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In 1817 he was posted to the horse artillery
and continued his service with them until his
death on 28 March 1830 when he was a sergeant. He
was only 33 and was buried at Meerut. His military
record gives his description: 5'4" tall, a long
face with sallow colouring, hazel eyes and
black hair.
He and Harriet had nine children. Eliza, who
had been born in Belfast on 18 May 1812; Mary born
in 1814 and later married to Patrick Dease on 7
July 1831; John born in 1816; Joseph in 1818;
Catherine in 1820; Christopher William in 1822;
Richard Henry in 1824; Harriet in 1826 and lastly
Thomas Bartholomew born in 1828. Details of only
three of these children have been found.
Mary's husband, Patrick Dease became a
consultant engineer to the Government of Bombay
and they had eight children. Thomas Bartholomew,
their youngest child, became a hero and sons were
named after him in the next two generations. He
was captured by mutineers at a siege of the Red
Fort in Delhi and was roped to a stake and burned
alive before the fort was relieved. His brother,
Christopher William, who also fought at Delhi, saw
his younger brother die and joined the Army.
There are memorial tablets at St James church,
Delhi for Thomas Bartholomew dated 11 and 17 May
1857: 'Sacred to the memory of the following
members of a family murdered during the massacre
of the Christians at Delhi between the 11th and
17th of May 1857. Thomas McNally, 2nd Clerk
Commissariat Office, Delhi. Thomas Bartholomew
Corbett, Assistant Apothecary and Sub-Medical
Dept., Charlottefr Corbett, Harriet Corbett. Her
brothers shall rise again.'
Christopher William Corbett had been born on 11
September 1822 at Meerut and was Joseph and
Harriet's sixth child. At that time his father was
a corporal in the horse artillery. Christopher
William joined the army and saw active service as
a junior medical officer. His rank was that of an
Assistant Apothecary (which had been the same rank
as that of his brother Thomas Bartholomew) when he
was twenty; he was with the 3rd Troop of the
1st Brigade of Horse Artillery. He saw action on
the north west frontier during the 1st Afghan War
(1839-42). Eventually he was promoted to
Apothecary Lieutenant and Captain.
On 19 December 1845 he was posted to Dehra Dun
and there he married eighteen year old Ann Morrow
at Landour, Mussoorie, a military cantonment. He
was then posted to the Army of Sutlej for the Sikh
Wars. He and Ann had three children and she died
in her early twenties. In 1849 he was in the Army
of the Punjab as a Hospital Steward to the Bengal
Army. He received several medals for his service.
Mary Jane Prussia, whom Christopher William was
later to marry, had married Dr. Charles James
Doyle of Agra when she was 14 years old in 1851, he
being 21. They had four children. These were
Charles, George, Evangeline (who died of smallpox
as an infant), and Eugene Mary. Charles and George
became doctors, Charles graduating from Aberdeen
and practicing in Magdalene Street, Norwich in
1878. After the Great War he emigrated to
California and later became an author. George was
appointed Colonial Surgeon in the West Indies.
Mary Jane and her children suffered great
privations during the Indian Mutiny (when she was
still only 20). The European community of Agra
were sent to the fort for safety. Her husband,
Charles Doyle, was in command of the remnants of
the Etawah Light Horse and the 13th Troop of
Police Cavalry. In November 1858 rebels attacked
Etawah and Doyle's unit took part in defeating
them. On December 8 whilst fighting, having
already killed 2 mutineers by sword whilst on
horseback, Charles Doyle was dragged from his
saddle and killed. In the church at Etawah there
is a plaque in his honour. He was buried in the
churchyard.
Now widowed Mary Jane Doyle and her children
moved to Mussoorie where she met Christopher
William Corbett. He had left the army and joined
the post office as a Postmaster at Mussoorie in
1859. They were married on 13 October 1859.
Between them they had, by their previous
marriages, 6 children.
In 1862 he was appointed Postmaster of Naini
Tal, a hill station which was about 200 miles
away in the mountains and which later became the
summer capital of the United Provinces. Naini Tal
was discovered by "The Pilgrim" Mr. Barron who had
his yacht carried up here in 1840.The Nainital
Boat Club whose wooden Clubhouse still graces the
edge of the lake, became the fashionable, focus of
the community.
The Naini Tal lake - tal meaning lake - lies at
about 6,400 feet a.s.l. Pockets of snow are found in
Cheena (or Naini, 8,568 ft), the peak which
dominates the lake, as late as March. Many
people and birds move down from the hills to the
plains in the winter months.
