"Jamshedpur"\, as British Viceroy named it\, turns 100

"Jamshedpur", as British Viceroy named it, turns 100

Press Trust of India  |  Jamshedpur 

Envisioned by a Parsi, planned by an American, named by a British Viceroy and landscaped by a German, the industrial of "Jamshedpur" turned 100 on Wednesday.

"This place will see a change in its name and will no longer be known as Sakchi, but will be identified with the name of its founder, bearing down through the ages the name of the late Mr Hereafter, this place will be known by the name of Jamshedpur," the British ruler had said, according to a company statement here.

"On January 2, completes 100 years of being renamed as from Sakchi," and Managing Director, said at a function organized to mark the New Year on Tuesday.

"...few places in can equal Jamshedpur's pluralism." US planned the city on the basis of the blueprint of J N Tata, a Parsi, and later, in 1940s, of gave Jamshedpur its parks and gardens, the said in its website.

"It is hard to imagine that 10 years ago, this place was scrub and jungle; and here, we have now, this place set up with all its foundries and its workshops and its population of 40,000 to 50,000 people. This great enterprise has been due to the prescience, imagination of the late Mr Jamsetji Tata," Chelmsford had said on this day in 1909.

The has planned to celebrate the centenary year in several ways, Narendran said.

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First Published: Wed, January 02 2019. 20:21 IST