Ooty – History
Udhagamandalam (sometimes Ootacamund),
sometimes abbreviated Udhagai and better known as Ooty, is a
town, a municipality, and the district capital
of the Nilgiris
district in
the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. It is located 80 km north of Coimbatore. It is a popular hill station located in the Nilgiri Hills. Originally occupied by the Todas, the area came under the rule of the East India Company at the end of the 18th
century. Today, the town's economy is based on tourism and agriculture, along
with manufacture of medicines and photographic film. The town is connected to
the rest of India by road and rail, and its historic sites and natural beauty
attract tourists.
Introduction
Ooty or
Udhagamandalam (the Tamil version of the original name) rightly described as
"Queen of Hill Stations" by Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, now sprawls over
an area of 36 sq km with a number of tall buildings cluttering its hill slopes.
It is situated at an altitude of 2,240 meters above sea level. Ooty still woos
people from all over India as well as foreign countries right through summer,
and sometimes in the winter months too.
An added
attraction for the tourists to Udhagamandalam is the mountain train journey on
a ratchet and pinion track which commences from Kallar, near Mettupalayam and
wends its way through many hair-raising curves and fearful tunnels and chugs
along beside deep ravines full of verdant vegetation, gurgling streams and tea
gardens.
The
scenery, as it unfolds during the trip, is breathtaking, awe-inspiring and
fantastic. One can notice a marvelous change in vegetation, as one goes from
Kallar to Coonoor. At Kallar it is tropical and at Burliar-the next bus-stop as
one proceeds from Mettupalayam-it is sub-tropical. Near Coonoor, it is humid
with pines, blue gum (Eucalyptus globulus) and cypress trees. As we go from
Ooty to Gudalur, the change in vegetation is striking. What a splendid
interaction between climate and vegetation! It is therefore very appropriate
that Mount Stuart called the whole road leading to Ooty from Mettupalayam,
"One long botanical debauch."
Etymology
The
origin of the name Udhagamandalam is obscure. The first mention of the place
occurs in a letter of March 1821 to the Madras Gazette from an unknown
correspondent as Wotokymund.
In early
times it was called OttaikalMandu. "Mund" is the Tamil word for a Toda village, and the first part of the name is
probably a corruption of the local name for the central region of the Nilgiri
Plateau.
Another
likely origin of the stem of the name (Ootaca) comes from the local language in
which Otha-Cal literally means Single Stone. This is perhaps a
reference to a sacred stone revered by the local Toda people. The name probably
changed under British rule from Udhagamandalam to Ootacamund, and later was
shortened to Ooty.
History
Ooty is situated
deep within the Nilgiri hills (which can be literally translated as The Blue
Mountains). It is unknown whether this name arises from the blue smoky haze
given off by the eucalyptus trees that cover the area or from the kurunji flower, which blooms every twelve years
giving the slopes a bluish tinge. Nilgiris in general was ruled by Ganga
kings and later by Hoysala kings, particularly
Vishnuvardhana who captured Wynad and Nilgiri area during the 11th century. Tippu Sultan was the first to extend his border by
constructing a hideout cave like structure.
It was
originally a tribal land and was occupied by the Todas along with other tribes
who coexisted through specialization and trade. The major tribes of Nilgiri
area are Todas, Kotas, Badagas and Alu Kurumbas, who settled in and around
Ooty. The first reference of Todas in Nilgiri is found in a record dated 1117
A.D. Toda people are known for raising water buffaloes and Badaga people
for their farming activities. Frederick Price in his book Ootacamund,
a History states that the area called 'Old Ooty' was originally occupied
by the Todas. The Todas then handed over that part of the town to John
Sullivan, the then Governor of Coimbatore.
Sullivan
later developed the town and encouraged the establishment of tea, chinchona, and teak trees.
Like many of the settlers, Sullivan was highly impressed by the way the tribes
cooperated, and sought to maintain this balance. He later campaigned tirelessly
to ensure land rights and cultural recognition for these tribes and was
financially and socially punished for this by the British Government.