The Mutiny had left Naini Tal virtually unaffected. Refugees particularly from Rampur,
Moradabad and Bareilly flooded the hill
stations to escape the pillaging dacoits were
inflicting on the plains people; other than that
there was little upheaval. The nearest the
mutineers got to Naini Tal was 11 miles away and
5,000 ft down the precipitous mountainside.
According to a military report the greatest
hardship was the shortage of beer! Had the
violence reached the Tal Brewery Company, a branch
of the Bareilly Beer Company, just two miles down
the road from Naini Tal? The brewery wasn't built
until 1875 and it is more than likely that dacoits
and mutineers interrupted the supplies of beer
coming from Bareilly. A more serious consequence
of the mutiny was to send the price of land,
houses and rents soaring - many well-established
residents of Naini Tal made a killing.
The family traveled there across hill routes
and along the edge of plains on what were pathways
and bridle paths, the journey taking a month.
Along the way they encountered tigers who had to
be chased away from their camps. Mary Jane and the
younger children traveled in a "doolie dak", a
sedan or a box-like contrivance like chair,
carried by four stalwart bearers and later, for
the last steep ascent, in a dandy, which was a
hammock suspended from a pole which one had to
cling on to to prevent being thrown out. Neither
method of travel was comfortable. The others
traveled by foot or on ponies.
On arrival in Naini Tal the Corbetts' rented a
house near the treasury building on the outskirts
of Malli Tal Bazaar where they stayed until 1875
when they moved to a house they had had built on
Alma.
Naini Tal was extremely cold in winter with
deep snow and Christopher William was granted 10
acres of land on the edge of the plain below, just
outside the village of Choti Haldwani at a place
called Kaladhungi, a small Bhabar town 15 miles
away from Naini Tal. Here he built a substantial
house which he named Arundel and they planted most
of the land with fruit trees and mango and the
family moved there in the cold weather.
Christopher William and Mary Jane had eight
children. The first was named after the hero
Thomas Bartholomew, who, when he was old enough
was employed by the post office. Their second
child was Harriet, followed by Christopher Edward,
John Quinton, Edith, Maurice, Margaret Winifred
known as Maggie, Edward James (Jim) and lastly
Archibald d'Arcy in 1879. Eugene Mary, Mary Jane's
daughter from her marriage to Charles Doyle helped
with the delivery of Edward James (known as Jim)
who was born on 25 July 1875 (only 17 years after
the end of the mutiny) at Naini Tal. He was always
known as Jim.
The family always had various members of the
family living with them. Christopher William's
elder sister, Mary, and her husband Patrick Dease
died leaving eight children, four of whom, Patrick
Paget, Robert, Stephen and Carly Thomas, lived
with the Corbetts. The first two of these became
eminent engineers, the third became a doctor and
the last the Superintendent of the post office.
Harriet, Jim's sister, married Richard Nestor from
Kaladhungi and Naini Tal and they had two
children, Ray and Vivian, who were also brought up
in the Corbett household. Christopher Edward,
Jim's brother, married Helen Mary Nestor (Richard
Nestor's sister).
John Quinton, Jim and sister
Maggie were very close and their mother called
them the 'Jam Sandwich'.
Mary Jane was Naini Tal's first estate agent negotiating
property for rent, selling plots and,
as time passed, she and Christopher William bought
land about the town on which they built houses.
These were sold from time to time to bring in a
little income.
The family were members of the church at Naini
Tal which was called St John-in-the-Wilderness.
The children were raised with the help of 'ayahs'
and as they grew up learned the local tongue and
two Indian dialects as well as Hindi. Jim became
familiar with the local religion and Hinduism.
Early on, his mother and Eugene Mary acted as
tutors to the children and the latest books were
always available for them to read. A considerable
amount of freedom appears to have been given to
the children and for Jim the surrounding jungle
must have proved a draw to him. Christopher
William retired from the post office at Naini Tal
in 1878 and was, by then, one of the city fathers.
On Thursday 16th September 1880 it started to
rain, by Saturday 19th, 33 inches had fallen,
Cheena had turned to mud with the consistency of
porridge resulting in the great landslide. The
Corbett family watched horrified from their house
on Alma expecting to be carried away at any moment
by the mud torrent. It missed them by a hundred
yards and carried away parts of the Victoria Hotel
in Naini Tal, burying several people. The side of
the hillside then became fluid and a landslip took
place carrying everything away including the rest
of the hotel and those trying to extricate those
buried in the earlier fall. 151 persons were
killed. The Corbett's house in the valley was
close to where this landslip took place.
