardship of the then principal, Professor J.C. Sengupta.

In the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s the college became a centre of leftist and then far-left politics. Through the 1970s and 1980s the college fought off repeated attempts to control it from outside, especially by the government as well as dominant political parties. A important change that was brought to the college in the post-independence period includes the appointment of Mamata Roy as the first woman principal of the college in 2005.

Becoming a University

In 1972 an unsigned article was released by members of the college's faculty suggesting that the college should be given full university status. It is an open secret that the author of the article was Professor Dipak Banerjee, the legendary professor of economics of the college. The upgrading of the status of the college continued to be delayed through the 1970s. Two education commissions set up by the Left Front government after 1977 recommended the granting of autonomy to the college, but the idea was opposed by teachers' bodies affiliated to same the ruling Left Front. In 2007 the state government appointed a seven member committee to look into the possibility of upgrading the status of the college. The report of the committee suggested that the state government should grant the college partial autonomy. In 2009 the Governing Body of the college unanimosuly adopted the proposal that the college should be given full university status amidst protests and proposals brought by the Trinamool Congress that the college should be given full university status. On 16 December 2009 the state government tabled a Bill, entitled the Presidency University Act, 2009, in the West Bengal Legislative Assembly which granted the college full university status. It was stated in the Bill that once the college becomes a full university it will be renamed Presidency University. On 19th March 2010 a new chapter was opened in the history of the college when the West Bengal Government passed the Presidency University Bill, 2009 in the State Legislative Assembly making it into an Act.

Departments

Bengali - Biochemistry - Botany - Chemistry - Civil Engineering - Economics -English - Geography - Geology - Hindi - History - Law - Mathematics - Molecular Biology & Genetics - Philosophy - Physics - Physiology - Political Science - Sanskrit - Sociology -Statistics - Zoology

Department of Economics

It is one of the most illustrious departments of the college. Many former students and teachers of this department are renowned. Some of them are: Abhijit Banerjee, Amartya Sen, Amit Bhaduri, Amiya Kumar Bagchi, Asim Dasgupta, Avirup Sarkar, Badal Mukherjee, Bhabotosh Dutta, Bibek Debroy, Bimal Jalan, Debraj Ray, Dhiresh Bhattacharya, Dilip Mukherjee, Dipankar Dasgupta, Dipak Banerjee, Kunal Sengupta, Maitreesh Ghatak, Mihir Rakshit, Mukul Majumdar, Prabal Roychowdhuri, Pranab Bardhan, Ratan Lal Basu, Sanjit Bose, Soumen Sikdar, Subhasis Gangopadhyay, Sugata Marjit, Sukhamoy Chakravarty, Partha Gangopadhyay, Sujoy Mookerjee, Tapan Mitra, Tapas Majumdar, Udayan Mukherjee. The Department has been organising "Professor Dipak Banerjee Memorial Lecture" since 2007.

Department of English

It is one of the most popular and well known departments of the college. It boasts of students and teachers such as Peary Charan Sarkar, Taraknath Sen, Subodh Chandra Sengupta and Amal Bhattacharya, all of whom studied and taught here from the first half to the middle of the twentieth century. Other equally popular and erudite students and teachers of this department in the second half of the twentieth century include Arun Kumar Dasgupta, Sukanta Chaudhuri, Supriya Chaudhuri, Kajal Sengupta and Pralay Kumar Deb.

Department of History

This is one of the most notable departments of the college. Some of its eminent students and teachers in the first half of the twentieth century include Hem Chandra Raychaudhuri, Kiran Shankar Ray, Kuruvilla Zachariah, Susobhan Sarkar, Hirendranath Mukherjee, Amalesh Tripathi, Pratap Chandra Chunder, Pratap Chandra Sen and Tapan Raychaudhuri. Eminent students and teachers of the department in the second half of the twentieth century include Mohit Sen, Sipra Sarkar, Ashin Dasgupta, Hirendranath Chakrabarty, Parthasarathi Gupta, Benoy Bhushan Chaudhuri, Barun De, Nitish Sengupta, Sumit Sarkar, Rajat Kanta Ray and Tanika Sarkar. The department has a Seminar Library of its own with a seminar secretary and a seminar librarian elected by the students of the department from amongst themselves. In 1990, a lecture series entitled P.C. Sen Memorial Lecture, named after Pratap Chandra Sen, another former student of the department, was started with an endowment given by the members of his family. In 2004, Gopal Krishna Gandhi, who had just become the Governor of West Bengal, attended a class taken by Rajat Kanta Ray.

