Sir Pherozeshah Mehta
(1845-1915) President - Calcutta, 4 1890

Sir Pherozeshah Mehta was born in Bombay, on August 4, 1845, where he
spent the greater part of his life. His father, Merwanji Mehta, belonged
to a family of merchants. Pherozeshah entered the Lincoln's Inn in 1864
and spent three years qualifying himself. Called to the Bar in 1868, he
left for home in September 1868. While in England, he used to frequent the
house of Dadabhai Naoroji, and these visits were to remain important
influences in moulding his liberal outlook. Several of his close friends
were liberals; besides Telang and Badruddin Tyabji (who along with
Pherozeshah were described as "the three bright boys of Bombay"), Ranade,
Gokhale, Wacha, W. C. Bonnerjee and Bal Mohan Wagle were close to
Pherozeshah. This made him a part of the Liberal School of Indian
politics. His antipathy to violent methods in politics alienated him from
Tilak and Pal, his innate trust in constitutionalism, his dislike of
regional and communal developments, made him criticise Sir Syed Ahmad
Khan. These were characteristics that distinguished the Liberal School in
Indian politics.
Education, both primary and higher, absorbed his interests throughout
his life. He saw in education the means by which India could modernize
itself rapidly; he laid great emphasis on the value of English. He had a
hand in the establishment of a Swadeshi bank, the Central Bank of India.
Pherozeshah is remembered mainly as the maker of the modern Bombay
Municipal Corporation which he fostered and served in a distinguished
manner for nearly half a century.
He was mainly responsible for the founding of an English newspaper, the
Bombay Chronicle (April 1913), which became an important agency for
expressing Indian public opinion.
In the nationalist movement, in the forming and running of political
associations and in serving Governmental official institutions.
Pherozeshah had a notable record. In the proceedings of the Indian
National Congress (in its founding he had a distinctive hand) he held an
important and commanding position. His main endeavour was to keep the
extremists from dominating the Congress, and in this he was largely
successful. He presided over the Congress session held in Calcutta (1890)
and was twice President of the Reception Committee when the Congress
sessions met in Bombay (1889 and 1904). In the different Congress
sessions, which he attended, he either moved or supported resolutions for
reforming the administration of the country. Along with Telang, he founded
the Bombay Presidency Association (1885) and served as its Secretary.
Honours came to him thick and fast. He was made a C.I.E. in 1894 and
1904 saw him Knighted. In 1915 the University of Bombay decided to confer
upon him the honorary degree of Doctor of Law. He was a much admired
man.
- R. Srinivasan
All movements of the kind in which we are concerned pass through
several phases as they run their course. The first is one of ridicule.
That is followed, as the movement progresses, by one of abuse, which is
usually succeeded by partial concession and misapprehension of aim,
accompanied by warnings against taking "big jumps into the unknown". The
final stage of all is a substantial adoption of the object of the
movement, with some expression of surprise that it was not adopted before.
Well, gentlemen, we have pretty well passed the first two stages. We have
survived the ridicule, the abuse, and the misrepresentation. We have
survived the charge of sedition and disloyalty. We have survived the
charge of being a microscopic minority. We have also survived the charge
of being guilty of the atrocious crime of being educated, and we have even
managed to survive the grievous charge of being all Babus in disguise.
From The Presidential Address - Pherozeshah Mehta I.N.C. Session,
1890, Calcutta. |