The
Nilgiri territory came into possession of East India Company as part of the
ceded lands, held by Tipu Sultan, by the treaty of Srirangapatnam in 1799. Rev. Jacome Forico, a priest, was
the first European who visited Nilgiris in 1603 and released his notes about
the place and the people of Nilgiris. In 1812 surveyor William Keys and
Macmohan visited the top of the plateau. In 1818, Wish and Kindersley, Assistant
and Second Assistant to Collector of Coimbatore visited this spot and submitted
their experience report to the Collector of Coimbatore John Sullivan. John
Sullivan with his party proceeded to Nilgiri Mountain and camped at Dimbhatti,
just north of Kotagiri in January 1819 and was enthralled by the beauty of the
place. He wrote to Thomas Munro - " it resembles Switzerland, more than
any country of Europe, the hills beautifully wooded and fine strong spring with
running water in every valley"
Again in
May 1819, Sullivan came to the Hill of Ooty and began the construction of his
bungalow at Dimbhatti (near Kotagiri), the first European dwelling on the hills. John
Sullivan laid the path from Sirumugai (near-Mattupalayam) to Dimbhatti in 1819
and the work was completed in May 1823. The route up to Coonoor was laid in
1830-32.
Ooty
served as the summer capital of the Madras Presidency and other small kingdoms, much visited by
British during the colonial days, and as today, a popular summer and weekend
resort. Soldiers were also sent here and to nearby Wellington (the home of the
Madras regiment to this day) to recuperate. Its stunning beauty and splendid
green deep valleys inspired the British to name it Queen of Hill Stations.
From May
to October each year during the hot season, the Madras Government and its
officials, the Governor, and his family, went to the Government House in the
Nilgiri Hills. One governor, Sir Arthur Lawley (1906-1911), was an accomplished horseman, a
quality admired by the Indian princes of the Madras Presidency. He enjoyed
hunting with the Ooty hounds and was frequently joined by close friends like
the Maharajah of Mysore. “Hunting, which had been the passion of his youth in
England, probably appealed to him more than any other form of recreation, and
he was a fine shot with a rifle and brought home many of the trophies – tiger,
panther and bison – for which the Southern Indian jungles are well
renowned.”
The
Governor’s Residence, Government House, was the focus of activity and there was
a splendid Club House with a fine golf course, polo, swimming and tennis.
Snooker is said to have originated on the billiard tables of the Ootacamund Club,
invented by an army officer – Sir Neville Francis Fitzgerald Chamberlain. There
was also a cricket ground with regular matches played between teams from the
Army, the Indian Civil Service and the business sector. Visiting teams would
come from various parts of India as well as from the island of Ceylon.
There
were riding stables and kennels at Ooty and the Ootacamund Hounds hunted across
the surrounding countryside and the open grasslands of the Wenlock Downs, named
after Sir Arthur Lawley’s brother Beilby Lawley, 3rd Baron Wenlock. There were Point to Point Races and Gymkhanas,
and horse riding was a very popular pastime. The maharajas, the business
fraternity and the senior civil servants had summer cottages at Ooty. There
were churches like St Stephen’s and St Thomas’s and traditional inns. It was in
many ways a re-creation of Old England. When the Governor was in residence the
Union Jack flew over Government House and a six gun salute would announce his
arrival and departure. The misty blue haze of the Nilgiri Hills, and the
fragrant mountain rains were a welcome change from the sultry heat of Madras.
Ooty is
reached via winding hill roads or a complicated rack railway system, known as the Nilgiri Mountain Railway, built in 1908 by impassioned and enterprising
British citizens with venture capital from the Madras government.
In 1882,
a Swiss engineer named Arthur Riggenbach came to the Nilgiri Hills on an
invitation from Government of India and he submitted detailed estimates for a
line costing £132,000. A local company named “The Nilgiri Rigi Railway Co.
Ltd.” was formed, and the Government offered it free land. This company
insisted on a guaranteed return of 4%, which was not acceptable, and the
proposed railway, once again, had to be shelved. In 1885, another Nilgiri
Railway Company was formed and, in 1886, planning work commenced, using the Abt
system with two adjacent toothed rails in the centre of the one metre gauge
track. The work on the line commenced in August 1891 when Sir Arthur Lawley’s
brother, Beilby Lawley, 3rd Baron Wenlock, the then Governor of Madras, turned the first
turf to begin construction. The Mettupalayam-Coonoor section of the track was
opened for traffic on 15 June 1899.