Department of Law

The college until the beginning of the twentieth century had a separate Department of Law. This was not one of its original departments, but as mentioned above it had been started soon after the inception of Hindu College. Two of its more prominent students were Bankim Chandra Chatterjee and HH Maharaja Nripendra Narayan Bhup Bahadur of Coochbehar.

Department of Physics

This department is one of the most well known departments of the college. The department has had as students or as teachers several eminent people, including Sir Jagadish Chandr Bose, Satyendra Nath Bose, Meghnad Saha, Amal Kumar Raychaudhuri, Bikash Sinha, Prasad Ranjan Ray and Ashoke Sen. The Baker Laboratory and the Physics Lecture Theatre, in the majestic new building built in 1913 are two of the most famous features of the college. Since 2004 the department started an autonomous post-graduate course in physics recognised by Calcutta University. Earlier, the department's course in post graduate studies was carried out at the University College of Science and Technology of Calcutta University in Rajabazar. On 27 February, 2009, the department organized a one-day symposium on the 150th birth anniversary of Sir J.C. Bose.

Department of Physiology

This department was founded in 1900. The first phase of the development of this department which coincided with the founding of physiology as a discipline in India took place between 1900 and 1913. Subodh Chandra Mahalanobis returned to India from England in 1900 and joined the Bengal Education Service. He was posted at Presidency College as the Head of the Department of Biology, which was at that time composed of Human Physiology and Botany, in the same year. In 1902, study of Human Physiology started as a separate course at this college, which was officially recognized in 1903 by the University of Calcutta. On the Founders’ Day, i.e. 20 January, in 1913, the new building for science subjects, later named as Baker Laboratories, was formally inaugurated and the Department of Human Physiology was shifted to the second floor of the new building. In 1915, the Calcutta University started the M.Sc. in Human Physiology in this department. In 1923, during the tenure of Dr. N.M.Basu as Head of the Department, E. H. Sterling visited this department. In 1939, Dr. Syama Prasad Mookerjee, as Vice-Chancellor of Calcutta University, convened a historic meeting and passed two important resolutions in favour of this department: (a) PG teaching in Physiology at Presidency College should continue as before; and (b) the university should not open Honours course in Physiology as this was running at its best at Presidency College. In 1944, Sir A.V. Hill visited the department. From 1947 to 1959, the department was guided under the able stewardship of Prof. Sachchidananda Banerjee, the first D.Sc. in Physiology from Calcutta University. In 1960, Dr. Achintya Kumar Mukherjee joined as Professor and Head of Department. Dr. Haripada Chattopadhyay worked as an interim Head of Department from 1984-1987. In 1988, Dr. Chandan Mitra joined as Professor and Head of Department. In 2001, the department celebrated 100 years of UG teaching. The Centenary Postgraduate Wing was inaugurated during that celebration and in the same year the department was affiliated for independent postgraduate teaching by Calcutta University. In 2004, the department was given full academic autonomy for postgraduate teaching. The department organized The XVIII Annual Conference of the Physiological Society of India between 8-10 December, 2006.

Department of Political Science

This department emerged out of the Department of Economics and is in the early twenty-first century one of the finest departments of Political Science in India. A creation of the second half of the twentieth century, it already boasts of an alumus which is world famous. Among its ex-students are Partha Chatterjee and Sudipta Kaviraj, both extremely well known in Indian political studies. Yet another student was Amal Mukhopadhyaya, who was a Professor and Head of this department and also one of the better known Principals of the college at the time of its 175th birth anniversary.

Department of Statistics

Although the Department of Statistics is small in size and relatively young it was at one time the premier statistics department in the country & is still very well known. Originally it was started as a Statistical Laboratory by Prasanta Chandra Mahalanobis. Later, it housed the ISI before the that institute moved to Baranagar. Through the second half of the twentieth century, the department grew in stature under the tutelage of Professor Bhattacharyya and Professor Atindra Mohan Gun. Some of its famous alumni include Jayanta K. Ghosh, Pranab K. Sen, Malay Ghosh, Bani Kumar Mallick and Sudipto Banerjee among others.