On Easter Sunday 1881 Christopher William had
sharp chest pains and died aged 58 on
21 April. He was buried at St
John-in-the-Wilderness. Jim was six years old and
his mother, Mary Jane, was left with 9 children to
raise. After Christopher William's death they sold
their house and moved across the valley, to a spot
1000 feet higher on the safer Ayarpata. The Alma
house was dismantled and moved lock stock and
barrel to the 1.7 acre site on Ayarpata where Mary
had bought a plot in 1871. They named their new
home Gurney House (ref 113 De on the map of Naini
Tal). There was also enough room on this plot to
build another house to rent called Clifton (ref.
54 De). (Joseph John Gurney (1788-1847) was an
English philanthropist and a Quaker banker of
Norwich. He and his sister. Mrs. Elizabeth Fry,
were closely involved in prison reforms. Perhaps
the house was named after him.)
The Corbett house (Gurney House) still stands,
and contains some of the Corbett furniture,
including their piano. There is a tall pile of
sheet music, and among the books several prizes
awarded to Maggie Corbett for her playing. The
library was evidently a good one: besides
theological and medical works, books on sport,
natural history, travel and photography, the
nineteenth-century poets and novelists are well
represented, sometimes by first editions. The
Corbett children had a cultured, comfortable home.
For most of the years they lived in Naini Tal, Jim,
Mary and the children spent the winter months in
their Kaladhungi house Arundel, now the Corbett
museum. Jim Corbett's dogs have very special
graves in the garden especially his favorite spaniel called Robin.
Edward James (Jim) Corbett who had been born 25
July 1875 at Naini Tal became famous as a
destroyer of man-eating tigers, naturalist and as
an author. He grew up to be a tall, slim,
attractive blue-eyed man with exceptional
eyesight, hearing and powers of observation, and
was known for his modesty, kindness and
generosity, and loved by all. At an early age he
spent nights alone in the jungle becoming familiar
with the creatures of the jungle, their
movements and habits. His mother and half-sister
Mary, who were religious and intelligent and
imbued with a spirit of service, courage and
cheerfulness which had a strong influence on
family life. All these qualities Jim
inherited.
He went to the English High School called Oak
Openings at 7,500 ft on Sherkadanda in Nainital.
Oak Openings was part owned and run by an
ex-Indian-Army-Officer nicknamed "Dead Eye-Dick".
He was a cruel and ruthless man who would thrash
the children in his care for the slightest misdemeanor. Oak Openings was Jim's first school.
It is he who describes the atrocious beatings
given to children as young as 6 or 7 both in
lessons and during cadet corps training when Jim
himself was only 10 years old.
The Philander Smith's Institute, part of the
American Mission Institute of Mussoorie, took over
the school in 1905. It was greatly increased in
size and renamed Philander Smith's College. At
Philander Smith College and St Joseph's College,
both at Naini Tal, Jim proved himself popular and
was to excel in games. However he was not a great
scholar.
In later years he gave talks to the boys of his
old school which he illustrated with a 16 mm. film
and sounds of the jungle. He could mimic the
calls of a tiger and leopard, both male and
female;
in fact, he could mimic calls of all the animals he mentions in his books.
The school in those days, was very close to the
jungle where such sounds were quite common
especially at night, so many of those listening to
him would recognise what they were and couldn't be
fooled. They must have sounded right because the
real folk of the jungle were often fooled!
Leaving school he
entered the service of the Bengal and North
Western Railway when he was 20 as an Inspector of
railway fuel at Mankapur on a salary of Rs100 a
month (£36 13s). The exchange rate in 1895 was 1s
4d to the rupee, almost the same as in January
1978.) He soon received a transfer, as Transshipment
Inspector. When he was 20, Jim took on
the contract from the railways for handling
the transshipment of goods across the Ganges,
described in 'Mokameh Ghat'.
He helped to raise from Kumaon, during a
recruitment campaign in the Great War, a force of
over 5,000 and with himself as Captain took 500 of
them to France in 1917. He returned with all but
one in the following year. These he resettled in
their Kumaon villages. With his usual generosity
he gave his war bonus to build a soldiers'
canteen. Thereafter, he saw fighting in the Third
Afghan War, and in the Waziristan campaign serving
as a Major from 1919 to 1921.
In about 1920, at the age of 45, he settled
down at Naini Tal to look after his mother, his
sister Maggie, and his step-sister Mary Doyle. A
bequest in a will left him a house at Naini Tal
and this allowed him to leave the railway. He was
now able to give all his time to the people of
Kumaon and their welfare. With his sister's help a
surgery at the house was opened for treatment
of the sick.