In
January 1903, the Indian Government purchased the line, and took over the
construction of the new extension from Coonoor to Ooty. The Nilgiri Mountain
Railway was operated by the former Madras Railway Company until 31 December
1907 on the behalf of the Government. In January 1908, the railway line was
handed over to South Indian Railways. Construction continued. The line from
Coonoor to Fernhill was completed on 15 September 1908 and reached Ooty, one
month later. On October 15, Sir Arthur Lawley, Governor of Madras, officiated at the opening
ceremony of the new railway to Ootacamund.
Developmental History
This
beautiful botanical paradise was first brought to the public eye by John
Sullivan, Collector of Coimbatore district in 1819. But prior to this in 1812,
the first Englishmen who were sent up the Nilgiris by the Collector of
Coimbatore, were Mr. Keys, Assistant Revenue Surveyor, and his Assistant,
McMahon. They made their way via Dananayakan Kottai to Aracad and the existing
village of Denad, and penetrated as far as Kallatti, the lower level of North
Ooty, but never set their eyes on the beautiful valley in which Ooty lay. After
Keys' visit there was no further expedition until 1818 when J.C.Whish and
N.W.Kindersly (Asst. and second Asst. to the Collector of Coimbatore
respectively) went up by the Dananayakan Kottai-Denad route, crossed the
plateau in a south-western direction and descended by the Sundapatti pass from
Manjakombai to the Bhavani valley and then went back to Coimbatore. The purpose
of their visit is not known.
In March 1819, John Sullivan obtained Rs 1,100 (Rupees of those days not to be compared with the present-day rupee) from the Board of Revenue for laying a bridle path up the hill from Sirumugai to Kotagiri and its neighboring village, Dhimatti. The work was executed by McPherson in a period of 2 years starting 1821. This was the only route to the Nilgiris from Coimbatore until 1832, when the first Coonoor ghat road was laid, thanks to the then Governor, S.R. Lushington, who got the work executed by Lehardy and Capt. Murray. The present metalled ghat road from Kallar to Coonoor, a distance of 25 km which has 14 hair-pin bends and a gradient of one 18 ft, which facilitated carriage traffic from Madras to Ooty, was mainly constructed by Colonel G.V. Law in 1871. Wenlock Bridge on the Coonoor-Mettupalayam road named after Law continues to bear the same name.
The
Coonoor-Mettupalayam road was extended to Udhagamandalam, covering a distance
of about 15 km. The Kotagiri-Mettupalayam road (about 34 km long) which was 8
ft wide to begin with, was widened to 17 ft in 1872-75 with a gradient of one
in 17 by the Dist. Engineer, Major Morant R.E. and handed over to the District
Board in 1881. During the period from 1819 to 1830, John Sullivan's
contribution was, apart from laying the route to Ooty, that he built the first
house called Stone House in this place. This formed the nucleus of Government
offices. Further, at his own expense, he conducted experiments on agricultural
and horticultural crops and in animal husbandry to find the most suitable crops
and breeds of milch animals for future settlers.
Next to
the magnificent task of laying the road to Ooty, the British took up, around
1880, the stupendous task of connecting Mettupalayam to Ooty by rail. A Swiss
engineer, M. Riggenback and Major Morant of Kotagiri road fame prepared an
estimate of 1,32,000 pounds (currency) for laying the rack railway and floated
a company called The Rigi Railway & Co Ltd. Since capital was not
forthcoming, Mr. Richard Wolley of Coonoor came forward to advance money on the
condition that the contract would be entrusted to Mr. Wolley by the Government
of Chennai.
The
agreement between the 2 was signed in 1886, and the company called The Nilgiri
Railway & Company came into being with a capital of Rs 25 lakhs. The work
on the line was started in August 1891 by Lord Wenlock, Governor or Madras, but
the company was liquidated in 1894. Later, a new company was formed in 1894,
and the work was completed in 1899. The line was worked by Madras Railway, to
start with. Though the Nilgiris formed part of Coimbatore district, it was
separated into an independent district in 1868. For a period of 13 years from
1830, it remained part of Malabar district. This was to prevent tobacco
smuggling from Coimbatore. From John Sullivan's days to this date, more than
170 years have rolled by. Udhagamandalam considered a sanatorium and hill
resort by the Europeans, has come to be like any other district. The
devastation was so much that a ban on fresh construction was belatedly imposed
by the Government.