Department of Zoology

It is one of the best departments in the college with a rich museum and well equipped laboratories. It has both postgraduate and undergraduate courses. Research fellows are also recruited through various examinations. The department was built by Sivatosh Mookerjee. The present Head of Department is Trilochan Midya. The department has a good teacher-student ratio. Well-equipped laboratories, rich faculties and educational excellence are the three main characteristics of this department. It has a Central Computer Room with ultra-modern servers, a rich-with-books Seminar Library and an state of the art laboratory for modern researches. All forms of modern biochemical and biotechnological researches can be done in these laboratories.

Institutions that were started in Presidency

This college, being the oldest educational institution in the country, boasts of a number of prestigious institutions of primary, secondary and higher learning that were started under its aegis.

The Hindu School, initially the pathshala wing of Hindu College, was the college's school when it was established, although it is now independent. The Hare School has been from the middle of the nineteenth century located inside the premises of the college and has been traditionally associated with it. Its students used to complete their higher education in this college in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. A large majority of the students of these two schools came from the landed aristocracy and the urban upper middle classes. The importance of these two schools is evident in a verse written by Justice Phani Bhushan Chakrabarty, a former student of the college and the first Indian Chief Justice of the Calcutta High Court. He wrote: Prathom jakhon collegey elam/Bollam bahabaharey/Aschi hotey Hindu-Hare/Koriney care kaharey (When I first came to college,/I said, "Oh! Wow,/Have come from Hindu-Hare,/Don't care for the high-brow).

The Bengal Engineering and Science University, Shibpur was founded in this college and was one of its departments from 1865 to 1879. The Indian Statistical Institute, Calcutta was founded in the Statistical Laboratory of this college in 1931.

Administration

The college is administered on a daily basis by a principal, a burser, a deputy controller of examinations and the respective heads of departments. It offers several scholarships to meritorious students, such as B.C.Law Free Studentship (185), Book Prizes (50), Cash Prizes (33), FAEA Scholarships (5), Hindi Scholarship (6), Hostel Stipend (14), Lump Grant (9), Medals (19), National Scholarship (14), Presidency College Graduate Scholarships (6), T.S.Sterling Onetime Grant (17), T.S.Sterling Scholarships (16).

Hostel facilities

The college has two halls of residence, one each for boys and girls. The boys hostel is the famous Eden Hindu Hostel, which was started in 1886. It stands on Peary Charan Sarkar Street, which separates the college's premises to the south from the hostel, which is next to the central premises of the University of Calcutta, called the Ashutosh Shiksha Prangan, that includes the Ashutosh Building and Darbhanga Building. After 1990, the college administration also built a girls' hostel in Salt Lake in Calcutta.

Extra-Curricular activities

Students' Union

The Students' Union room is located behind the main building. The Union has been active since the first half of the twentieth century. It is run by a President and a General Secretary. It plays a constructive role in the day-to-day running of the students' affairs. It is pertinent to note that the Union has always been controlled by elected students' groups that seek to challenge and question policies framed and actions taken by the establishment, both inside and outside the college, especially at the state level. In the first decade after independence, when the college was starting off as a centre of excellence, wholly managed by Indians, and more specifically by Bengalis, the Union was firmly in the hands of forces not always friendly towards the Students Federation (SF). From the sixties until the end of the eighties, the Union was controlled by the Marxist-Leninists. After a brief period of students' apathy and indifference towards politics in the late eighties, the Union, in 1989, came under the control of a loosely formed group called the Independents' Consolidation (IC), covertly formed by an assortment of progressive democratic elements, owing allegiance to left-of-center and Marxist-Leninist parties which are hostile to the Students Federation of India (SFI). Barring a brief spell of a few years at the end of the last century and the beginning of this century, the IC has kept control of the student body. The Union is now under the control of the SFI, which returned to power in 2009.

