Recollections of an Indian Official 1928-1949

Recollections of an Indian Official 1928-1949

by Roger Bell
Recollections of an Indian Official 1928-1949

Recollections of an Indian Official 1928-1949

by Roger Bell

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Overview

Roger Bell (1905-1959) was a civil servant in British India during the most tumultuous period in its history, and was directly involved in not only the fascinating workings of the administration, but also its eventual transfer of power upon Indian Independence in 1947. His nearly two decades in Orissa and Madras Provinces saw the rise of Gandhi, the “flap” caused by World War II, corruption, riots, panther attacks, and Englishmen whose eccentricities were only exceeded by those of the local Rajas and Maharajas.

 

Bell’s handwritten memoirs lay forgotten for decades in a trunk in his family home in Tasmania until rediscovered by his daughter, Alexandra. They are finally published here, 56 years after his death (and 70 years after his Orissa District Gazetteer), providing a fascinating insight into this pivotal period of India’s history. Anybody with an interest in this time, the history of the British Empire, or simply good old-fashioned adventure, will certainly enjoy reading this eloquent and engaging first-hand account.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781499028775
Publisher: Xlibris AU
Publication date: 03/12/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 248
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Alexandra was born to Roger and Margaret Bell at the Vellore Hospital in India on 16 March 1947, just months before Independence. She fondly remembers her Indian ayah, Mariam Thomas of Travancore who was with the family until their move to Australia in November 1952. Alex recalls travelling with her parents on Indian trains to return Mariam to the arms of her family and visiting the Casey family in Sambalpur where she caught malaria. After leaving India at the age of 18 months, Alexandra (Alex) had an exciting early childhood in Brunei and recalls cruising on rivers in the government launch Juanita, encountering Dayaks at the villages on the way. There was a period in Singapore before the family enthusiastically made the adjustment to a Tasmanian semi-rural lifestyle without servants. The family went to England for 15 months when Alex was 9 and she attended a school in Wimbledon for this time. In 1959, the year after returning to Tasmania, Alex was heartbroken to lose her adored father. Alex had always known of the existence of her father’s memoirs, but the task of transcribing his handwriting, particularly with difficult Indian names and words was daunting. When she tentatively asked her daughter Mae what she thought about tackling it the enthusiasm of Mae’s response was immensely encouraging. Mae Tanner was born in 1982 while her parents were living in Tullah, Tasmania and was educated in Hobart until she won a national scholarship to ANU (Australian National University). Mae achieved First Class Honours in Law. She has worked as a lawyer in Samoa and Myanmar (Burma) following the family tendency to independently explore far horizons. She has expressed enormous interest in the reminiscences of a grandfather she never met and applied herself to the task with great diligence.
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