Gnarled,
knobbed and twisted, Sullivan’s oak is an appropriate metaphor for Ootacamund.
On the one hand it is apparent that the tree has been much better years; a 1905
photograph capture it standing tall, robust and bushy before what were then the
Secretariat offices. On the other, it has survived the ravages of time; look
closer and you will discover that its branches have a tangled beauty and that
its alternate leaves glow softly in the wintry sun.
John
Sullivan, the man who founded Ooty, planted this oak over 150 years ago in
front of what was then his residence, Stonehouse. Over the years, Stonehouse
was subsumed in flurry of construction for the office of the Secretariat. And
today, these offices have become the Government Arts College – a tale of change
and continuity that is very much the story of Ooty.
Identifying Stone House
If you
are armed with a sketch of an original ground plan and elevation of Stonehouse,
you can identify the exact portions of the old residence- the very first
European house in Ootacamund – that were incorporated with the Secretariat
office building. If you walk through the over ground and beautifully unkempt
cemetery at St. Stephen’s, which lies on a small outcrop behind what must be
one of the country’s prettiest churches, you will find the graves of Sullivan’s
wife, Henrietta, and his 16-year-old daughter, Harriet. They died within 10
days of each other in 1838.
The
famous Ooty Lake – that serpentine stretch of water that has deteriorated in to
a sewer-was Sullivan’s creation too. He dammed a stream in order to collect
water for the nearby fields, but somehow it never developed in to the headwater
of an irrigation system. Half the lake was appropriate and filled in for the
racecourse, but the other half still remains one of the remains one of the main
tourist attractions in the hill station. But as Reverend Philip Mulley
suggests, his real legacy goes well beyond a building that endures here or a
crumbling grave that survives there. “His impact is evident almost everywhere,”
says Mulley, who has been interesting the history and sociology of the
Nilgiris.
It was
Sullivan who revolutionized agricultural practice in these mountains, there by
changing the face of the local economy. He did this not merely through the
introduction of tea (which was commercialized only years after his death), but
by freely distributing speed for a large assortment of cereals, fruit and
vegetables. He brought in European varieties of wheat and barley (which the
Badagas knew as Sullivan ganji), vegetables such as cabbage, radish and turnip
and fruits such as peach, apple and strawberry. It was Sullivan who persuaded
the initially skeptical Directors of the East India Company to develop the
Nilgiris as a sanatorium for sick British troops. And it was Sullivan again who
encouraged the construction of the early ghat roads up in to the hills. As
anthropologist and Nilgiris expert Paul Hockings has noted: “His impact was
widespread and permanent.”
Laying the Foundation
Sullivan
didn’t ‘discover’ the Nilgiris, but he was the first to see its potential as a
sanatorium and he laid the foundations that changed the social and economic
face of these hills. Other European had been up before. An enigmatic Jesuit
priest, father Fininicio, made the first expedition in 1603. He made the
journey up from Calicut, but all that remains of his visit to Todamala is a
small fragment that reveals he tried to converse with the Badagas about
Christianity and that he gave “Toda women looking glasses and hanks of thread,
with which they were very much pleased”. Two centuries later, after the British
had annexed Mysore, There were other expeditions by men such as Buchanan,
Mackenzie, keys and MacMohan, some of them reaching only the lower slopes.
It was in
1818 that two youthful Assistant collectors of Coimbatore, Whish and
Kindersley, made it to the made it to the Nilgiris plateau. It is not clear
what took then up. One story goes they may have been on a shooting expedition,
another that they chasing tobacco smugglers. Their account of their
explorations, which were of a place that was cool and teeming with the game and
wildfowl, stoked the interest of the boss. Sullivan, who was then the permanent
Collector of Coimbatore, made the ascent the following year.