Sports

The college has a long history of excellence in sports, especially in cricket and lawn tennis. Until date it has a strong cricket team. Until the mid-1950s the college used to have a lawn tennis court to the west of the premises, which was later replaced by the new building housing the economics, political science and sociology departments as well the college's auditorium, Derozio Hall. Until the mid-twentieth century the college's sporting facilties were managed and maintained by a Sports Secretary elected from the student body. There is a table tennis board in the Junior Common Room of the college on the ground floor and a badminton court in a room close to the Student's Union Room.

The college has a long association with Mohun Bagan AC, the first Bengali football club, whose history is closely linked to the rise of the Indian national movement. One of the preliminary matches played by Mohun Bagan was against Eden Hindu Hostel's team. Some students of the college who had joined this club earlier invited Professor F.J. Row, a grammatologist, to visit the club ground, then at Mohun Bagan Villa, on the day it was founded, i.e. 15 August 1889. At this occasion Row suggested that the Club could be called 'Athletic', due to its excellent infrustructural facilities.

Cultural events

Presidency has an annual festival organised by the students union called the 'Milieu' which hosts events in which students of all other colleges and universities of West Bengal participate. The events of the festival comprise of a wide variety of activities such as outdoor sports and literary events including debates and quizzes. The college always had a great tradition of debates. Amartya Sen's first lecture entitled 'Bigyaponer Arthoniti' ('The Economics of Advertisement') was delivered at a debate organised by the Student's Union soon after he joined the college in 1951.

Canteen

The college also has a students' canteen situated at the back of the main building, beyond the Students' Union room and next to the badminton Court. In the 1940s the college's canteen was called "Ray Babur Canteen". A decade later in the 1950s the students of the college frequently visited the neighbouring Coffee House, on the lane that is now called Bankim Chatterjee Street, which soon became a hub of both academic and political activities and discussions and is now famous for its debates. Several eminent academics of the second half of the twentieth century, many of whom joined the government and/or have or still are teaching in the finest world universities were regulars at the Coffee House. Later, in the last quarter of the twentieth century, the students of the college began to return to the college's canteen, which has been run by Pramodda since the 1980s and is now called "Pramoddar Canteen". The canteen remains the most popular meeting place for the students of the college. The Coffee House retains its popularity amongst Presidencians.

Building and Grounds

The main building, housing the English, History, Geography, Bengali and Philosophy Departments of the college, which also has a clock tower, was built in the nineteenth century and is representative of the architecture of the middle of that century. It has a quadrangle in the middle, next to the central library of the college which is located on the ground floor. The science building, which has the Physics Lecture Theatre in it, is situated to the south of the college premises and opens out on to Peary Charan Sarkar Street. It was built in 1913. The new building housing the Economics, Political Science and Sociology Departments and the Derozio Hall was built in 1956, while the newest building built to the west of the main building for the holding of post-graduate classes, was built in 1990.

Alumni

Alumni Association

The college has an active Alumni Association. It works from within the main building of the college. Some of the eminent past Presidents of the Association were Radhabinod Pal and Pratap Chandra Chunder. Dr. Shyamaprasad Mookherjee was a past Vice President of the Association. The Association publishes an yearly journal entitled the 'Autumn Annual'. Professor Subodh Chandra Sengupta was the longest serving editor-in-chief of the journal.

Notable alumni

Main article: List of Calcutta Presidencians

The former students of this college are still the best and the brightest in India and abroad. Until the middle of the twentieth century this college was widely considered to be the very best in higher education in the country. In the second half of the twentieth century it can still claim to be among the top five colleges in the country and is clearly still the most famous of all the Indian colleges. That the college continues to be the alma mater of eminent professionals, including senior politicians and industrialists, who are still working gives evidence of its relevance today and also shows that it is still at the height of its powers. Students of this college have continued to be awarded all the major scholarships, such as the Rhodes Scholarship, the Commonwealth Scholarship, Inlaks Scholarship, Radhakrishnan Scholarship and Government of India and State Scholarship to study in either Oxford or Cambridge.

The college started with the expressed objective of encouraging boys of landed and aristocratic families of the Bengal Presidency to join it, but has also traditionally attracted extremely meritorious students from district schools and colleges to it since the nineteenth century. It has the distinction of being the college where Academy Award winner Satyajit Ray and the Nobel Laureate Professor Amartya Sen studied. Rabindranath Tagore was admitted into the college, but spent only one day there.