In 1922 he took a share with Percy Wyndham in a
coffee estate on the slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro
and used to go to it for about three months each
year. Maggie testifies: 'As there was no proper
living accommodation on the estate, nothing but
huts, Jim set to work, and with his own hands laid
every brick of a two-storeyed house, with a
veranda upstairs. He was very pleased to find, on
measuring the building when it was finished, that
it was not out by an inch anywhere.' Mary Jane, an
Anglican, lived into her eighties, dying on 16 May
1924 and she was buried at St
John-in-the-Wilderness. The churchyard by then had
been closed but was specially opened for her
burial.
During his time in the railways, Jim spent many
holidays at their winter home in Kaladhungi and in
the early years of the century had bought
the almost forsaken and deserted village, Choti
Haldwani. Here he resettled the inhabitants and
paid the villagers' taxes up to 1960. With a mile
of wire he enclosed the area, divided it into
plots, and built new houses. As he could afford
it, he increased the circumference to three miles
and built a 5-foot stone wall instead of the wire.
He remained a resident of Kaladhungi, where he
farmed and did small business in winter when not
otherwise gainfully occupied arranging their
shoots for high-ups in the Government and their
guests. The village was soon flourishing. Corbett
lived with his sisters at Naina Tal from April to
October.
Jim Corbett, now a famous man after his classic
'Man-eaters of Kumaon' which had been dedicated to
'the gallant soldiers, sailors and airmen of the
United Nations who during this war have lost their
sight in the service of their country.'
'Man-eaters of Kumaon' was an immediate success in
India and was chosen by book clubs in England and
America, the first printing of the American
Book-of-the-month Club being 250,000. It had been
issued as a Talking Book for the Blind and
translated into at least fourteen European
languages (Bulgarian, Czech, Danish, Dutch,
Finnish, French, German, Italian, Norwegian,
Portuguese, Serbo-Croat, Slovene, Spanish,
Swedish), eleven Indian languages (Bengali,
Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, Oriya,
Sindhi, Sinhalise, Tamil, Telugu, Urdu), Afrikaans
and Japanese. All the royalties on the first
edition went to St Dunstan's Hostel for Indian
soldiers blinded in the war that was still being
fought.
He completely identified himself with the local
population which affectionately called him 'Carpet
Sahib'. He always had a word of cheer for all
those in trouble, a kindly nature and sympathetic
attitude and was generous with his money. He was
of middle size and rather dark. One could see him
going about in shorts, shirt, a thick coat of
coarse material and a hat. He never wore a
tie.
Percy Wyndham spent most of his career hunting
in Mirzapur district (the Wyndham Falls are named
after him) or in the Naini Tal Terai. He was Jim
Corbett's friend and a colourful person in his own
right. He spent 12 years in the Kumaon Division as
its Commissioner. Corbett was a constant companion
of Mr. Wyndham whenever he was out looking for
tigers in the Bhabar and Terai.
In his early life Jim was an excellent marksman
and fisherman but in his later life he found
photography of big game was preferable to shooting
them. At some undetermined date, he resolved never
again to shoot an animal except for food or if it
was 'a dangerous' beat. In the early 1930's (he
told Rev'd A. G. Atkins, pastor of the Union Church
at Naini Tal) that having taken three officers out
for a duck-shoot, he was sickened by the senseless
slaughter of 300 birds.
His courage and patience is proved by the
amount of film which he exposed in close proximity
to the animals he photographed. He was strong and
fit and able to endure hardship. For several
months he went out daily and waited for a tiger to
appear and obtained 'a long sequence of six superb
specimens, of which the nearest was eight and the
farthest thirty feet from his camera'. Now
deposited in the British Museum they are unusual
and remarkable records of Indian wild life.
He was a pioneer conservationist and began to
give lectures to local schools and societies to
stimulate awareness of the natural beauty
surrounding them and the need to conserve forests
and their wildlife. His fluency in animal
languages was demonstrated to more critical
audiences when he used them to call up a man-eater
or to drown the whirr of his camera when filming
tigers.
He was asked to undertake the shooting of his
first two man-eaters in 1907. These were the
Champawat tiger and the Panar tiger. He shot ten
man-eaters altogether, the last being shot in
1938. It was his belief that a tiger or leopard
was not by nature a man-eater but had received an
injury and became one because it was unable to
pursue it's normal prey any longer.