The
letter he wrote from the “Neilgherry hills” to Thomas Munro, who went on to
become Governor of Madras, is ecstatic. “This is the finest country ever…. It
resembles I suppose Switzerland more than any other part of Europe… the hills
beautifully wooded and fine strong spring with running water in every valley.”
Within a few months, Sullivan had constructed a small cottage a Dimbhatti, near
Kotagiri. It had gone to ruin over the years, being used, among other things,
as a cowshed; only recently was it restored by the district administration,
thanks to the efforts of the environmental forum, the save Nilgiris Campaign,
and the enthusiasm of an energetic Collector.
By 1822,
Sullivan had started building stone house in what was then known as Wotokymund,
acquiring land from the Todas at one rupee an acre. He would quickly corner
huge tracts of land, many times more than the other entire European settler put
together. All the while, Sullivan was peppering his superiors in Madras with
letters about the unusually temperate and healthy climate in the Nilgiris and
its suitability as a sanatorium. By 1828, there were some 25 European houses,
not to mention churches and the houses of immigrants from the plains. This was
also the year that Ooty was made a military cantonment. Sullivan’s dream of
making it a sanatorium for British troops had been fulfilled, but the government’s
action meant that Ooty would no longer be in his control but in that of his
rival Major William Kelso.
But
Sullivan wasn’t through with Ooty. After he finished his tenure as Collector of
Coimbatore, he returned in his capacity as the Senior Member of the Board of
Revenue of the Madras Presidency.
Liberal Views:
At the
same time, Sullivan laid himself open to charges that he had used his position
in government to acquire enormous personal wealth. He retired and left to
England in 1841 and died unsung on January 16, 1855 – exactly 150 years to this
day. “Most people in Ooty do not even know he existed,” says lawyer and
environmental activist B.J Krishnan. “But the important thing for the future of
these hills is that we retain the spirit and energy of Sullivan.” The Save
Nilgiris Campaign had planned a procession of tribals and a public meeting on
January 16, 2005 on the occasion of his 150th death anniversary.
Ooty Golf Course
The
originator of golf at Ootacamund was Colonel Ross Thompson, R.E. who brought it
in 1889, from Bangalore, when he had been transferred as Executive Engineer,
Nilgiri district. He began with a few holes, partly in the ground of the
A.B.C., and partly on the adjacent land belonging to the Hobart Park. These
pioneer links were used principally by ladies but owing to one cause and
another they did not find much favour.
In
consequence of this, Colonel Ross Thompson, brigadier - general Van Straubenzee,
and Colonel Straker R.A., selected, some time in February of the following
years, a site near the municipal rubbish depot and the road out to the
Governor's Shola, on which links consisting of eighteen holes were laid out. The
starting point of the course was on the slope above the turn on the road the
lake, to the west of Woodstock.
Government Gardens & Horticultural Societies
The
earliest gardens of any size or importance in Ootacamund were those attached to
Stonehouse and Southdown’s, both originally owned by Mr. J. Sullivan. The
former of these was, for over six years, held on lease by Government, and a
latter was the property of the State for ten years, dating from December 1829.
The Garden was maintained by Government, who employed a comparatively larger
staff for this purpose. They appear however to have been more of an ornamental
than useful character, and the general public derived no benefit from them.
During
the time the Ootacamund was under military controls, considerable
cultivation of vegetables for the market was carried on by so- called settlers
and others, but towards the end of this epoch, which closed in 1841, there were
a great falling off, due no doubt to lack of demand arising from the abandonment
of the place as a military sanitarium. The present Government Gardens had their
origin in one which was established in 1845, by subscription amongst the
European residents, for the purpose of supplying themselves with vegetables, at
a reasonable cost.
The site
occupied was, so it has been ascertained, the spot immediately below the
ornamental pond close to the band stand, and now forming part of the lawn,
planted with exotic trees, which faces one on entering the Gardens. Captain Molyneux,
of the 2nd European Regiment, managed it, the subscribers paying Rs.3 a month,
and receiving their vegetables free of charge. In less than a couple of years’
times, however, this arrangement was found not to work so satisfactorily as had
been expected, and, early in 1847, a fund was raised, by means of donations and
subscriptions, with a view to form a Horticultural Society, and start a Public
Garden.