In politics, it has amongst its students, some of the biggest names of the Indian national movement, such as five Presidents of the Indian National Congress, including Surendranath Banerjea, Romesh Chandra Dutt, Bhupendra Nath Bose, Lord Satyendra Prasanno Sinha and Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose. The first President of India, Dr. Rajendra Prasad studied in this college. The Speaker of the Indian Lok Sabha, Somnath Chatterjee was a student of this college. The first President of Bangladesh, Abu Sayeed Chowdhury was also a student of this college. It has had one Governor of an Indian state, Sir Chandeshwar Prasad Narayan Singh, as its student also. Since elections were first held in Indian provinces in 1937, and after independence, it has had three Prime Ministers, one each of Pakistan, Bengal and Assam, five Chief Ministers of West Bengal and one Chief Minister of Assam as its former students. They are the first Prime Minister of Pakistan, Mohammad Ali Bogra, first Prime Minister of Bengal, A.K. Fazlul Huq, the first Prime Minister of Assam, Sir Saiyid Mohammed Saadullah, the first and second Chief Ministers of West Bengal, Prafulla Chandra Ghosh and Dr. Bidhan Chandra Ray, later Chief Ministers of the same state, Shri Siddhartha Shankar Ray, Shri Jyoti Basu and Shri Buddhadeb Bhattacharya and the sixth Chief Minister of Assam, Shri Bishnu Ram Medhi. The first Deputy Chief Minister of Bihar, Anugrah Narayan Sinha was a student of this college. The college has had as its students a host of other politicians including central and state level ministers.

Scions of former Indian Princely States and substantial landholding families also studied in this college, such as the former Maharaja of Coochbehar, HH Maharaja Sir Nripendra Narayan Bhup Bahadur and the former Maharaja of Burdwan, Maharaja Sir Uday Chand Mahtab. Other zamindari families from where boys came to study in this college included Burdwan, Susanga, Cossimbazar, Natore, Gouripur, Kalipur, Jhargram, Kirtipasha, and Teota in Bengal, Gauripur in Assam and Sonepur and Jarasingha in Orissa.

There are several senior judges, such as the first Indian judge of the High Court of Calcutta, Sir Gooroodas Banerjee and a Chief Justice of India, Justice Sabyasachi Mukherjee who were students of this college. Several senior civilians, such as the first Indian member of the ICS, Satyendranath Tagore and first Chief Election Commissioner of India, Sukumar Sen studied in this college.

This college has also performed equally well in industry. Sir Rajen Mookerjee was its student and Shri Rama Prasad Goenka also studied in this college.

In academics too, eminent intellectuals and vice chancellors, such as the scientist, Sir Jagadish Chandra Bose, the pre-eminent vice chancellor of Calcutta University, Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee, the doyen of Indian history, Sir Jadunath Sarkar, and India's first planner, Professor Prasanta Chandra Mahalanobis, have been students of this college. In literature, it has amongst its students, Michael Madhusudan Dutt, Bankim Chandra Chatterjee, Sukumar Ray and Jibanananda Das. Amongst journalists, Avik Sarkar, M. J. Akbar and Pritish Nandy studied here.

In the entertainment industry, this college can boast of such legendary names as Satyajit Ray, Pramathesh Barua, Ashok Kumar, and Aparna Sen among other equally gifted and well known film and theatre personalities. Vece Paes, a member of India's hockey team was also a student of this college.

Presidency in Film and Fiction

The college has been depicted in both Bengali fiction and films. Sunil Gangopadhyay's novel Shei Samaye (Those Days) mentions this college in the context of nineteenth century Bengali society. The Bollywood blockbuster Yuva starring Ajay Devgan, Abhishek Bachchan and Rani Mukherjee shows this college. It is the college where Devgan, called Michael in the movie, is a student leader.

External links

References

  1. From Banglapedia
  2. ^ http://www.telegraphindia.com/1100320/jsp/frontpage/story_12240219.jsp
  3. This building is a historic one because Raja Ram Mohan Roy inaugurated his Brahma Sabha there and Reverend Alexander Duff of the Scottish Missionary Board started his educational establishment, the General Assembly's Institution there as well a few years later in 1830.
  4. Pramod Dar Canteen
  5. Presidency College Alumni Association
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