Jim Corbett's exciting accounts of the hunting
and killing of these man-eaters which had killed
almost 1,500 Indians, are related with modesty in
three of his books: The Man-Eaters of Kumaon
(1946), The Man-Eating Leopard of Rudraprayang
(1948), and the Temple Tiger and More Man-Eaters
of Kumaon (1954). These forays meant days without
sleep and food, nights sitting waiting for the
tiger to appear, with his life always in danger.
Because of his courage and resolve he received the
love and sometimes worship of the people.
In the Second World War Jim Corbett asked for
duty and raised a labour corps and recruited 1,400
Kumaons and served from 1940 to 1942 as a Deputy
Military Vice-President of district soldiers'
boards.
In 1942 an attack of typhus reduced his weight
from 12 and a half stone to 7 stone and he was
told he would have to spend the rest of his life
in a wheel-chair. Refusing to give way he
recovered and was commissioned Lieutenant-Colonel
and trained men for jungle warfare in Burma
despite serious illness. After a year of this
strenuous life, in training camps in Central
India, he had a bad attack of malaria.
Neither Maggie nor Jim could face the thought of
continuing to live, after the death of the other
in India, so they went to Kenya in 1947 and settled
in Nyeri, Kenya, in the house which Lord
Baden-Powell had built, lived and died in.
Much of his time was spent filming wild life
and to writing and he was made Honorary Officer,
Royal National Parks of Kenya and an Honorary
Assistant Game Warden. Soon after his arrival in
Nyeri Jim founded a Wild Life Preservation Society
and became its Honorary Secretary.
It was at Nyeri that he wrote most of his
books. He and Maggie sat together night after
night before their wood fire, he at his typewriter
and she brewing the after-dinner cup of tea. She
said of him: 'He worked very hard; did his own
typing, all with one finger, and made four copies
of each book - three for the publishers, London,
New York and Bombay, and the fourth copy for
ourselves, known as 'The Home Copy'. He was very
neat and if there was even one mistake on a page,
he would scrap the page and type it all over
again. He always wanted a sentence to read
'smoothly' and would take infinite pains in making
it do so'.
He received the Volunteer Decoration (1920),
the Kaisar-i-Hing gold medal (1928), the O.B.E.,
(1942) and the C.I.E.-Companion of the Indian
Empire (1946). In India he was granted a
privilege only given once before - the freedom of
the forests.
Jim Corbett was the most modest, companionable,
and unassuming of men. He never sought the
limelight but was publicly honoured by the
Government of India both before and after
Independence.
In 1952 (by then aged 80) he received a note
from an aide to Princess Elizabeth requesting him
to meet her and Prince Philip at Treetops that
afternoon. Treetops was a game observation
platform owned by the Outspan Hotel. The platform
was over 30 ft up in the branches of a Ficus
tree and was reached by a ladder. At the top was a
tree house and the platform overlooked a water
hole and saltlick. The accommodation comprised of a
dining room, three bedrooms, a toilet, a room for
the resident guard and another for staff. Princess
Elizabeth and Prince Philip were paying a state
visit to Kenya and spending part of their time
about 20 miles away from Treetops. Jim identified
animals for the royal party and when they retired
for the night at Treetops he sat awake and on
guard at the top of the ladder, with his army
blanket across his shoulders and his rifle in his
lap. There he spent the night. The night on which
King George VI died. In the Treetops register,
kept for listing the names of animals seen, he
wrote of that night 'For the first time in the
history of the world a young girl climbed into a
tree one day a Princess, and after having what she
described as her 'most thrilling experience' she
climbed down from the tree the next day a
Queen.'
Jim died at Nyeri on 19 April 1955 and was
buried in St Peter's churchyard , the same
cemetery as Baden-Powell.
In 1957 the game sanctuary in Kumaon was named
after him by the Indian Government. It had been
established in Garhwal in 1935. This was in
recognition of one who had dedicated his life to
the service of the simple hill folks of Kumaon.
Corbett National Park, in the state of
Uttaranchal, erstwhile state of Uttar
Pradesh, exhibits a wide variety of India's
wildlife in the foothills of the Himalayas.
In January 1976 the Government of India issued
a 25-paise stamp to commemorate Jim's birth in
1875. A new, Annamese, race of tigers was, in
1968, named Panthera tigris corbetti.
Jim also wrote My India (1952), which is
largely autobiographical; Jungle Lore (1953);
Treetops (1955) and published posthumously, an
account of the visit of the Princess Elizabeth and
the Duke of Edinburgh to the hotel in the treetops
near Nyeri. Over a million of his books in English
had been sold by 1957 and translations in eighteen
languages had been published. |