Sir Henry Cotton
(1845-1915) President - Bombay, 1904

Sir Henry Cotton belonged to a distinguished family who served India
for five generations. His great grandfather Joseph Cotton joined the East
India Company's mercantile service in the middle of the 18th century, and
was a Director of the Company for 28 years. Henry's father, Joseph John
Cotton, was a Madras Civilian from 1831 to 1863. Henry was born in 1845 at
Combaconum in the Tanjore district of Madras.
In October 1867, he came to India to join the Bengal Civil Service. He
became the Chief Commissioner of Assam in 1897, from which post he retired
in 1902. The purely administrative controversy with the Government of
India regarding the readjustment of the boundaries of Bengal and Assam
brought him into prominence and made a leader of him in the Partition
agitation which was soon to follow.
He returned to India to preside over the twentieth session of the
Indian National Congress at Bombay, in 1904. On January 10, 1905 a
conference on the Partition question was held at the Town Hall, Calcutta,
under the presidency of Sir Henry Cotton. Sir Henry traced the history of
the Partition of Bengal from 1891 when the matter was first discussed till
1897 when he was the Chief Commissioner of Assam. Lushai Hills were then
transferred to Assam and the matter was dropped. The proposals of the
present partition, in his opinion, were not made either by the Government
of Bengal or by the administration of Assam. They had come "spontaneously
and uninvitedly from the Government of India itself". Returning to London,
he joined the India group in the House of Commons.
He had many Indian friends with whom he mixed freely - the Tagore
family, W. C. Bonnerjee, R. C. Dutt, Surendranath Banerjea and the
Maharaja of Darbhanga.
In 1885 he was appointed a fellow of the Calcutta University and was
elected unopposed to the Calcutta Municipal Corporation. About the same
time he published his 'New India or India in Transition'. His second work
Indian and Home Memories' was published in 1911. Both books reveal his
genuine and humane interest in the welfare of India.
- Pansy Chhaya Ghose
The Indian National Congress has thus its own functions, which I take
it upon myself to say, as a watchful eye - witness from its birth, it has
discharged with exemplary fidelity, judgement and moderation. Yours is a
distinguished past. If you have not in any considerable measure succeeded
in moulding the policy of Government, you have exercised an immense
influence in developing the history of your country and the character of
your countrymen. You have become a power in the land, and your voice peals
like a trumphet - note from one end of India to the other. Your
illustrious leaders have earned a niche in the Temple of Fame, and their
memory will be cherished by a grateful posterity.
From the Presidential Address - Sir Henry Cotton I.N.C. Session,
1904, Bombay |